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Group 5 Garate, Ronniel

Tupang, Aaron-j Muello, Faith


Fajardo, Shina Aina Camille Pabu-aya,
Onayan, Steeve Crystal
Painting as a Visual Art
-It is about putting
colors on a canvas or a
wall
Painting
-it is the application of pigment
(color) on any flat
two-dimensional surfaces
Painting Tool
1. Easel
- to hold the painting on
which the painter is working
2. Palette - it holds and where
paint is mixed
3. Spatula / Palette knife
- used for mixing colors and on
occasion, for applying colors to and
scraping colors from the painting
surface.
4. Brushes of varied shapes and sizes

used in the creation of single painting. Other than
brushes: a painter can use sponges, rages,
fingers, or spraying instruments.
Painting Media
An artwork's medium refers to the
different materials or supplies that an
artist utilizes in order to create a work of
art.
1. Oil - the art of applying
oil-based colors to surface
to create a picture or a
design.
2. Water color - in art, it is a type of
painting with pigments (color) dissolved
in water. It is produced by binding dry
powdered pigment fixed with gum
Arabic, a gum obtained from acacia
tress, that solidifies through
evaporation, but which is soluble in
water.
Types of Water Color

A. Transparent water colors


- come in tubes or pans.

B. Opaque watercolor - also


called gouache, is usually
obtained in tubes, but are also
familiar in the form of poster
paints.
3. Fresco - comes from the
Italian word “fresco” which
means fresh.
Types of Fresco
A. Buon fresco (true fresco) - the painting must be done
quickly and confined to the essentials.

B. Fresco secco (dry fresco) - the paint is applied to dry


plaster; it requires a binding medium such as gum and may
flake. The effect of Fresco secco is inferior to buon fresco;
the color is not as clear and the painting is less durable.
4. Tempera - painting involves the
application of powdered pigments mixed with
egg yolks to a panel, usually wood (often
covered with linen), on which several coats of
gesso (plaster of Paris mixed with glue) have
been carefully rubbed down to create a glass-
smooth surface.
5. Acrylics
- water-based paints
made from acrylic resins. It has
a quick-drying property,
durable and adaptable to almost
any surface. Can be cleaned
from brushes simply with
water.
6. Encaustic - a painting

medium that combines dry


pigments with heat-softened
wax and resin. Produces a
highly durable finish.
Techniques and Styles in Painting

Cloisonnosism
- In French painting, the term "cloisonnism" (after the
French for "partition") describes a style of
expressionism associated.
Examples of Cloisonnism

"Tropical Conversation" "Café Terrace at Night"


By: Paul Gauguin By: Van Gogh
Constructivism
- Constructivism was a concept that emerged from
Russia in the early 20th century. At its core,
constructivism operates from the position that art should
serve a social purpose that extended beyond aesthetics.
Examples of Constructivism

"Tatlin's Tower"
"Proun Room"
Cubism
- Cubism is one of the most influential art styles of the
twentieth century, which radically broke away from the
long-standing tendency in art to attempt to create the
illusion of a real three-dimensional space from a fixed
viewpoint on the two-dimensional canvas.
Examples of Cubism

"Les Demoiselles d'Avignon". "Houses at I'Estaque"

(The young ladies of Avignon) By: Georges Braque


By: Pablo Picasso
Expressionism
- An artistic style in which the artist seeks to
depict not objective reality but rather the
subjective emotions and responses that objects
and events arouse within a person.
Examples of Expressionism

"The old Guitarist" "Evening of Karl


Johan"
By: Pablo Picasso By: Edvard
Fauvism
- Fauve artists used pure, brilliant colour
aggressively applied straight from the paint
tubes to create a sense of an explosion on
the canvas.
Examples of Fauvism

" Woman with a Hat" "The river


Seine at Chatou"

By: Henri Matisse By:


Futurism
- Italian Futurismo, Russian Futurizm, early 20th-
century artistic movement centred in Italy that
emphasized the dynamism, speed, energy, and power of
the machine and the vitality, change, and restlessness of
modern life.
Examples of Futurism

"The city of Rises" "Funeral of Anarchist


Gallo"
Impressionism
Impressionism describes a style of painting
developed in France during the mid-to-late 19th
century; characterizations of the style include small,
visible brushstrokes that offer the bare impression of
form, unblended color and an emphasis on the accurate
depiction of natural light.
Examples of Impressionism

“Woman with a Parasol -


Madame Monet and Her Son”
By: Claude Monet
Pointillism
Pointillism is a technique of painting in
which small, distinct dots of color are applied in
patterns to form an image.
Examples of Pointillism

“The Eiffel
Tower”
By: Georges
Seurat
Realism
In its specific sense realism refers to a mid
nineteenth century artistic movement characterized
by subjects painted from everyday life in a
naturalistic manner; however the term is also
generally used to describe artworks painted in a
realistic almost photographic way
Examples of Realism
“THE GROSS
CLINIC”
By: Thomas Eakins
in 1875
Collage
Collage describes both the technique and
the resulting work of art in which pieces of
paper, photographs, fabric and other ephemera
are arranged and stuck down onto a supporting
surface
Examples of Collage

“The Hotel Eden”


By: Joseph
Cornell, 1945
Ceramics
Handbuilding is an ancient pottery-making or
ceramics technique that involves creating forms
without a pottery wheel, using the hands, fingers, and
simple tools and decorating it using a style of
Underglaze and Carved Lines
Examples of Ceramics

“Throne Home”
By: Coille
Hooven, 1987
Graphic Arts
graphic art, traditional
category of fine arts, Example of Graphic Arts

including any form of


visual artistic expression
(e.g., painting, drawing,
photography,
printmaking), usually
produced on flat surfaces.
Tapestry
A tapestry is a picture
woven into cloth. It's a Example of Tapestry

decorative rug you hang on


the wall, with detailed
images or designs on it.
Some tapestries, like the
famous Unicorn Tapestries, Designed by Charles Le
tell stories with their Brun
Acrylic
Acrylic paint is a fast-drying Example of
Acrylic
paint made of pigment
suspended in acrylic polymer
emulsion and plasticizers,
silicon oils, defoamers,
stabilizers, or metal soaps. Most
acrylic paints are water-based,
but become water-resistant Letting Go by Randy L.
Honerlah
Body Art
Body art is art made
Examples of Body
on, with, or consisting Art

of, the human body.


The most common
forms of body art are
tattoos and body
piercings
Handicrafts
A handicraft, sometimes more precisely expressed
as artisanal handicraft or handmade, is any of a
wide variety of types of work where useful and
decorative objects are made completely by one’s
hand or by using only simple, non-automated
related tools like scissors, carving implements, or
hooks
Examples of Handicrafts

DARAGA, Albay – Quezon City-


Women handicraft makers Handicraft Wooden Plates
THANKS

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