Visual Art
Painting Photography Filmmaking Printmaking
Drawing Sculpture Fashion
• 1. starts with lines made from pens, pencils, or other drawing tools.
• 2. usually uses a canvas, brushes, and paints.
• 3. is artistic photos made with a camera.
• 4. is a form made from materials such as clay, wood, or metal.
• 5. design uses cloth with the intent of display through being worn.
• 6. is when an image is taken from one form and transferred to another.
• 7. is similar to photography but with a series of stills used to create motion
or a story.
The Visual
Arts
• creative art whose
products are to be
appreciated by sight,
such as painting,
sculpture, and film (as
contrasted with
literature and music).
What are three types of visual art?
•Three types of visual art are painting, photography,
and sculpture. The tools and techniques used to create
these works are very different (paint vs. camera vs.
clay), and the end works will also look very different.
However, the similarity is that they are all objects that
express a message, idea, or feeling, using the viewer's
eyesight in mind.
What makes a visual art?
• . A visual art is work that has visual
characteristics such as shapes and colours
that most people will be able to not only
see, but find emotion or meaning with when
they look at it. For example, it may be a
realistic photograph of a child's smile, or an
abstract painting representing death in war
What is the main focus of visual arts?
•The main focus of visual arts is creative
expression through visual means. This means
there is communication without the need for
words and without the need for the other
human senses.
The following are examples of visual
art
• Drawing starts with lines made from pens, pencils, or other drawing tools.
• Painting usually uses a canvas, brushes, and paints.
• Photography is artistic photos made with a camera.
• Sculpture is a form made from materials such as clay, wood, or metal.
• Fashion design uses cloth with the intent of display through being worn.
• Printmaking is when an image is taken from one form and transferred to
another.
• Filmmaking is similar to photography but with a series of stills used to
create motion or a story.
Visual Arts include:
• Fine Arts – refers to an art form practiced
mainly for its aesthetic value and its beauty
rather than its functional value.
• Contemporary Arts – include number of
modern art forms such as: assemblage,
collage, mixed-media, conceptual art,
installation, happenings and performance
art, along with film-based disciplines such as
photography, video art, and animation, or
any combination thereof.
• Decorative Arts and
Crafts – includes
ceramics and studio
pottery, mosaic art,
mobiles, tapestry, glass
art, and others.
• Other – graphic design,
fashion design, and
interior design. New
types of body art may
also fall in this category
which includes tattoo
art, face painting, and
body painting.
The Subject of Art
Representational of Objective
• Representational art or figurative art
represents objects or events in the real
world, usually looking easily
recognizable. It uses form and is
concerned with what is to be depicted
in the artwork.
Non-representational
or Non-objective
• These are those arts without
any reference to anything
outside itself. It is non-
objective because it has no
recognizable objects. It is
abstract in the sense that it
doesn’t represent real
objects in our world.
Sources of Subject Art
Primary Sources
• Provide first hand
testimony or direct
evidence concerning a
topic under
investigation. They are
created by witnesses or
recorders who
experienced the events
or conditions being
documented.
Secondary Sources
• Interpret and analyze
primary sources.
Because they are often
written significantly
after events by parties
not directly involved but
who have special
expertise, they may
provide historical
context or critical
perspectives.
Some of these
sources of art
subject are:
1. Nature
2. History
3. Greek and Roman
mythology
4. The Judaeo-Christian
tradition
5. Oriental Sacred Texts
6. Other works of art
Kinds of Subject
1. Still Life
2. Landscapes, Seascapes
& Cityscapes
3. Animals
4. Portraits
5. Figures
6. Everyday Life
7. History and Legends
8. Religion and Mythology
9. Dreams and Fantasies
Different Levels of Meaning
Factual Meaning
• The literal meaning or
narrative content in the
work which can be directly
apprehended because the
objects presented are easily
recognized.
Conventional
Meaning
• Refers to the special
meaning that certain object
has in a particular culture or
group of people.
Subjective Meaning
• Any personal meaning
consciously or unconsciously
conveyed by the artist using a
private symbolism which stems
from his own association of
certain objects, actions, or colors
with past experience.

visualarts-190618145426.pptx jsksritonbvjahdjidjaosoas

  • 4.
  • 5.
    Painting Photography FilmmakingPrintmaking Drawing Sculpture Fashion • 1. starts with lines made from pens, pencils, or other drawing tools. • 2. usually uses a canvas, brushes, and paints. • 3. is artistic photos made with a camera. • 4. is a form made from materials such as clay, wood, or metal. • 5. design uses cloth with the intent of display through being worn. • 6. is when an image is taken from one form and transferred to another. • 7. is similar to photography but with a series of stills used to create motion or a story.
  • 6.
    The Visual Arts • creativeart whose products are to be appreciated by sight, such as painting, sculpture, and film (as contrasted with literature and music).
  • 7.
    What are threetypes of visual art? •Three types of visual art are painting, photography, and sculpture. The tools and techniques used to create these works are very different (paint vs. camera vs. clay), and the end works will also look very different. However, the similarity is that they are all objects that express a message, idea, or feeling, using the viewer's eyesight in mind.
  • 8.
    What makes avisual art? • . A visual art is work that has visual characteristics such as shapes and colours that most people will be able to not only see, but find emotion or meaning with when they look at it. For example, it may be a realistic photograph of a child's smile, or an abstract painting representing death in war
  • 9.
    What is themain focus of visual arts? •The main focus of visual arts is creative expression through visual means. This means there is communication without the need for words and without the need for the other human senses.
  • 10.
    The following areexamples of visual art • Drawing starts with lines made from pens, pencils, or other drawing tools. • Painting usually uses a canvas, brushes, and paints. • Photography is artistic photos made with a camera. • Sculpture is a form made from materials such as clay, wood, or metal. • Fashion design uses cloth with the intent of display through being worn. • Printmaking is when an image is taken from one form and transferred to another. • Filmmaking is similar to photography but with a series of stills used to create motion or a story.
  • 11.
    Visual Arts include: •Fine Arts – refers to an art form practiced mainly for its aesthetic value and its beauty rather than its functional value. • Contemporary Arts – include number of modern art forms such as: assemblage, collage, mixed-media, conceptual art, installation, happenings and performance art, along with film-based disciplines such as photography, video art, and animation, or any combination thereof.
  • 12.
    • Decorative Artsand Crafts – includes ceramics and studio pottery, mosaic art, mobiles, tapestry, glass art, and others. • Other – graphic design, fashion design, and interior design. New types of body art may also fall in this category which includes tattoo art, face painting, and body painting.
  • 13.
  • 14.
    Representational of Objective •Representational art or figurative art represents objects or events in the real world, usually looking easily recognizable. It uses form and is concerned with what is to be depicted in the artwork.
  • 15.
    Non-representational or Non-objective • Theseare those arts without any reference to anything outside itself. It is non- objective because it has no recognizable objects. It is abstract in the sense that it doesn’t represent real objects in our world.
  • 16.
  • 17.
    Primary Sources • Providefirst hand testimony or direct evidence concerning a topic under investigation. They are created by witnesses or recorders who experienced the events or conditions being documented.
  • 18.
    Secondary Sources • Interpretand analyze primary sources. Because they are often written significantly after events by parties not directly involved but who have special expertise, they may provide historical context or critical perspectives.
  • 19.
    Some of these sourcesof art subject are: 1. Nature 2. History 3. Greek and Roman mythology 4. The Judaeo-Christian tradition 5. Oriental Sacred Texts 6. Other works of art
  • 20.
    Kinds of Subject 1.Still Life 2. Landscapes, Seascapes & Cityscapes 3. Animals 4. Portraits 5. Figures 6. Everyday Life 7. History and Legends 8. Religion and Mythology 9. Dreams and Fantasies
  • 21.
  • 22.
    Factual Meaning • Theliteral meaning or narrative content in the work which can be directly apprehended because the objects presented are easily recognized.
  • 23.
    Conventional Meaning • Refers tothe special meaning that certain object has in a particular culture or group of people.
  • 24.
    Subjective Meaning • Anypersonal meaning consciously or unconsciously conveyed by the artist using a private symbolism which stems from his own association of certain objects, actions, or colors with past experience.

Editor's Notes

  • #4 Artist: Emily Foster
  • #6 Sculpture by Michael James Talbot
  • #11 Assemblage - a work of art made by grouping found or unrelated objects. Installation - an artistic genre that "involves the configuration or installation of objects in a space, such as a room or warehouse. E.g. Leeroy New (Filipino) Photograph by Jed Regala
  • #12 Foothills Ceramic Arts Museum, California Body Painting: Mona Turnbull
  • #14 Mojarto Monalisa by Da Vinci
  • #15 Composition VII (1913) – Wassily Kandinsky
  • #16 Dan Flavin, ‘Untitled (to Don Judd, colorist)’ 1–5 (1987) Photo: Emma Hogan Photography
  • #17 Photo taken at Sudan by Kevin Carter
  • #18 Spoliarium. 19th Century. Juan Luna. The painting features a glimpse of Roman history centered on the bloody carnage brought by gladiatorial matches.
  • #21 Photo by Fiji Kama