The Elements and Principles of Organization in the Arts.docx

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    The Elements and Principles of Organization in the Arts

    Main source: Prof. Felipe de Leon, Jr.additional information: Steven P.C. Fernandez

    BASIC ART TERMS

    Mediumthe physical means or stuff through which we come in contact with the work of art; the material out ofwhich the artist creates his work. The artists choice of medium affects expressive content. (In general,medium for the visual arts is color, tone for music, words for Literature, and action and voice for thecombined arts like theater and dance.)

    Technique- the way the artist uses his materials and medium in expressing an idea, feeling or sensation

    Elements- properties or qualities of the medium: line, color, shape, texture, volume, etc.

    Subject Matter- the recognizable objects, persons or incidents represented in a work of art. A work ofart having no subject is also called Non-Objective or Non-Representation Art.

    Visual Form (Aural Form in Music)- the particular manner in which the elements exist or appear; thespecific manner in which they were used by the artist in terms of arts and the whole whether or not ininteraction, relationship, or fusion with subject matter in order to express an idea, feeling, or sensation

    Expressive Content (or expressive significance)- the ideas, feelings, sensations (theme, message,meaning) presented in a work of art. Expressive content arises from the effect of visual or aural form or,if there is subject matter, f rom the combined effect or unique fusion of subject matter and particular

    visual form. In trying to determine the expressive content of a work of art with subject matter, we mayask ourselves: What attitude, feeling, idea or statement about the subject matter is the artist trying toconvey through the specific form that he used?

    THE ELEMENTS OF THE VISUAL ARTS(Painting, Sculpture, and Architecture)

    Color- a visual attribute of bodies or substances distinct from their spatial characteristics anddepe nding upon the spectral composition of the wavelengths of radiant energy (Funk and Wagnalls,1966) It has three dimensions: hue, value, and saturation

    Value- degree of lightness or darkness (related terms: tone, tonal value)

    Light - (illusion or actual use of) luminosity

    Texture- the surface quality of an object, either real or made to appear real, which appeals to thetactile imagination or feeling (related term: tactile value)

    Line- one or two dimensional mark which indicates direction, orientation, movement or energy

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    Shape (or Form)- outward form; configuration; contour

    Related terms:

    format the shape of the frame and the general arrangement of shapes within it

    plane a flat or uncurved surface

    Volume- the amount of space a body occupies; that quality of an object which enables us to know that ithas length, breadth and thickness; solidity as a quality opposed to relative flatness; bulk or roundness

    Mass (or FORM)- the amount of matter a body contains; in painting refers not to bulk but t o theprincipal areas in which form is distributed and realized as distinct from detail

    Perspective-a. the art or theory of representing on a flat or curved surface solid objects, figures, architecture,

    other surfaces conceived of as not lying in that surface.

    b. the art of conveying the impression of depth or distancec. delineation of objects as they appear to the eye

    Movement- illusion of or actual movement

    Size- relative magnitude of an object

    Number- amount, quantity

    COLOR- The three dimensions or attribute of color are:

    Hue - the name of the color, such as red, green or blue; that quality that enables us to distinguish onecolor from another.Hue indicates the colors position on the color wheel

    Value- lightness and darkness of a color

    Saturation (or INTENSITY) - any colors degree of purity or strength. This is determined by the quantity ofthe dominant hue. Scarlet, a vivid red, is almost pure red. Rose beige is red neutralized with gray.

    Achromatic colors include black and white and the entire series of intermediate grays, varying only invalue.

    Chromatic colors contain hue, value and saturation