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Vocabulary Shape- the element of art defined as a two dimensional plane defined by a border Form-the element of art defined as a three dimensional object.

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Presentation on theme: "Vocabulary Shape- the element of art defined as a two dimensional plane defined by a border Form-the element of art defined as a three dimensional object."— Presentation transcript:

1 Vocabulary Shape- the element of art defined as a two dimensional plane defined by a border Form-the element of art defined as a three dimensional object Geometric- A shape or form with angled sides. Organic- A shape or form with curves relating to nature Maquette-a sculpture that is created as a practice version; it is typically much smaller than the final sculpture Relief-a type of sculpture that is constrained to a flat background Sculpture in the Round- a type of sculpture that can be viewed from all angles

2 Cardboard Sculptures Creating 3D Forms with 2D Shapes Mark Langan

3 “The Guitar” Pablo Picasso Contructed in 1914 Abstract “Cubism”

4 Bartek Elsner, “This is Colossal”

5 Ann Weber “Untitled”

6 Write what you learn about the following points. Cutting a Geometric shape Cutting an Organic Shape Attaching with Glue Attaching Cardboard at 90 degree angles Connecting Cardboard with Slotted Cuts Scoring Cardboard to Create Complex Forms

7 Cutting and Attaching with Cardboard Click Picture for Video Demonstration

8 Cutting and Attaching Continued Click Picture for Video Demonstration

9 Practice Excercise Demonstrate the following techniques to show proficiency before beginning your project… – Cut a Geometric Shape – Cut an Organic Shape – Build a relief with a minimum of three layers and use the negatives to create a depression. – Assemble a Stacked maquette with at least 3 pieces attached at 90 degree angles – Assemble two pieces of cardboard slotted together.

10 Objectives Create a three dimensional cardboard sculpture representing a real object. Build a maquette of the final sculpture. The Final Sculpture must be at least 2 ft tall or wide. Projects will be graded on craftsmanship of cutting, gluing, and assembling of the pieces as well as the display of the final arrangement.

11 For Homework View items that might make an interesting sculpture in cardboard. Option 1: Bring in one Object Option 2: Take 6 photos of a few items from the top, bottom, front, back, left and right sides.

12 More Examples and Project Ideas Triumph of Good over Evil, 2009 (Life Sized) Chris Gilmour http://www.chrisgilmour.com/en.opere.html

13 Cardboard Lamps made by Latvian students.

14 Boombox, Bartek Elsner http://www.visualnews.com/2013/06/07/massive-cardboard- boombox-brings-beats-to-zurich/

15 Functional Cardboard Sculpture http://tedrefee.blogspot.com/2010/12/winter-project.html

16 123D Autodesk Free Computer/iPad App to help you design and create cardboard sculptures. http://www.123dapp.com/

17 Review Demonstrate the follow processes building with cardboard – Cut an Organic Shape and a Geometric Shape – Create a Positive and Negative Relief (3 layers.) – Attach 3 pieces of cardboard with 90 degree angles. – Attach 2 pieces of cardboard with a Slot or Pierce. – Utilize Scoring for a texture or Curve.

18 Before Building Make sure you have gotten homework checked off. – Brought in actual object you’re sculpting. – 6 Photos of the object you’re sculpting. Build the maquette before spending time building full scale sculpture.


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