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Objects and Viewpoints
Objects and Viewpoints
What can you say about these images?
Lesson 1: Still Life
Q1. What is a still life?
Q2. What then, is NOT still life?
Q3. Why have artists used still life?
Q4. How might we create our own still
life in our lesson?
NOW:
ON THE PAPER IN FRONT OF YOU:
Write down the following
questions
GROUP QUIZ (6 groups)
Still Life
A1.
Inanimate objects, not living, arranged
in a particular way used by artists to
improve drawing or painting skills.
These objects could be natural or man
made.
A2.
Moving living things, the human body.
A3.
As a way of practicing drawing and
painting to improving skills and create
artwork.
A4.
By arranging objects and recording
them from a specific viewpoint
Still Life
Portrayal of something inanimate: a representation of
inanimate objects such as fruit, flowers, or food, often in a
domestic setting, in paintings, pictures, or photographs.
1. With your neighbours (2s or 3s)…
• Use the materials to
make small abstract
sculptures
• Bend, squeeze, tie, fold,
roll
• Organise your sculptures
in a still life arrangement
which you’ll draw
YOU HAVE 5 MINUTES
STARTER ACTIVITY
2. Gestural drawings
Make a small drawing
of the objects from the
angle you are sitting at.
You have 60 SECONDS
to include ALL of it
3. Continuous line
Now repeat the
drawing using one
continuous line-
you must NOT take
your pencil off the
page until the
drawing is complete
4. Contour Drawing
Use the remaining time
up until the last 10
minutes of the lesson
to make a detailed
outline drawing
Preparation: Now that you can
see how much information you
can record in a short amount of
time, you are going to create a
REALISTIC version of your piece.
Using all the techniques you have
already tried, create an
OBSEVATIONAL drawing of your
chosen objects.
ALWAYS LOOK AT YOUR OBJECTS.
MAIN ACTIVITY
Using a green pen… WWW, EBI
Which is your best technique? why? how could you improve your work?
Lesson 2: Tonal ink study
Tonal ink study
What is a tonal ink study?
What do we mean by study?
What kind of Ink?
What method do we use?
Recap from last week:
What is ‘still life’?
What is the purpose of ‘still life’?
What object is our ‘still life’ today?
Lesson objective:
Produce a tonal ink study from a single viewpoint.
Tonal ink study
Success criteria:
1. Use three tones
2. No outline
3. Add a shadow
under the object
A tonal ink study is a type of artwork produced using multiple layers of ink. It
does not contain outline, but it does contain light and dark areas.
* Year 8 examples
NOW: Analyse this Art work…
• What is the
medium?
• What is it?
• Describe
the tones.
• Describe
the
shapes?
• Who is the
artist?
• Subject
matter?
NOW: On the piece of paper you must all write at least ONE
key word to describe the art work
GROUP ACTIVITY
Jim Dine
born 1935, America
• Jim Dine is an American pop artist.
• Jim Dine is a painter, sculptor, printmaker, illustrator, performance
artist, stage designer and poet.
• He first earned respect in the art world with his Happenings. Pioneered
with artists Claes Oldenburg and Allan Kaprow, in conjunction with
musician John Cage.
• In 1962 Dine's work was included, along with Roy Lichtenstein, Andy
Warhol, Robert Dowd, Phillip Hefferton, Joe Goode, Edward Ruscha,
and Wayne Thiebaud, in the historically important and ground-
breaking New Painting of Common Objects, curated by Walter Hopps
at the Norton Simon Museum.
Lesson 3: Negative Space
Negative space
• Negative space, in art, is the space around and
between the subject(s) of an image. Negative
space may be most evident when the space
around a subject, not the subject itself, forms
an interesting or artistically relevant shape,
and such space occasionally is used to artistic
effect as the "real" subject of an image.
Negative space
Drawing negative space
Negative space, used in a FedEx logo
Lesson 4: The Hand of the Artist
Drawing Hands by M. C. Escher
Drawing Hands is a lithograph by the Dutch artist M. C. Escher first printed in
January 1948. It depicts a sheet of paper out of which, from wrists that
remain flat on the page, two hands rise, facing each other and in the
paradoxical act of drawing one another into existence. Although Escher used
paradoxes in his works often, this is one of the most obvious examples.
Now
Produce a drawing in the style of the artist M C Escher
Success Criteria:
• The hand you draw must be life size (1:1 scale)
• Add detail of your skin texture
• Your drawing must include a background
NOW: Analyse this Art work…
• What is the
medium?
• What is it?
• Describe
the tones?
• Describe
the
shapes?
• Who is the
artist?
• What is the
subject
matter?NOW: On the piece of paper you must all write at least ONE
key word to describe the art work
GROUP ACTIVITY
Lesson 5: Michael Craig-Martin
NOW: Analyse this Art work…
• What is the
medium?
• What is it?
• Describe
the tones.
• Describe
the
shapes?
• Who is the
artist?
• Subject
matter?
NOW: On the piece of paper you must all write at least
ONE key word to describe the art work
GROUP ACTIVITY
Michael Craig-Martin
born 1941, Ireland
• Michael Craig-Martin, CBE RA, is a contemporary conceptual artist and
painter.
• He is noted for fostering the Young British Artists, many of whom he
taught, and for his conceptual artwork, An Oak Tree.
• He is Emeritus Professor of Fine Art at Goldsmiths
Lesson 6: Charcoal and chalk tonal study
* Example
Lesson 7: Monoprinting
Image 1
Image 2
Image 3
Setup
Ink up
skim with newsprint
Place paper down
Place photo down. Start to draw!
You must use a range of mark making techniques to
describe the shape and texture of the object.
Pencil marks, before Ink Monoprint, after
Light and dark tone? Mark making? 3D form? Contrast? Texture?
Background? Foreground? Negative space? Expressive?
* Example
Lesson 8: Giorgio Morandi
Artist: Giorgio Morandi b. 1890 , d. 1964
• He was an Italian
painter and
printmaker who
specialised in still life.
• His paintings are noted for
their tonal subtlety.
• He often paints and draws
simple subjects, such as
vases, bottles and bowls.
Think pair share:
What do you notice about the
viewpoints?
Medium: Ink / mexed media
Lesson objective:
By the end of the lesson everyone will
produce a tonal ink drawing.
You will be using black ink or mixed
media, working from the lightest tone
to the darkest tone.
Remember to use the whole page and
consider composition.
Arrange items such as
paint pots and bottles
to produce an
interesting still life in
the style of Morandi.
Homework: 1
Produce a full colour copy of a work by the artist
Michael Craig Martin. See examples below or pick
your own.
Success criteria:
1. Use vibrant colour
2. Use a fine pen to outline the shapes
3. Fill the entire a4 page.
Homework: 1
Produce a full colour copy of a work by the artist
Michael Craig Martin. See examples below or pick
your own.
Success criteria:
1. Use vibrant colour
2. Use a fine pen to outline the shapes
3. Fill the entire a4 page.
Homework: 2
Draw the corner of your bedroom as illustrated in
the example below. You should use tonal pencil or
charcoal for this homework.
Success criteria:
1. Draw at least 5 objects in situ
2. Use at least 3 tones.
3. Make sure to add lots of detail
4. Fill the whole a4 page
Homework: 2
Draw the corner of your bedroom as illustrated in
the example below. You should use tonal pencil or
charcoal for this homework.
Success criteria:
1. Draw at least 5 objects in situ
2. Use at least 3 tones.
3. Make sure to add lots of detail
4. Fill the whole a4 page
Additional examples:
Homework: 3
Arrange a series of object to form a temporary
still life. Draw this using tonal pencil or charcoal
from an interesting viewpoint.
Success criteria:
1. Draw at least 5 balancing objects
2. Use at least 3 tones.
3. Make sure to add lots of detail
4. Fill the whole a4 page
Homework: 3
Arrange a series of object to form a temporary
still life. Draw this using tonal pencil or charcoal
from an interesting viewpoint.
Success criteria:
1. Draw at least 5 balancing objects
2. Use at least 3 tones.
3. Make sure to add lots of detail
4. Fill the whole a4 page
1. Use a range of tones
2. Add lots of detail
3. Fill the A4 page
4. Create an interesting
composition
Success criteria…
Year 8 cover: Objects and viewpoints
• Produce an A4 tonal drawing of an arrangement of objects from
your pockets. You should use objects such as your keys and
things from you pencil case. NO PHONE OR LANYARD allowed.

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Object viewpoints 2016_b_nathan_new

  • 2. Objects and Viewpoints What can you say about these images?
  • 4. Q1. What is a still life? Q2. What then, is NOT still life? Q3. Why have artists used still life? Q4. How might we create our own still life in our lesson? NOW: ON THE PAPER IN FRONT OF YOU: Write down the following questions GROUP QUIZ (6 groups)
  • 5. Still Life A1. Inanimate objects, not living, arranged in a particular way used by artists to improve drawing or painting skills. These objects could be natural or man made. A2. Moving living things, the human body. A3. As a way of practicing drawing and painting to improving skills and create artwork. A4. By arranging objects and recording them from a specific viewpoint
  • 6. Still Life Portrayal of something inanimate: a representation of inanimate objects such as fruit, flowers, or food, often in a domestic setting, in paintings, pictures, or photographs.
  • 7. 1. With your neighbours (2s or 3s)… • Use the materials to make small abstract sculptures • Bend, squeeze, tie, fold, roll • Organise your sculptures in a still life arrangement which you’ll draw YOU HAVE 5 MINUTES STARTER ACTIVITY
  • 8. 2. Gestural drawings Make a small drawing of the objects from the angle you are sitting at. You have 60 SECONDS to include ALL of it
  • 9. 3. Continuous line Now repeat the drawing using one continuous line- you must NOT take your pencil off the page until the drawing is complete
  • 10. 4. Contour Drawing Use the remaining time up until the last 10 minutes of the lesson to make a detailed outline drawing
  • 11. Preparation: Now that you can see how much information you can record in a short amount of time, you are going to create a REALISTIC version of your piece. Using all the techniques you have already tried, create an OBSEVATIONAL drawing of your chosen objects. ALWAYS LOOK AT YOUR OBJECTS. MAIN ACTIVITY
  • 12. Using a green pen… WWW, EBI Which is your best technique? why? how could you improve your work?
  • 13. Lesson 2: Tonal ink study
  • 14. Tonal ink study What is a tonal ink study? What do we mean by study? What kind of Ink? What method do we use? Recap from last week: What is ‘still life’? What is the purpose of ‘still life’? What object is our ‘still life’ today?
  • 15. Lesson objective: Produce a tonal ink study from a single viewpoint. Tonal ink study Success criteria: 1. Use three tones 2. No outline 3. Add a shadow under the object A tonal ink study is a type of artwork produced using multiple layers of ink. It does not contain outline, but it does contain light and dark areas.
  • 16. * Year 8 examples
  • 17. NOW: Analyse this Art work… • What is the medium? • What is it? • Describe the tones. • Describe the shapes? • Who is the artist? • Subject matter? NOW: On the piece of paper you must all write at least ONE key word to describe the art work GROUP ACTIVITY
  • 18. Jim Dine born 1935, America • Jim Dine is an American pop artist. • Jim Dine is a painter, sculptor, printmaker, illustrator, performance artist, stage designer and poet. • He first earned respect in the art world with his Happenings. Pioneered with artists Claes Oldenburg and Allan Kaprow, in conjunction with musician John Cage. • In 1962 Dine's work was included, along with Roy Lichtenstein, Andy Warhol, Robert Dowd, Phillip Hefferton, Joe Goode, Edward Ruscha, and Wayne Thiebaud, in the historically important and ground- breaking New Painting of Common Objects, curated by Walter Hopps at the Norton Simon Museum.
  • 21. • Negative space, in art, is the space around and between the subject(s) of an image. Negative space may be most evident when the space around a subject, not the subject itself, forms an interesting or artistically relevant shape, and such space occasionally is used to artistic effect as the "real" subject of an image. Negative space
  • 23. Negative space, used in a FedEx logo
  • 24. Lesson 4: The Hand of the Artist
  • 25. Drawing Hands by M. C. Escher Drawing Hands is a lithograph by the Dutch artist M. C. Escher first printed in January 1948. It depicts a sheet of paper out of which, from wrists that remain flat on the page, two hands rise, facing each other and in the paradoxical act of drawing one another into existence. Although Escher used paradoxes in his works often, this is one of the most obvious examples. Now Produce a drawing in the style of the artist M C Escher Success Criteria: • The hand you draw must be life size (1:1 scale) • Add detail of your skin texture • Your drawing must include a background
  • 26. NOW: Analyse this Art work… • What is the medium? • What is it? • Describe the tones? • Describe the shapes? • Who is the artist? • What is the subject matter?NOW: On the piece of paper you must all write at least ONE key word to describe the art work GROUP ACTIVITY
  • 27.
  • 28.
  • 29.
  • 30.
  • 31. Lesson 5: Michael Craig-Martin
  • 32.
  • 33.
  • 34.
  • 35. NOW: Analyse this Art work… • What is the medium? • What is it? • Describe the tones. • Describe the shapes? • Who is the artist? • Subject matter? NOW: On the piece of paper you must all write at least ONE key word to describe the art work GROUP ACTIVITY
  • 36. Michael Craig-Martin born 1941, Ireland • Michael Craig-Martin, CBE RA, is a contemporary conceptual artist and painter. • He is noted for fostering the Young British Artists, many of whom he taught, and for his conceptual artwork, An Oak Tree. • He is Emeritus Professor of Fine Art at Goldsmiths
  • 37.
  • 38.
  • 39. Lesson 6: Charcoal and chalk tonal study
  • 40.
  • 41.
  • 42.
  • 48. Setup
  • 52. Place photo down. Start to draw!
  • 53. You must use a range of mark making techniques to describe the shape and texture of the object. Pencil marks, before Ink Monoprint, after
  • 54. Light and dark tone? Mark making? 3D form? Contrast? Texture?
  • 55. Background? Foreground? Negative space? Expressive?
  • 57. Lesson 8: Giorgio Morandi
  • 58. Artist: Giorgio Morandi b. 1890 , d. 1964 • He was an Italian painter and printmaker who specialised in still life. • His paintings are noted for their tonal subtlety. • He often paints and draws simple subjects, such as vases, bottles and bowls. Think pair share: What do you notice about the viewpoints?
  • 59.
  • 60. Medium: Ink / mexed media Lesson objective: By the end of the lesson everyone will produce a tonal ink drawing. You will be using black ink or mixed media, working from the lightest tone to the darkest tone. Remember to use the whole page and consider composition. Arrange items such as paint pots and bottles to produce an interesting still life in the style of Morandi.
  • 61. Homework: 1 Produce a full colour copy of a work by the artist Michael Craig Martin. See examples below or pick your own. Success criteria: 1. Use vibrant colour 2. Use a fine pen to outline the shapes 3. Fill the entire a4 page. Homework: 1 Produce a full colour copy of a work by the artist Michael Craig Martin. See examples below or pick your own. Success criteria: 1. Use vibrant colour 2. Use a fine pen to outline the shapes 3. Fill the entire a4 page.
  • 62. Homework: 2 Draw the corner of your bedroom as illustrated in the example below. You should use tonal pencil or charcoal for this homework. Success criteria: 1. Draw at least 5 objects in situ 2. Use at least 3 tones. 3. Make sure to add lots of detail 4. Fill the whole a4 page Homework: 2 Draw the corner of your bedroom as illustrated in the example below. You should use tonal pencil or charcoal for this homework. Success criteria: 1. Draw at least 5 objects in situ 2. Use at least 3 tones. 3. Make sure to add lots of detail 4. Fill the whole a4 page
  • 64. Homework: 3 Arrange a series of object to form a temporary still life. Draw this using tonal pencil or charcoal from an interesting viewpoint. Success criteria: 1. Draw at least 5 balancing objects 2. Use at least 3 tones. 3. Make sure to add lots of detail 4. Fill the whole a4 page Homework: 3 Arrange a series of object to form a temporary still life. Draw this using tonal pencil or charcoal from an interesting viewpoint. Success criteria: 1. Draw at least 5 balancing objects 2. Use at least 3 tones. 3. Make sure to add lots of detail 4. Fill the whole a4 page
  • 65. 1. Use a range of tones 2. Add lots of detail 3. Fill the A4 page 4. Create an interesting composition Success criteria… Year 8 cover: Objects and viewpoints • Produce an A4 tonal drawing of an arrangement of objects from your pockets. You should use objects such as your keys and things from you pencil case. NO PHONE OR LANYARD allowed.

Notes de l'éditeur

  1. Instructions: Start with very transparent ink, darken very slightly each time, 4 layers min, finish with very dark tone for shadows.