Second Quarter Module 1: Elements and Principles of Art in The Renaissance and Baroque Periods
Second Quarter Module 1: Elements and Principles of Art in The Renaissance and Baroque Periods
Second Quarter Module 1: Elements and Principles of Art in The Renaissance and Baroque Periods
ARTS
Second Quarter
Module 1: Elements and
Principles of Art in the
Renaissance and Baroque
Periods
(Week 1)
Arts – Grade 9
Alternative Delivery Mode
Quarter 2 – Module 1 – Week 1: Elements and Principles of Art in the Renaissance and
Baroque Period
First Edition, 2020
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Welcome to the Arts - Grade 9 Alternative Delivery Mode (ADM) Module on Elements
and Principles of Art in the Renaissance and Baroque Periods!
This module was collaboratively designed, developed and reviewed by educators both
from public and private institutions to assist you, the teacher or facilitator in helping the learners
meet the standards set by the K to 12 Curriculum while overcoming their personal, social, and
economic constraints in schooling.
This learning resource hopes to engage the learners into guided and independent
learning activities at their own pace and time. Furthermore, this also aims to help learners
acquire the needed 21st century skills while taking into consideration their needs and
circumstances.
In addition to the material in the main text, you will also see this box in the body of the
module:
As a facilitator, you are expected to orient the learners on how to use this module. You
also need to keep track of the learners' progress while allowing them to manage their own
learning. Furthermore, you are expected to encourage and assist the learners as they do the
tasks included in the module.
For the learner:
Welcome to the Arts – Grade 9 Alternative Delivery Mode (ADM) Module on Elements
and Principles of Art in the Renaissance and Baroque Periods!
This module was designed to provide you with fun and meaningful opportunities for
guided and independent learning at your own pace and time. You will be enabled to process
the contents of the learning resource while being an active learner.
This module has the following parts and corresponding icons:
What I Need to Know This will give you an idea of the skills or
competencies you are expected to learn in the
module.
1. analyze the elements and principles of art that give these characteristics;
2. appreciate the different elements of art and principles of the Renaissance and
Baroque Period; and
3. create artwork by applying the principles of design and the elements of arts based
on the examples given.
What I Know
You begin with the module proper, take this test to find out how much you already know
about our topic.
Instructions: Use the pictures below to check how much you know about this topic. Classify
the different artworks/pictures base on the elements and principles of design where they
belong, by putting the letters on the table. Write your answer on your answer sheets.
LINE SHAPE FORM TEXTURE COLOR SPACE
1 2 3 4 5 6
Find and encircle all the elements of arts that are hidden in the grid. The words may be hidden
in any direction (vertical, horizontal, diagonal). Write your answers in a separate sheet of paper.
S K S H A L E X R R L
S H E A L I S M E F S
V H A U E N E O A I V
R T C P L R R T L Z A
D Y P X E A O E I A N
E L L H H C L X S I A
P E R S P E A T M V T
S S E L G R Y P F H O
L I G H T S T R E J M
W U V T L I N E I S Y
Well, how was it? Do you think you did well? Compare your
answers with those in the Answer Key on page _____ to find out.
If all your answers are correct, very good! This shows that
you already know how much about the topics in this module. You
may still study the module to review what you already know. Who
knows you might learn a few more new things as well.
If you get a low score, don’t feel bad. This means that this
module is for you. It will help you understand some important
concepts that you can apply in your daily life. If you study this
module carefully, you will learn the answers to all the items in the
test and a lot more! Are you ready?
You may go now to the next page to begin Lesson 1.
Lesson Elements of Art Applied in
1 Renaissance and Baroque
Periods.
What’s In
Arts can be seen in all aspect of life. It is everywhere. It can be seen in our
surroundings. The popular feeling about art is that it exists only in concert
halls, museums, and art galleries in a world by itself, which are accessible only
to those who can afford to pay for its enjoyment or to the critics and scholars
who take time to study the art and objects of the art.
What’s New
Activity 1
Instructions: Analyze the image at the center, then answer the questions provided in each
quadrant. Write your answers in your answer sheets.
DESCRIPTION ANALYSIS
INTERPRETATION JUDGEMENT
https://images.app.goo.gl/B4jRsSBsvrjnQn1C8
DESCRIPTION ANALYSIS
What are the things do you see in What elements of arts were used by
the artwork? the artists?
INTERPRETATION JUDGEMENT
Now that you are done, you may proceed to learn more. Are you ready?
Go ahead, read and understand to learn more.
ENJOY!
What is It
The Renaissance period (1400-1600) derived its name from the French word that
means “rebirth”. The artworks during this period were inspired by the Greek artistic
tradition, although they became more worldly. They portrayed individuality and the value
of the human being was its motivating factor. The artists were interested in showing the
human character, the capabilities of the mind and body, social relationships, economic
condition, and the people’s place in political life.
The Renaissance period enabled human being to achieve their highest potentials
by applying perfection of beauty, and by practicing intellectual exchanges, exploration,
and experimentation. This is why the Renaissance period is referred to as “the age of
humanism”. Renaissance art and culture travelled around the globe through trade and
conquest.
FORMS AND STYLE IN RENAISSANCE PAINTING
Forms and style are evident in every Renaissance painting. Forms encompasses the
elements of art and the principles of organization that guide the artist in art-making. The
elements of art include the qualities that we experience through our senses: line, shape,
forms, texture, color, space, movement. The principles of organization show how sensory
properties are organized to achieve a sense of unity and harmony, variety, rhythm,
proportion, balance and perspective. Style is the manner in which the artist expresses
himself or herself, which influenced by the characteristics of an art historical period. For
example, in Impressionism, the brushstrokes are rough and thick and the lines of the subject
are very well defined. In this period, the artists wanted to record the interplay between light
and color. Artists are recognized by their viewers through their style.
1. Line is the foundation of all drawing. It is the first and most versatile of the visual elements
of art. Line in an artwork can be used in many different ways. It can be used to suggest shape,
pattern, form, structure, growth, depth, distance, rhythm, movement and a range of emotions.
2. Shape can be natural or man-made, regular or irregular, flat (2-dimensional) or solid (3-
dimensional), representational or abstract, geometric or organic, transparent
Giotto, Lamentation
4. Texture is the surface quality of an artwork - the roughness or smoothness of the material
from which it is made.
5. Color is the visual element that has the strongest effect on our emotions. We use color to
create the mood or atmosphere of an artwork.
The term Baroque was derived from the Portuguese word barocco which means “irregularly
shaped pearl or stone”. It describes a fairly complex idiom and focuses on painting, sculptures
as well as architectures.
Baroque paintings illustrated key elements of Catholic Dogma, either directly in Biblical
artworks or indirectly in imaginary or symbolic work. The gestures are broader than Mannerist
gestures: less ambiguous, less arcane, and mysterious.
Great Job! Now you have learned the different elements let’s check
how far you have done with it. Do the activities and assessments that
are prepared for you to work on. Let’s get it on.
Lesson PRINCIPLES OF DESIGN IN
RENAISSANCE AND
2 BAROQUE PERIOD
PRINCIPLES OF ART
The “principles of design” are mechanisms of arrangement and organization for the various
elements of design in artwork. Please note that different sources might list slightly different
versions of the “Principles of Design,” but the core fundamentals are essentially the same.
What’s More
EXAMINE ME!
Looking on the picture below analyze what are the different elements and principles of art
where manifested and answer the following questions.
1. What elements and principles of design are manifested on the picture?
2. How does their elements and principles are affecting the artwork?
Compare the Principles of design and the elements of artworks during the Renaissance and
Baroque Period.
What I Can Do
In these lessons, you will create artworks integrating themes found through direct
observation, personal experiences and imagination. You will also select appropriate art
materials and tools to interpret subjects or themes traditionally and experimentally.
You will create a nonobjective composition. Your drawing will be based on your
imagination as well as direct observation of the art elements. You will use a variety of art
materials and tools.
WHAT YOU WILL NEED
1. Using one continuous pencil line, make a design that fills the sheet of drawing paper.
Use your imagination. Your line should be straight in some places and curved in others.
Allow your pencil to drift off the edge. Create a design that has both large and small
shapes.
2. Use a ruler to divide your paper into eight rectangles. Number the boxed areas lightly
in pencil. You may order the numbers any way you like.
3. Using the primary hues of crayons, color all the shapes in area 1. Using light and dark
values of colored pencils, color in all the shapes in Area 2. Using the bright and dull
intensities of colored pencils, color in all the shapes in Area 3.
4. Using the pencil, go over the lines in Area 4. Press down on the pencil to add variety
to your line quality. Make some of the lines darker and thicker. Using pencil, crayons,
colored pencils, or markers, create three different textures to fill all the shapes in area
5.
5. Using markers, draw outlines around all the shapes in Area 6. Fill in some of the
shapes with the markers. Leave others white. To show space, use a pencil to draw a
new shape that overlaps the existing shape in Area 7. Add to this feeling of space by
using colored pencil to color this new shape in an intense or bright hue.
6. Using a pencil, shade the shapes in Area 8 to suggest three-dimensional forms.
Gradually increase the pressure on the pencil to create the illusion or depth.
7. See the sample picture below on how to use the different elements and principles of
artworks.
Rubrics
Assess your performance by putting a check (/) mark under the column that best describes
how you completed your work based on the criteria below.
Very Needs
Good Average
Criteria Good improvement
6pts 4pts
10pts 2pts
Creativity/originality
Produced high quality, creative, unique, and
original work
Exhibited in an innovative idea in making the
project
Demonstrate understanding of art elements
and principles of design
Craftsmanship
Produced neat and complete work project
Demonstrate skillful use of art tools and
media
Performance
Followed directions and requirements
Produced good quality work
Total
Assessment
Instructions: Answer the following and try to recall what you have just read.
Write the letter that corresponds to the correct answer on your answer sheet.
_____1. A feeling of equality in weight, attention, or attraction of the various visual elements
within the pictorial field as a means of accomplishing organic unity.
A. Balance C. Emphasis
B. Variety D. Movement
_____2. It is the relationship in scale between one element and another, or between a whole
object and one of its parts.
A. Balance C. Proportion
B. Variety D. Movement
_____3. Which of the following is another word for "center of interest"?
A. Focal Point C. Emphasis
B. Dominance D. All of the above
_____4. It is the lightness or darkness of a color. The tonal values of an artwork can be
adjusted to alter its expressive character.
A. Line C. Tone
B. Shape D. Color
_____5. It is the physical volume of a shape and the space that it occupies.
A. Form C. Tone
B. Shape D. Color
_____6. It is complemented to unity and harmony, and is needed to create visual interest.
Without unity and harmony, an image is chaotic and “unreadable;” without variety it is dull and
uninteresting.
A. Form C. Value
B. Shape D. Color
____7. A few good strategies to evoke a sense of movement (among many others) are using
diagonal lines, placing shapes so that they extend beyond the boundaries of the picture plane,
and using changing values.
A. Movement C. Value
B. Shape D. Color
_____8. It is the path our eyes when we look at a work of art, and it is generally very important
to keep a viewer’s eyes engaged in the work.
A. Form C. Tone
B. Shape D. Movement
_____9. A continuance, a flow, or a feeling of movement achieved by the repetition of
regulated visual information.
A. Form C. Tone
B. Rhythm D. Movement
_____10. It is an art and design that visually satisfying effect of combining similar, related
elements.
A. Form C. Tone
B. Harmony D. Movement
Answer Key
WHAT I KNOW
ASSESSMENT
TEST A
1. C 1. A
2. A 2. C
3. D
3. D 4. C
4. B 5. A
5. E 6. C
7. A
6. F 8. D
9. B
10. B
TEST B
SHAPE
REALISM
LIGHT
LINE
References
K to 12 Curriculum Guide ART
http://learn.leighcotnoir.com/artspeak/principles/
http://www.artyfactory.com/art_appreciation/visual-elements/visual-elements.html
https://www.google.com/search?q=artworks+of+renaissance+period+linear+pers
pective&tbm=isch&ved=2ahUKEwiembzsnZ7tAhVPBaYKHcQlCjUQ2-
cCegQIABAA&oq=artworks+of+renaissance+period+linear+perspective&gs_lcp=
CgNpbWcQA1CLqQFY2s4BYP_SAWgAcAB4AYABsguIAYEjkgENMS4yLjEuNS
0xLjEuMpgBAKABAaoBC2d3cy13aXotaW1nwAEB&sclient=img&ei=FJa-
X56_Mc-
KmAXEy6ioAw&bih=600&biw=1366&rlz=1C1GCEA_enPH863PH863&hl=en
https://www.britannica.com/art/Renaissance-art
http://wpmsart.weebly.com/renaissance-perspective1--point-linear-
perspective.html