Reading Visual Arts Module 1
Reading Visual Arts Module 1
Reading Visual Arts Module 1
JOEVENELLE P. MALLORCA
Instructor
Module
MODULE 1
Module Outcomes
At the end of the module the learner should have:
View works of arts “dynamically”, that is, to appreciate
and communicate simultaneously individual viewer
response, uniqueness of the work, its origin and
precedent, its potential as an inspiration and influence on
late art, and its relationship to particular cultural
movement.
Recognize formal qualities in two- and three dimensional
arts and read visual elements artistic and cultural styles
and symbols.
Engage
Vassily Kandinsky
Hourglass by:
Jennifer Weber
Pablo Picasso
Decorative Arts
The Decorative Arts comprise objects that possess qualities and were created by skilled
makers, but do not belong to the general categories of painting, sculpture and
architecture. They include, but are not limited to, the decoration and furnishing interiors,
personal adomment (costume and jewelry), and, later with the rise of industrialization,
product design.
The term Decorative Arts refers to wo0rks of the arts that do not fall readily into the
categories of painting, sculpture and architecture. During Renaissance, such objects were
greatly valued because of the high level of skills and costly materials involved in making
them. Items such as jewelry, arms and armour, tapestry, embroidery, woodwork and
ceramics were popular.
Textiles
Woodwork and Enamel- the art of creating images with pieces of inlaid wood reached
Europe in the mid-1300s from the Islamic world. Italian woodworkers produces benches,
cabinets and wall panelling featuring intricate inlaid pictures. In the early 1400s they began
incorporating three-dimensional scenes in their designs, drawing on new theories of
perspectives.
Ceramics- during the Renaissance, ceramics (objects made from clay) developed into a high
art form. Artists were inspired by glazed pottery from China and Muslim regions of the
Middle East and Spain. In Italy potters developed a technique known as majolica, which
involved glazing a clay object, painting a design on it, coating it with a clear glaze, and firing
in it. A similar type of ceramics, known as faience, emerged in France.
Painting
- Often called the most important form of the visual arts. It is about putting colors
on a canvass or a wall.
- Painters express their ideas through a mixture of colors and different brush
strokes.
- One of the oldest forms of visual art
Drawing
- Is creating a picture with a variety of tools, in most cases pencils, crayons, pens,
or markers.
- Artists draw on different types of surfaces, like paper or canvas.
- The first drawing was discovered in caves about 30,000 years.
- Ancient Egyptian drew on papyrus.
Photography
- Making pictures by letting the
light through the lenses of the
camera on to a film.
- In analog photography, light
was recorded on film, which
had to be chemically
developed.
- Images could be printed in
special paper.
Filmmaking
- Process of making film of moving images that they turn into films.
- A very expensive and complicated form of art, involving many task for example
script-writing, casting and editing film sequences before they can be shown to
an audience.
Printmaking
-an art that is made by covering a plate with ink and pressing it on the surface of
another object.
- Today prints are mostly
produced on paper today but
originally, they were pressed
on cloth or other objects.
- Plates are often made out of
woods or metals.
Sculpture
- Three-dimensional pieces of art that are
created by shaping various kinds of material
- Among the most popular are stone, steel,
plastic, ceramics and wood.
- Often referred to as plastic arts
Great! You are almost done. I am happy for you. It seems that you’ve
learned a lot in our journey. I appreciate your determination and diligence in
reading the module’s content and answering all our activities. Now, it’s time to
evaluate what you’ve learned from the start.
1. How Visual Art affect your chosen College Course? (10 points)
2. In what medium of Visual Art you are likely to be engaging in this semester? Why?
(15 points)
WRITTEN RUBRIC
FEATURES 10 8 6 5
Answers Writer clearly Writer clearly Writer Writer
answered all answered all answered attempted to
parts of the parts of the some parts of answer part
question in question in the question, of the
complete complete but left other question, but
sentences. sentences, but parts answer is
Student answer may not incomplete. unclear and
referred back be clear Answer may not in
to the not be in complete
question in complete sentences
their answer sentences.
Cite Writer cited Writer cited Writer may Writer did not
evidence for evidence for have cited cite evidence
all parts of some parts of evidence for from the text
their answer their answer part of their in any part of
directly from directly from the answer. Most their answer
the text; it is text. Some part of the
Refences:
Riddett-Moore, “Developing an Arts of Living Visual Arts Research, 39n (2), 116
Arts and Crafts (1977), Design for Arts in Education, 79 (1), 22-23