Identify, define, and discuss the visual elements and principles of design and their use in art and visual communication (course level learning objective)
Whether an artist creates two-dimensional or three-dimensional art, works in a traditional medium like painting, or makes art using the latest technology, all artists use the same basic visual building blocks of form (elements) and strategies of visual organization (principles) to achieve visual unity.
In this section you will learn about the differences between form and content and be introduced to the basic elements and principles of design. You’ll also learn about types of representation in art. All of these concepts are integral to formalism, which is a method of studying artwork by analyzing and describing it in purely in terms of visual effects.
Check out the video for a quick introduction to formalism:
Take a look at Picasso’s painting, Guernica, completed in 1937. At first glance it’s an incredibly busy and complex arrangement of forms. How can formalism be used to provide compositional understanding of this work? How can it be used to analyze and describe the arrangement of forms and how they contribute to a viewer’s experience and interpretation of the painting? Read on, and you’ll find out.
Identify and describe the difference between form and content as used in art
Identify and define the five elements of design
Identify and distinguish how the principles of design are used to visually organize the elements of design
Distinguish between representational (realistic), abstract, and nonrepresentational (or non-objective) imagery
OK, let’s get started!