The document discusses the key elements of design used in visual art - line, shape, space, value, color, and texture. It provides detailed descriptions and examples of each element:
- Line can be actual, implied, or contour lines that define boundaries and suggest movement. Different types include horizontal, vertical, diagonal, wavy, zigzag lines.
- Shape is defined by lines or edges and can be geometric or organic. Positive and negative space are used to manipulate shapes.
- Space can be two-dimensional or three-dimensional. Techniques like overlapping shapes, linear perspective, and size variation create a sense of depth and space.
- Value refers to lightness and darkness used through sh
3. Line is a mark on a surface that describes a shape or outline. It can
create texture and can be thick and thin. Types of line can include
actual, implied, vertical, horizontal, diagonal and contour.
Characteristics of line –
– Active
– Static
– Aggressive/passive
– Sensual/mechanical
– Directional
– Defines boundaries
– Implies volume or mass
– Suggests motion or emotion
– Forms patterns and textures
5. • Line defines contours; most basic visual
element.
• Line in art may mean a single thin stroke
• It may signify the meeting edge of two
areas
• It may refer to the contours – as in
sculpture
• Line can display strong suggestion of
movement
• Line can produce a sense of tranquility
12. • Larger lines
in the
foreground
• Smaller lines
in the back
ground give
an illusion of
distances,
space and
perspective.
13. Implied Line
• Implied Line is the line inside the object within in
the art work. For example, an image of a soldier
standing tall has an implied vertical line in the
stance. Each of the lines imply different
meanings.
• A vertical line can imply nobility.
• A horizontal can imply calm or rest.
• A diagonal line can imply movement. A
curvilinear line can imply grace.
20. A VENETIAN WOMAN
John Singer Sargent (American,
b.1856, d.1925)
1882
oil on canvas
93 3/4 x 52 1/2 in. (238.1 x
133.4 cm)
21. A VENETIAN WOMAN
John Singer Sargent (American,
b.1856, d.1925)
1882
oil on canvas
93 3/4 x 52 1/2 in. (238.1 x
133.4 cm)
Lines used to create emphasis
22. Hokusai, Katsushika
The Great Wave Off Kanagawa
From "Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji"
1823-29
Color woodcut
10 x 15 in.
Lines can curve . . .
24. Venus at Her Mirror ("The Rokeby Venus")
Implied GRACE
25. Giotto
The Mourning of Christ
c. 1305
Fresco
Cappella dell'Arena, Padua
• Contour line is
the outside line,
or the line that
distinguishes
the outer edge
of the object
within the art
work.
Contour Line
28. Johann Koerbecke
German, c. 1420 - 1491
The Ascension, 1456/1457
tempera on panel, 92.7 x 64.8 cm (36 1/2 x
25 1/2 in.)
Curved, smooth
Jagged
Jagged, zig-zag
straight
29. Clyfford Still
American,
1904 - 1980
1948-C, (1948)
Oil on canvas
80 7/8 x 68 3/4 in.
complex contour lines
formed by these
complex shapes
30. A mark with length and direction.
A continuous mark made on a surface by a
moving point.
Ansel Adams Gustave Caillebotte
31. • 3 artists exemplify the usage of line
– Pablo Picasso
– Henri Matisse
– Vincent Van Gogh
48. Shape is an area that is contained within an implied line, or is seen and
identified because of color or value changes.
•Shapes have two dimensions, length and width, and can be geometric or free-
form.
•Shape: geometric and organic shapes; positive and negative shapes; abstract
shapes; and outlined shapes.
50. Shape / Form
• A shape is an area that is defined in
some way by a line, an edge, a color or a
texture. If we traced around its outline we
would have a shape, silhouette
• Shapes can be geometric – look as if
they were made with a ruler.
• Organic – irregular, uneven shapes of
nature.
51. Hendrik van Steenwyck
St. Jerome in his Study 1624Oil on panel
27 x 21.7 cm
Bequeathed as part of the
Princes Gate Collection, 1978
P.1978.PG.423
How many shapes can
you find?
53. THE UPSTAIRS
Charles Sheeler (American,
b.1883, d.1965)
1938
oil on canvas
19 1/2 x 12 3/4 in. (49.5 x 32.4
cm)
Lines create planes;
planes suggest volume
54. An enclosed area defined and determined
by other art elements; 2-dimensional.
57. Space -Actual space is a three-dimensional volume that can be empty or
filled with objects. It has width, height, and depth. Various techniques can be
used to show such visual depth or space.
Space: two-dimensional and three dimensional space; creating space with
different sized and overlapping shapes; and linear perspective.
SPACE
58. • Open and Closed
– In a painting, if the viewer’s eyes are led off the
canvas, the space is open, or the painting has an
open frame. If the viewer’s eyes are kept in the
center of the canvas and all the characters and action
are within the edges of the frame, the artist has
composed a closed space or closed frame.
• Positive and Negative
– Positive space takes up space, negative space is
empty. The positive is the material, the negative is
the absence of material.
59. Open and Closed Space
Raphael
Crucifixion with
Sts Mary Virgin,
Mary Magdalen,
ohn and Jerome
c. 1503
Grunewald
The Mocking of Christ
1503
Grunewald’s
piece exhibits and
open frame, the
action leads the
eyes all over the
canvas and off the
edges of the
frame.
Raphael’s piece
exhibits a closed
frame, the action
is centered and
the viewer is
focused on the
main action.
60. Positive Space
• Positive space is the space that an object occupies.
• On the left hand side picture, the positive space is the
area that the bottles take up.
• On the right hand side picture, the positive space is
shown as the black objects.
61. Negative Space
• Negative space is opposite of positive.
• Negative space is the space around an object.
• On the left hand side picture, the negative space is the
white area around the bottles.
• On the right hand side picture, the negative space is
shown as the black area surrounding the bottle.
62. Artists often use positive space and negative
space to manipulate an object.
For instance, an artist might deliberately leave a
cutout area white, which would be a negative
space. Then, they might add some kind of
pattern in that space to trick the viewer’s eyes.
63.
64. Brancusi, The Kiss, 1917
Positive and Negative…
All positive space, no negative
space, no room between them.
Canova, 19th
Century, NeoClassical
(Reproduction)
Lots of
negative
space
employed
to create
tension,
dynamic
embrace.
65. CONTINUOUS, INFINITE, EVER PRESENT
• Space is the area
between and around
objects.
• The space around
objects is often called
negative space;
negative space has
shape.
• Space can also refer
to the feeling of depth.
Real space is three-
dimensional; in visual
art when we can
create the feeling or
illusion of depth we
call it space.
66. Space
Since objects in our
environment look smaller
when they are farther away,
the easiest way to show
depth is to vary the size of
objects, with closer objects
being larger and more
distant objects being
smaller. As well, we
perceive objects that are
higher on the page and
smaller as being further
away than objects which
are in the forefront of a
picture.
Overlapping, vertical, and
diminishing
Edward Degas
67. We live in a three-dimensional world of depth. When we look around us, some
things seem closer, some further away. The artist can also show the illusion of
depth by using the following means:
Size Vertical Location
Overlapping
Linear Perspective
68. Depth of Field
The human eye, like
the camera, has a
limited depth of field. In
other words we focus
on one level and the
objects in front or
behind are often
blurred. When Diego
Velazquez painted Las
Meninas he, along with
many artists painted
everything in focus.
This was part of the
magic of painting as
the viewers perception
was thereby expanded.
This painting by Diego
Velazquez has a
defined foreground,
middle ground and
background.
72. • Value can be flat or graduated
• Can be created by using shading, line or dots.
• Lines can be used to create value in hatching or
cross-hatching
• Dots can be used to create value.
• Value can be subdued
• Strong
• Contrasting
Value
73. Value refers to the degree of dark and light. Value contrasts help us to see and
understand a two dimensional work of art.
Value contrast is also evident in colors, which enables us to read shapes in a
painting.
74. Value Scale
The above graphic is called a Value Scale.
Tonal graduations in color from light to dark produce perspective. Graduation of
tone can add interest to a shape. A graduation from light to dark will cause the
eye to move along the shape. Using black and white paint, many artists make a
rectangular value scale with ten values. Pure white will be at one end, then mix
varying amounts of black and white to create eight shades of gray, increasing in
value, ending with pure black.
76. •Dramatic use of light
creates value.
•Light is used to attract our
attention to the most
important part of the
painting
•The relative lightness or
darkness is the value. A
black-and-white photo or
movie involves not only
black and white, but also
different values of gray.
77.
78. Cast shadows are the
dark shapes tha t
emanate from an object
onto another surface,
revealing the direction
and quality of the light
source.
79. • Color is very expressive and an exciting element
of art. It appeals strongly to the senses and
emotions.
• Color can communicate in all different ways, it
can be very powerful thing in art work. Art works
can communicate by color alone. It can cause
emotional reactions.
COLOR
80. HUE – the name of a color
VALUE – the lightness or darkness of a color
INTENSITY – the brightness or dullness of a color
MONOCHROMATIC – many values of one color
ANALOGOUS – colors side by side on the color wheel
COMPLEMENTARY – colors opposite on the color
wheel
WARM vs. COOL – red, yellow, orange – blue, green,
violet
81. Primary Colors
• Red, blue, yellow
• Cannot be produced by intermixing other colors
• All other colors are mixed from these 3 colors
82. Secondary Colors
Orange, green, violet
Colors mixed from a
combination
of 2 primary colors
Red + Blue = Violet
Blue + Yellow = Green
Red + Yellow = Orange
87. Color Schemes
Color groupings that
create distinct color
harmony
• Monochromatic
One color plus white
and black
• Analogous
3 – 5 colors next to
each other on the color
wheel
• Complementary
2 colors directly
opposite each other on
the color wheel
Vincent Van Gogh
90. Complementary Colors
2 colors directly opposite each other on the color wheel
These colors when mixed create hues of brown Red and green above
91. What your favorite color says about you!
• Red – You are a nonconformist. You
work hard, are very optimistic, never let your
mood down, and are quick to react.
• Orange – You are warm and friendly
and use care in choosing your friends. You
have a strong sense of justice, and are not
impressed by material things.
• Yellow – You are interested in people
and are glad to be of service to others. You
are critical of mind and learn through
observation.
• Green – You are a very good
conversationalist and like people. You have
a keen wit and tend to be alert at all times.
• Blue – You are devoted and truthful
and tend not to show your feelings readily.
People tend to have confidence in you.
• Purple – You like to live like royalty
and enjoy a sense of luxury. You enjoy
beautiful things and have a tendency to the
romantic.
• White –You are sincere in mind and
heart, you cooperate well, you are efficient
and orderly.
• Gray – You seek perfection and are a
good manager. You are very objective and
seek constant development.
• Black – You are very self-assured and
like meeting interesting people. You are
critical in your choice of companions and
seek perfection.
• Brown – You are patient and a hard
worker. You are always ready to help
others, have a strong sense of family loyalty,
and do not take uncalculated risks.
92. Texture is the surface quality of an object. There are two categories of
texture: real texture and implied texture.
•Real texture refers to how the object would feel if it was touched.
•Implied texture refers to something that has been made to look as if it has
texture through drawing or painting techniques
93. • Real texture is texture that actually exists – what you can
actually feel
• Implied texture -created to look like the real object on a
flat surface
Texture can be
•Grained
•Rough
•Corrugated
•Smooth
•Furry
•Shiny
•Prickly
94. Van Gogh close up
When we look at a
photograph or a painting
of the texture of a
surface such as glass or
velvet leather, we see
patterns of light and
dark that create the
effect of texture
Simulated texture; a two
dimensional surface that
imitates real texture,
simulated textures copy
or imitate real textures.
95. Texture can be surprising.
The smooth texture of skin in this close up of a marble sculpture by Bernini is
remarkable. Notice the veins, soft waves, in the top of the male hand. Also,
notice the smooth texture of the drapery.
96. Oppenheim, Fur Covered Cup
Camille Claudel’s The Waltz
1891-1905
Creating texture…
Transition from
smooth skin
to rough,
bumpy, rippling
base
97. PERSPECTIVE
Perspective refers to the “point of view”. There are several
different types of perspective: aerial, atmospheric, linear or
one-point, and two-point perspective for a horizon line.
98. Aerial Perspective
• Aerial perspective is a
“bird’s view,” seen
from above, high
angle.
Aerial view of the grand canyon
100. Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa 1507 Raphael’s Cowper Madonna
Atmospheric Perspective gives the illusion of a
great distance in the background of the image.
101. Linear Perspective
Linear Perspective
is also referred to
as one-point-
perspective. This
perspective leads
the eyes to a
vanishing point
that disappears
deep into the
image. The lines
leading to the
vanishing point
created by the rails
are called
orthogonals.