Monday, October 27, 2014

Value Project

For this project I drew five random idems with value. The goal was to use contrast from light to dark to make the idems look three demential and life-like. In majority of artwork I create, the visual interest comes from shading. So I feel like I gained less out of this project then someone who hasn't done some of the projects I've done. Although, I was able to expand on what I already knew and practice in areas I wasn't as good at, like cylinders. Also I have a tendency to draw very light and this project helped me to work outside that and practice drawing with a larger range of shades.  

Negative Space Still Life

To start this peice, I made an outline of a still life that had masking tape, pearls, flowers, and other objects. This outline had no interior contour lines. Then, I filled in the negative space behind the outline with a pattern. My orginal plan was to create a floral pattern but I couldn't find a referance picture that didn't remind me of an old lady's curtains. So I started to just add random flowers and wildlife I liked. The pattern I created was radial, with its center point in the top left corner. I used various colored pencils for this project and even though the main principle I was trying to use was pattern, I used balance by placing smaller items around the larger ones to make the weight of the piece even. I used contrast a lot through color. I have blues and greens next to reds and oranges. I also have unity because I used color pencils as a consistant medium. This project helped me to think "outside the box." I would never have done a project like this my own, but I think it was a good exersice to see things in an abstact and unique way: using the right side of the brain. During this peice I would turn my paper and draw something. This made several of the idems in the pattern sideways, which I would have done differently I could change it. Although, I liked the way this piece came out and I think the sideways objects gave visual intrest to the artwork. 

Emphasis Portrait

This is a portrait I created to represent emphasis. I did this through color, isolation, and light to dark contrast. I used drawing pencils and several tints and shades of blue colored pencils. This shows what I learned about emphasis as a principle. Before this project, I knew very little about it, nothing much more than it was used to draw your eye to a specific part of the peice. Through what I learned using the Exploring Visual Design  textbook and in class, I made this artwork. In the future, if I make another emphasis piece, I would incorporate more solid examples of the principle.