Art Boot Camp
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the First Twenty Days
Elements of Art
The elements of art are sort of like atoms in that both serve as "building blocks." You know that atoms combine and form other things, right? Sometimes they'll casually make a simple molecule, as when hydrogen and oxygen form water (H2O). If hydrogen and oxygen take a more aggressive career path and bring carbon along as a co-worker, together they might form something more complex, like a molecule of sucrose (C12H22O11).
A similar activity happens when the elements of art are combined. Instead of hydrogen, oxygen, carbon, etc., in art you've got:
color
form
line
space
shape
texture
value
http://www.studentartguide.com/
http://www.artbabble.org/partner/art21
http://artclubblog.com/
The Elements of Art
A person can't create art without utilizing at least a few of the elements.
No elements, no art -- end of story.
Knowing what the elements of art are enables us to:
(1) describe what an artist has done
(2) analyze what is going on in a particular piece
(3) communicate our thoughts and findings using a common language.
(4) appreciate
(5) create
Art stimulates different parts of our brains to make us laugh or incite us to riot, with a whole gamut of emotions in between.
Art gives us a way to be creative and express ourselves.
Art is something that makes us more thoughtful and well-rounded humans.
art is such a large part of our everyday lives that we may hardly even stop to think about it. Look at the desk or table where you are, right this minute. Someone designed that. It is art.
Your shoes are art. Your coffee cup is art. All functional design, well done, is art.
Art is something that is both functional and (hopefully) aesthetically pleasing to our eyes.
Art is Form and Content
All art consists of these two things.
Form means:
The elements of art
·the principles of design
the actual, physical materials that the artist has used.
Form, in this context, is
concrete
fairly easily described
balance
contrast
emphasis
proportion (principles of design).
Content
is idea-based and means:
What the artist meant to portray,
What the artist actually did portray
how we react, as individuals, to both the intended and actual messages.
Additionally
content includes ways in which a work was influenced --
by religion
or politics
or society in general
or even the artist's use of hallucinogenic substances
--at the time it was created.
All of these factors, together, make up the content side of art.
"Art is form and content".
http://arthistory.about.com/cs/reference/f/what_is_art.htm
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