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ART FOR MIDDLE AND HIGH SCHOOL
IMAGINATION AND IDEAS
How to Develop Your Ideas
About ideas: Any idea when transformed through a medium can become art.
But --no idea, no art. Ideas are not hard to find. They come from our
reactions to life. The following list came from a single brainstorming
session.
When one brainstorms you come up with a whole lot of ideas, some will
be useful others may just be discarded.
AN IDEA LIST CONCEPT:
"Primary Breakup": (The content of Pictures)
Step 1. Think of the whole picture space as a puzzle which has numerous
pieces which become the design of your drawing or painting.
Step 2 is developing these primary areas with detail.
In the attempt to become more creative, the first consideration for us
as artists is deciding what to do.
THE SUBJECT OR STORY YOU
WISH TO EXPRESS
What will be subject or theme of my work?
The suggestions offered in this lesson describe how you can enhance your
ideas to make visual creations more interesting /creative. One of the
tell-tale signs of unskilled and untrained artist is that their pictures
often lack creative Visual content. Without Visual Content, pictures are
not very interesting and do not engage the interest of viewers.
Simply put, without creative visual content the picture is BORING!
Breaking up the Space is the beginning of developing visual content.
I refer to this stage of development as "primary breakup forms or objects".
You can think of this as part of the creative process. It is idea development.
It is thinking through the image content in a picture. A less creative,
less interesting, picture will have a short list. Following is a sample
of the idea building process where we actually think about what goes into
a picture:
Sample of how to develop an Idea List: Selection of Forms or Objects:
What will I choose for my theme? You are now faced with an infinite
set of choices. You need to target one. What is current in your life?
What do you like? What do you know something about? What is meaningful
or expressive to an idea or attitude?
WHAT TO DRAW OR PAINT - - - SUBJECT: Here is one random example.
I choose "My Garden" as the subject or main idea of the picture.
Primary Breakup Form 1 foreground
earth with a watermelon
(If we stop with that one watermelon it will be very boring.)
Primary Breakup Form 2 Interesting tree -- others further away
Primary Breakup Form 3 Flowers or Vines
Primary Breakup Form 4 A interesting fence
Primary Breakup Form 5 Bird on Fence
Primary Breakup Form 6 Scarecrow
Primary Breakup Form 7 Distant Hills
Primary Breakup Form 8 An old tractor
Primary Breakup Form 9 Skyline
Primary Breakup Form 10 Clouds in Sky
PLACEMENT AND SIZE IN SPACE
After "brainstorming" and making a list like the
above, we can think about HOW AND WHERE to place and organize these forms
in our picture. Each object listed will have its own space, size and qualities.
The use of the space, the size and position of these objects, and detail.
This phase focuses on PRIMARY BREAK UP. Therefore, do not worry too much
about detail today. The final part is the step of filling in the open
areas of the primary breakup form. This phase can be called development
where you add your interpretations of color, tone, texture or detail so
that your spaces become rich and visually interesting. If you look at
a picture by Maxfield Parrish you will see the simplicity of the basic
primary break up but the developed pictures are AMAZING because of the
wonderful color, detail and textures that he uses inside of the primary
outlines.
PRACTICE EXERCISE:
ON A TYPING SIZE PAGE Make a list that is similar to the example above.
List your main theme object, and then think of other objects which can
fit in the environment of the theme object.
HERE ARE SOME CLASSIC THEMES INTERPRETED BY
ARTISTS
BASED UPON AN INTERPRETATION OF A THEME
Art Ideas: Interpretation of Themes: About ideas:
Any idea when transformed through a medium can become art. But --No idea,
no art. Ideas are not hard to find. They come from our reactions to life.
Here is a list of themes that came from a single brainstorming session.
When one brainstorms you come up with a whole lot of ideas, some will
be useful others may just be discarded.
Time: Seasons as time: Fall, Winter, Spring, Summer; A season
to --- (plant, harvest, build, grow, suffer, destroy, want, plenty, trials;
Time as Ages; age of innocence, golden age, in the prime, old age;
Time the destroyer, victim of time, man's dilemma in the age of machines.
Love: Self absorbing love, brotherly love; Love as lust; Lust
for --- (money, power, fame, blood) Love unrequited love, unloving, love
goddess;
Love of --- (country, justice, peace, security, etc;
Realms: Realms as rooms; Old rooms, large rooms, small rooms,
pool rooms, bar rooms, school rooms, light rooms, dark rooms; Realms as
worlds; new world, old world, day world, night world, business world,
other world, other worldly; Outer space, Fairy land, Mother Goose land,
--- Sea places, air places, rocky places, sandy places, glassy places,
grassy places; mountains and seas, animal homes, the realm of dreams;
Feelings: Joy, Sorrow, Loneliness, Longing, Longing for --- ,
Confusion, Frustration, Hatred of -- Social Concerns: Roles of people;
Issues of life and death; Heaven and hell; Peace, Security, Being with
people; Parties,
Wild or interesting characters, Caricatures; Mothers, Fathers,
Clergy, Human rights, Generation gap; Institutions: Home scenes; Sport
scenes; Entertainment industry; Hospitals, Politics,
Religious themes;
Art Abstraction: Abstract art can be of several kinds, One kind
is "expressionistic" a category of art that brings emotional expression
through distortion and extreme colors. Color can become symbolic such
as green for envy and red for passion or energy; At times expressionism
appears distorted or chaotic and quite out of control. This kind frequently
gets a response like, "My two year old kid could do better than that!"
In cases like that the view is probably missing a lot of the visual content
within the work. Another kind is intellectual abstraction that tries to
develop a sense of relationship between lines, forms and color. Visual
Relationships can be such as small to large, dark to light, rough to smooth,
curved to strait, etc. Sometimes this kind of art can be very precise
but yet hard to interpret.
Symbolism is another area for free interpretation. The actual
content may use objects to represent other meanings than "reality."
Art Ideas: Viewing and Interpretation Reality interprets real
subjects taken from nature provide an unlimited source for drawings, paintings
and design. Human beings have interpreted the natural world since before
the Egyptians. Approaches to interpreting reality can vary a lot. From
photo realism to semi realism. Some artists use nature for a source of
"motifs' which are then used in a decorative crafty way.
Pattern and stylized motifs, Clay designs with fish on them for
example or clothing printed with flower patterns. Being able to draw or
paint realistically is not the only basis for 'good work' from nature.
It is an even more important to bring out a personal viewpoint or interpretation
than to make it look like a photo. Ordinary sights from everyday life
would be a great treasure if we only had them from some observer who lived
hundreds or thousands of years ago. Likewise your own every day life and
environment would be a treasure to anyone who might wonder what life was
like when you went to school as a young person.
Human subjects: Working, Playing, Studying, Working out, Playing
a sport; The very fact that the action is so common place usually makes
it a very good candidate for a picture. But at the same time, because
it is so common we think it is not a good idea. Treasures from everyday
life might include your mom in the kitchen with an apron, your father
on the tractor with his cap. Your little brother sprawled in front of
the TV, your sister styling her hair with a blow dryer.
Outdoor Subjects (landscape scenes) Places in the wild, out of
doors; Buildings, Fields, Trees, Fence Rows; Rivers or Lakes; Natural
park; Townscapes or Cityscapes are details of buildings and streets; Views
of the streets and store fronts. Indoor Subjects, (Interiors) Interesting
places seen from the inside; Living rooms, dining rooms, ball rooms, bedrooms,
basements, bathrooms, studios, deserted rooms, malls. Still life Subjects,
all sorts of objects, flowers, fruit, vegetables, non living forms, displayed
for composition for paintings or drawings.
Updated 10 2005
Wheaton Minnesota High School Return to Homepage
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