DRAWING/LISA ROGERS
Thursday, December 29, 2011
No posts for Semester 2/ I do not have a drawing section!
No drawing section this semester! I have two new sections/ Sculpture and Painting! Check out the new blogs!
Sunday, December 11, 2011
Final Reflections
Final Reflection
Documenting your learning
Developmental Workbook
Final-
Reflection involves looking back on experiences. Reflecting helps to reconstruct, analyze, and evaluate what happened. At a time and place away from the immediacy of the experience.
Reflect on the following questions!
1. Describe in detail how your planned for the artwork. (How did you create your piece? What was the process? What did you need to know?) What were you trying to do? Use value to create the illusion of depth without outlining? (example)
2. What materials did you use? How did the media influence the artwork?
3. What ideas, meaning, message or feelings have you expressed in your artwork?
4. In what ways did you take risks?
5. What problems or difficulties did you encounter? How did you solve them?
6. What suggestions did you get from your classmates or teacher?
7. What possibilities or ideas for future artwork did you get from this project?
8. What artists influenced your work? (explain why or how)
9. What concepts or skills did you learn about yourself, or about the world?
10. What was enjoyable or rewarding about making this art?
Final Reflection Rubric/Assessment/ Summative
¬-Photographs of Images included
-Reflections
4- You explain
-All the reasons behind what, how, and why?
(process, with details is included)
-Your creative process and problem solving
(What happened, What worked? What didn’t?)
-How successful your final result is. (What worked? What improvements or
Changes would you make next time?)
-You answer ALL of the questions. The entry is well organized, neat and clean. The work is documented using visual images. Your opinions/personal responses are stated in depth. It shows understanding of the art process and personal growth.
3- You explain
-what, how and why
-changes you made along the way with your reasons
-the problems you had and your ways of solving them
-how successful your final result is.
You answer most of the questions. The personal responses are stated with some depth. It shows understanding of the art process.
2-You describe what, how, and why, as well as what worked well and what didn’t. You answer about 50% of the questions. The reflection is rushed and unclear.
1-You describe what you did but there are hardly any other ideas about how you did it. You only answer 1 or 2 questions. Incomplete. Very messy with no thought or care. Minimal opinion or personal response is present.
Documenting your learning
Developmental Workbook
Final-
Reflection involves looking back on experiences. Reflecting helps to reconstruct, analyze, and evaluate what happened. At a time and place away from the immediacy of the experience.
Reflect on the following questions!
1. Describe in detail how your planned for the artwork. (How did you create your piece? What was the process? What did you need to know?) What were you trying to do? Use value to create the illusion of depth without outlining? (example)
2. What materials did you use? How did the media influence the artwork?
3. What ideas, meaning, message or feelings have you expressed in your artwork?
4. In what ways did you take risks?
5. What problems or difficulties did you encounter? How did you solve them?
6. What suggestions did you get from your classmates or teacher?
7. What possibilities or ideas for future artwork did you get from this project?
8. What artists influenced your work? (explain why or how)
9. What concepts or skills did you learn about yourself, or about the world?
10. What was enjoyable or rewarding about making this art?
Final Reflection Rubric/Assessment/ Summative
¬-Photographs of Images included
-Reflections
4- You explain
-All the reasons behind what, how, and why?
(process, with details is included)
-Your creative process and problem solving
(What happened, What worked? What didn’t?)
-How successful your final result is. (What worked? What improvements or
Changes would you make next time?)
-You answer ALL of the questions. The entry is well organized, neat and clean. The work is documented using visual images. Your opinions/personal responses are stated in depth. It shows understanding of the art process and personal growth.
3- You explain
-what, how and why
-changes you made along the way with your reasons
-the problems you had and your ways of solving them
-how successful your final result is.
You answer most of the questions. The personal responses are stated with some depth. It shows understanding of the art process.
2-You describe what, how, and why, as well as what worked well and what didn’t. You answer about 50% of the questions. The reflection is rushed and unclear.
1-You describe what you did but there are hardly any other ideas about how you did it. You only answer 1 or 2 questions. Incomplete. Very messy with no thought or care. Minimal opinion or personal response is present.
Thursday, December 8, 2011
Final Notes
Last day to turn in Eye, Nose, Mouth Drawing : 12/7/11
Final Self-Portraits: Due on Final Day/No exceptions!
Developmental Workbooks: Due on Final Day!
Final Self-Portraits: Due on Final Day/No exceptions!
Developmental Workbooks: Due on Final Day!
Saturday, November 12, 2011
Beyond the student i.d.: The self portrait!
How does an artist tell more about themselves when creating a self-portrait?
How do we go beyond the mugshot, or student i.d. photo as a representation of ourselves?
Each of us carries with us our own individuality. How do we represent this in our self-portraits?
How do we go beyond the mugshot, or student i.d. photo as a representation of ourselves?
Each of us carries with us our own individuality. How do we represent this in our self-portraits?
Sunday, October 9, 2011
Drawing the Skull with Value! Using what we have learned!
Now we are going to put what we have learned about value into a more realistic form!
Be aware of negative space!
No gridding!
Use your eyes!
Trust yourself!
Be aware of negative space!
No gridding!
Use your eyes!
Trust yourself!
Wrap Up! Figures in Space with a variety of media
Finish 1,2,3 Objects in space assignment.
Try everything!
Charcoal
China Marker
Acrylic
Pencil
Conte
Use what you know about shading from the shading technique exercise!
Try everything!
Charcoal
China Marker
Acrylic
Pencil
Conte
Use what you know about shading from the shading technique exercise!
Monday, September 26, 2011
Value/Shading Techniques/Making Marks
...particularly with drawing.
Let's look at how you define failure with drawing.
Have you failed if you do not draw what you have conceived in your head before you began the drawing?
In this class, you should be drawing what you see, NOT an ideal figure.
Have you failed if you do not draw what you see in front of you?
How much do you really see? Are you focused on details or the overall picture; the overall figure? What is more important; the individual fingers and small facial details or torso, legs, arms, head?
Have you failed if you make mistakes?
If you don't make mistakes, then how are you going to learn anything other than what you already know?
Let's look at how you define failure with drawing.
Have you failed if you do not draw what you have conceived in your head before you began the drawing?
In this class, you should be drawing what you see, NOT an ideal figure.
Have you failed if you do not draw what you see in front of you?
How much do you really see? Are you focused on details or the overall picture; the overall figure? What is more important; the individual fingers and small facial details or torso, legs, arms, head?
Have you failed if you make mistakes?
If you don't make mistakes, then how are you going to learn anything other than what you already know?
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