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Visual Arts

Art Activities

Drawing Painting Collage


Making
Sketch
• rough d r a w in g
• tentati ve d r a ft
D r awi n g
Warm Colors - These colors can be associated with
things like fire, the sun, and warmth, and are
referred to as warm colors because they stir up
feelings of warmth and heat.

Cold Colors - This is a quirk of human color


perception whereby colors with short wavelengths
of light such as blue and violet are perceived as
cold to the touch due to their association with cool
elements of nature such as water, sky and ice.

Primary - RYB
Secondary - OGV
Modern Art
Impressionism
Movement
Impressionism is a 19th-century art movement characterized by
relatively small, thin, yet visible brush strokes, open composition,
emphasis on accurate depiction of light in its changing qualities (often
accentuating the effects of the passage of time), ordinary subject
matter, unusual visual angles, and inclusion of movement as a crucial
element of human perception and experience.
Modern Art
Impressionism
Movement
Modern Art
Post -Impressionism
Movement
Post-Impressionists both extended Impressionism while
rejecting its limitations: the artists continued using vivid
colors, a thick application of paint and real-life subject
matter, but were more inclined to emphasize geometric
forms, distort forms for an expressive effect and use
unnatural and seemingly random colors.
Modern Art
Post - Impressionism
Movement
Modern Art
Cubism
Movement
Cubism was an art movement that completely changed the
face of European painting and sculpture and stirred similar
movements in music, literature, and architecture. It has
been considered the art movement with the greatest level of
influence on modern art.
Modern Art
Cubism
Movement
Modern Art
Fauvism
Movement
Fauvism, style of painting that flourished in France
around the turn of the 20th century. Fauve artists used
pure, brilliant colour aggressively applied straight from
the paint tubes to create a sense of an explosion on the
canvas.
Modern Art
Fauvism
Movement
Modern Art
Expressionism
Movement
a theory or practice in art of seeking to depict the
subjective emotions and responses that objects and events
arouse in the artist
Modern Art
Expressionism
Movement
Modern Art
Dadaism
Movement
As a word, it is nonsense. As a movement, however,
Dada art proved to be one of the revolutionary art
movements in the early twentieth century. Initially
conceived by a loose band of avant-garde modernists in
the prelude to World War I but adopted more fully in its
wake, the Dadaist celebrated luck in place of logic and
irrationality instead of calculated intent.
Modern Art
Dadaism
Movement
Modern Art
Surrealism
Movement
Surrealism is a cultural movement that started in 1917,
and is best known for its visual artworks and writings.
Artists painted unnerving, illogical scenes, sometimes
with photographic precision, creating strange creatures
from everyday objects, and developing painting
techniques that allowed the unconscious to express
itself.
Modern Art
Surrealism
Movement
Modern Art
Pop Art
Movement
Pop art is an art movement that emerged in the 1950s
and flourished in the 1960s in America and Britain,
drawing inspiration from sources in popular and
commercial culture. Different cultures and countries
contributed to the movement during the 1960s and 70s.
Modern Art
Pop Art
Movement
Art activities are important for kids

Develop
• Creative skills
• Analytical skills
• Expressional skills
• Hand eye coordination
Art experience at school

• Creative Expression
• Aesthetic Valuing
• Historical and cultural context
Exposure to selective basic
skill in art

• Practise every day


• Learn from master
• Avoid using rulers
• Learn art of shading
Basic skills of visual art

• Artistic
• Technical
• Communication
• Problem solving
• Interpersonal abilities
• Organisation
• Creativity
Art Education - Facilitating Interest
• Exposing them to different genres
• Make it casual
• Get back to the basics
• Be openminded
• Get creative yourself
• Make it fun
Motivating students towards arts
• Identify students desire to learn
• Make it relatable
• Empower students to become
better
• Encourage self-motivation through
assessment
• Practice unpredictable
reinforcement
Importance of learning arts
• Improve life skills
• Rotary learning
• Self driven and motivated
• Develop communication
• Social Development
• Cognitive development (gain
knowledge)
• Emotional and physical
development
Media and
Electronic Arts
What we'll discuss

Electronic Art - Definition


Ob j e c t i v e s
• Understand Media and Electronic art as Pedagogy
• Understand Media and Electronic art as an instrument for

social change
• Use Media and Electronic art to enhance learning
• Exhibit basic understanding on experiencing, responding and

appreciating media and electronic arts


• Discuss the adaptive strategies of artistic expression
• Acquire basic skills in Media and Electronic arts
Range of Art activities in media and
electronic art forms

• Media Art • Interactive Art


• Information Art • Internet Art
• Video Art • Conceptual Art
• Digital Art • Systems Art
• Electronic Art
Skills you need to become digital media
leader
• Design process - Ideation
• Self-awareness - about work
• Time management - for digital media
• Articulation - clear idea
• Information literacy - understanding digital media scape
• Teamwork - in digital media industry
Facilitating Interest

• Coherence
• Modality
• Signalling
• Multimedia
• Redundancy
• Personalization
• Spatial contiguity
• Voice
• Temporal contiguity
• No image
• Segmenting
• Pre-training
Advantages of using Media

• Showcasing complex ideas


• Provokes discussion
• Connects learners with culture
• Connects theories taught in the
class room
Thank
You

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