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The Elements of Art and Design:: Line

The document defines and provides examples of the key elements of art (line, shape, form, space, color, value, and texture) and principles of design (balance, contrast, emphasis/dominance/focal point, harmony and unity, movement, proportion and scale, repetition/rhythm/pattern, and variety and variation). It explains that each term leads to its own page with more information and examples. The elements and principles are fundamental concepts used in the creation and understanding of visual artworks.

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Romeo Liban
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
65 views7 pages

The Elements of Art and Design:: Line

The document defines and provides examples of the key elements of art (line, shape, form, space, color, value, and texture) and principles of design (balance, contrast, emphasis/dominance/focal point, harmony and unity, movement, proportion and scale, repetition/rhythm/pattern, and variety and variation). It explains that each term leads to its own page with more information and examples. The elements and principles are fundamental concepts used in the creation and understanding of visual artworks.

Uploaded by

Romeo Liban
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Elements of Art/Design and Principles of Design/Organization

Whole books are written about each of these art terms, filled with definitions, histories, insights, tips,
and examples - these pages are just the tip of the iceberg. Each entry leads to its own page with some
more information and examples, which should grow over time - feel free to make suggestions. Clicking
on any of the example images will lead to more information about the artist or work.

The Elements of Art and Design:

Line.

A continuous mark made on a surface by a moving point; it may be flat (pencil line) or three-dimensional
(a rod, groove, ridge, etc.) Line may be explicit - a line painted along the edge of the road - or implied by
the edge of a shape or form. Lines are used to outline (diagrammatic or contour lines), create shading
and show form (structural lines, hatching and cross-hatching), decorate, express emotion, and direct the
viewer's eye. Lines can be categorized as horizontal, vertical, diagonal, curved, and zigzag.

Lines can be hard, sharp, straight, geometric; they can be organic, smooth, soft, flowing, loopy, wavy.

Lines can remain a constant thickness (descriptive, analytical, objective, showing little of the action used
to create them) or vary in thickness along their length (flowing, calligraphic, lyrical, showing emphasis
and something of the gesture used to make them).

Expressive, gestural lines shout the force, speed and emotion put into their making. They swoop, slash,
scar, skip, skid, stutter, sing, whisper, drip, bleed, splash across the surface. Lines that are sketchy and
unsure express uncertainty and weakness, and are generally less pleasing. More confident lines left to
build up as the artist attempts to capture her subject can display character, process of investigation, and
interest.

Lines can loop closed around a shape and have no end-points (outline), or at the ends they can be
flared, frayed, splayed, rounded, tapered, or cut off at any angle.

Lines divide the space and volume they are in. At the same time, they can unite and tie elements
together.

See more.
Shape.

An enclosed space defined by a line or by contrast to its surroundings. Shapes are two-dimensional
(flat): circle, square, triangle, organic blob, etc. In everyday usage, the word 'shape' is also used to talk
about three-dimensional form, often as something of a shorthand for referring to the two-dimensional
outline or silhouette of the object. When discussing art, your meaning will be clearer if you reserve using
'shape' to talk about two-dimensional shapes on a plane.

See more.

Form.

A three-dimensional object: a defined volume of space.

See more.

Space.

The distance or area around or between elements of an artwork. The illusion of depth created on a flat
surface through the use of perspective, overlapping elements, size, level of detail, color and value.

See more.

Color.

The visible spectrum of radiation reflected from an object. Three properties of color are:

Hue – The name of the color (red, green, etc.)


Intensity or Saturation – The purity (brightness or dullness) of the color. Pure red is bright; red
mixed with a little green becomes less intense, more neutral.

Value or Brightness – The lightness or darkness of a color. How much white or black shows
through or is mixed in. Can be used to depict light and shadow on a color and help show volume/form.

Other terms used to talk about color include tint, shade, tone, temperature (warm, cool, neutral), and
various color harmonies or schemes, such as monochromatic, analogous and complementary.

See more.

Value.

How light or dark an object or element is, independent of its color. Shading uses value to depict light and
shadow and show volume/form.

In general, work using a full range of values will stand out more and be visually richer and more pleasing.
Purposely using a limited range of values (all darks, grays, or lights) can set the mood of the piece, from
mysterious to peaceful to ethereal. Work that uses only very bright and very dark values, with no grays
or middle tones, is very contrasty and can be very bold, stark and stylized.

Low Key and High Key


Pictorial works that exhibit mostly dark values (dark or minimally lit subject on dark background) are
called low key, while works with brightly lit subjects and washed-out or white backgrounds are
called high key. High key is used in female portrait photography, for example, and can convey delicacy,
innocence and dreaminess. Low key work can create a sense of the nocturnal and secretive, of things
hidden just beyond sight.

See more.

Texture.

The tactile sensation or feel of a surface (rough, smooth, spiky, etc.) or how something appears to feel.

See more.
The Principles of Design and Organization:

Balance.

The distribution of interest or visual weight in a work. If all the visually interesting elements of a work
are centered in one spot, the work is off-balance and the viewer's gaze will be stuck in one place,
ignoring the rest of the piece. A balanced piece of work will have art elements arranged such that
different areas draw the viewer's eye around or through the whole piece. Some types of balance
are symmetric, asymmetric, and radial.

The concept of visual balance is often illustrated using a seesaw. Like a seesaw, when two elements of
an artwork have the same visual weight and are on opposite sides of the center, equally distant from it,
they balance. Likewise, a smaller element can balance out a larger one if the smaller one is farther from
the center and the larger one nearer. In two-dimensional art, the center of the work serves as the
fulcrum (the visual center). In three-dimensional art, visual balance and the physical balance of mass
both come into play, and the balance of one does not assure the balance of the other.

See more.

Contrast.

The difference in quality between two instances of an art element, or using opposing qualities next to
each other. For example, black and white (contrasting values), organic/curvy and geometric/angular
(contrasting lines/shapes/forms), and rough and smooth (contrasting textures).

The greater the contrast, the more something will stand out and call attention to itself. This applies to
whole works of art as well as areas within an artwork. Areas with greater contrast in value (stronger
darks and lights) will tend to appear more forward in space, as over distance atmospheric haze lessens
contrast (atmospheric perspective). Contrast can also be used to set the mood or tone of the work. High
contrast makes a work more vibrant, vigorous, brash, lively - it "pops" more. Low-contrast work is more
quiet, calm, subtle, reflective, soothing.

See more.
Emphasis, Dominance and Focal Point.

Emphasis is created by visually reinforcing something we want the viewer to pay attention to. Focal
points are areas of interest the viewer's eyes skip to. The strongest focal point with the greatest visual
weight is the dominant element of the work. Elements of secondary importance could be termed sub-
dominant, and elements with the least visual weight subordinate. Isolation, leading lines and
convergence, contrast, anomaly, size, placement, framing, focus and depth of field, and absence of focal
points are some of the strategies used to help create these degrees of importance.

See more.

Harmony and Unity.

Harmonious elements have a logical relationship or progression - in some way they work together and
complement each other. When a jarring element is added - something that goes against the whole - it is
said to be dissonant, just like an off-note in a musical performance. Unity is created by using harmonious
similarity and repetition, continuance, proximity and alignment, and closure of design elements in
different parts of the work so that the parts RELATE to each other and create a unified whole, that
can be greater than the sum of the parts, rather than an ill-fitting and meaningless assortment of
elements.

See more.

Movement.

Using art elements to direct a viewer's eye along a path through the artwork, and/or to show
movement, action and direction. Also, giving some elements the ability to be moved or move on their
own, via internal or external power.
In a still picture such as a painting or photograph, where nothing is actually moving, various strategies
can be used to give the viewer a sense of movement and speed, or to move the viewer's eye through
the work. These include lines, diagonals and unbalanced elements; blurring; placement; direction; and
motion lines and afterimages.

See more.

Repetition, Rhythm and Pattern.

Repeating art elements in regular or cyclical fashion to create interest, movement, and/or harmony and
unity. Rhythms can be random, regular, alternating, flowing, and progressive. Classes of pattern include
mosaics, lattices, spirals, meanders, waves, symmetry and fractals, among others.

See lots more.

Proportion and Scale.

Proportion is the relationship of sizes between different parts of a work. For example, how wide it is
compared to how tall it is. Some proportions, such as the golden ratio and the rule of thirds, are thought
to be more naturally pleasing. Scale is the size of something compared to the world in general - an
artwork might be termed miniature, small scale, full scale or life-size, large scale or larger than life, or
monumental.

See more.

Variety and Variation.

Using a range of different qualities or instances of an art element to create a desired visual effect - e.g.,
a variety of shapes, colors, etc. Variety can add interest and break the monotony of simple repetitions.

See more.
Line
Shape
Form
Space
Color
Value
Texture
Balance
Contrast
Emphasis, Dominance And Focal Point
Harmony And Unity
Movement
Proportion And Scale
Repetition, Rhythm and Pattern
Variety And Variation

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