Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Project #3: “Cubist Cropped Self Portraits”
Colour Theory, Cubism, Portraiture
2
Part 1: Colour Theory
3
Colour Theory Colour is an element of art and design
A balance between subjective and scientific Colours can influence mood, emotions, and perceptions; take on cultural and personal meaning and attract attention The challenge is balancing these complex roles that colour plays to create an attractive effective design Traditional colour theory can help you understand which colours might work well together and what kind of effect different combinations will create within your design
4
The Colour Wheel A colour circle based on red, yellow and blue (primary colours)
5
Some terms… Hue: synonymous with color; or name of a specific color traditionally refers to one of 12 colors on color wheel Shade: hue darkened with black Tone: hue dulled with gray Tint: hue lightened with white Saturation: intensity of a color Value: lightness or darkness of a color
6
Three levels of colors Primary colors – cannot be created by mixing colors (blue, yellow and red) Secondary colors – mix the primary colors Tertiary – mix secondary +primary
7
Colour Schemes… Primary, secondary, tertiary
Colour values- tints, shades Colour schemes – Monochromatic: one colour, tint + shades Analogous; colours next to each other on colour wheel Complementary: colours directly across from each other color triads: three colours equally spaced split complementary: made up of color and complements (e.g. blue, yellow-orange, red-orange) Tetradic/double complementary: two complementary pairs warm colours, cool colours
10
Colour Harmony Harmony – pleasing arrangement of parts; it engages the viewer and creates an inner sense of order, a balance in the visual experience When something isn’t harmonious, either boring or chaotic Viewer not engaged, bland
11
How to achieve colour harmony: Colour Schemes
A colour scheme based on analogous colours
12
How to achieve colour harmony: Colour Schemes
A color scheme based on complementary colours Use a colour scheme to achieve colour harmony
13
How to achieve colour harmony: Reading Colour
Which colour combination with the same purple rectangle looks better?
14
How to achieve colour harmony: Colour Context
How colour behaves in relation to other colours and shapes is a complex area of color theory Compare the contrast effects of different colour backgrounds for the same red square Red appears more brilliant on a black background and duller on a white In the orange one, the red appears lifeless; in contrast with blue which exhibits brilliance
15
Part 2: Cubism
16
Cubism Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque KEY IDEAS:
Cubism rejected the concept that art should copy nature or that artists should adopt the traditional techniques of perspective, modeling, and foreshortening Abandoned perspective Instead…emphasizing the two dimensionality of the canvas Reduced and fractured objects into geometric forms
17
Analytic Cubism - style less literal and more conceptual
Synthetic Cubism – collage
24
Part 3: The Project
25
Project #3 Instructions
For this project, we will be combining the following grades into a massive mural on the wall: Grade 7/8 and Grade 9-12 You will demonstrate your knowledge of colour theory and “analytic cubism” through a self portrait
26
Requirements You will be using gouache for this painting
The shapes must be geometric The background must be a solid colour Fill as much of the page with your face as possible Crop your portrait – any sort of crop is okay You must choose a colour scheme – its tints and shades – and make conscious decisions based on the colours that you used
35
Instructions Pick a colour scheme and paint a map of it in your sketchbook Print out a self-portrait – black and white and/or colour – no fancy poses…needs to be JUST your face Map out the geometric shapes of your face based on the shadows and highlights and facial structure The more complex you make it, the better your mark will be Paint – with gouache – no shading – needs to be a flat colour (no skin colour needed)
37
Marking Scheme Your color wheel – is it accurate? Neat? Includes all the requirements? Labels? Do you include the shades and tints of the color scheme that you used? Labels needed: the hues/colours, primary/secondary/tertiary Your colour scheme with shades and tints (label the hue, and the shades and tints) Brainstorming/sketchbook Final art piece – drawing/colouring No crit/no writing Total of 4 marks
38
DUE: MONDAY DECEMBER 18 (NO EXTENSIONS)
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.