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Art-App-Reporting (1)

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Part 3: The Artist and
His Medium
HRMGT-1104
ABDON, MISHA
BERBERABE, RAVEN BERON
CAMACHO, ALLEAH KYLA
COLLADO, CARL
IBAÑEZ, MARY ROSE
LALONGISIP, AVEGAIL MENA
SANDOVAL, JOY MARIE
SASTADO, BABY MAE
19-52747
19-52776
19-58714
19-53373
19-56138
19-57314
19-58396
19-53925
The Process of Art
Production
REPORTER: MS. CAMACHO, ALLEAH KYLA
The Medium
When an artist is ready to express himself in Art and to
give shape to his vision, his first thoughts would be on what
medium to use. As long as his work will not cause harm to the
environment, and to people then it is fine. Each medium has its
own range of characteristics which will determine the physical
appearance of the product. The artist should understand his
medium because each medium has its own way of behaving.
An artist's choice of medium is usually influenced
by three considerations:
1. The availability of the material.
2. The nature and special characteristics of the material.
3. The idea he wants to communicate.
The Technique
An artist's knowledge of the medium and his skill in
making it achieve what he wants to is the artist's technique. A
wise artist knows that he should not stop learning. He should
let himself and his art evolve with the changing society without
sacrificing his style and individually as an artist.
Curation
Curation is derived from the Latin word "curare" which
means to take care. It is the process that involves managing,
overseeing, and assembling or putting together a presentation
or exhibit for some type of historical or artistic collection. The
person that responsible for this task is called a curator.
For museums and galleries, specifically the
curation process undergoes the following steps:
1. Curator decides on which art works or historical objects
should be included in the collection.
2. After the objects had been chosen and gathered, the
collection must be culled to fit within the space in the
gallery.
3. After arranging the pieces, the curator then provides
context for each piece.
The Different Media of
The Visual
REPORTER: MS. LALONGISIP, AVEGAIL MENA
A. Graphic or Two Dimensional Arts
Drawing - This is the fundamental skill needed in the
visual arts.
Different Media for Drawing:
1. Pencils - This is made of graphite which comes in different hardness
from soft to hard or thickness from thick to needle like making possible a
wide range of values.
• Hatching - Is drawing a series of thin parallel lines that run in the same
direction.
• Cross-Hatching - Is drawing a series of thin parallel lines and crisscrossing it with another set of thin parallel lines. This creates a tone that is
darker than hatching.
• Stippling - Is using the sharp point of the pencil to make dot patterns to
create depth in some parts of the drawing.
• Blending - Is at times accomplished by using the finger or a paper stump
to gradually change the tone from Dark to light.
Different Media for Drawing:
2. Ink - Is used in making the beautiful handwritings produced
in calligraphy which in itself is an art.
Different Media for Drawing:
3. Pastel - This is composed of dry pigment held together
by a gum binder and compressed into stick.
3 Kinds of Pastel:
- Soft pastel
- Hard pastel
- Oil pastel
Different Media for Drawing:
• A) Stippling - Is using pastel of different colors to
produce small marks, thus creating a pattern.
Different Media for Drawing:
• B) Feathering - Is using the points of the pastel to make
parallel stickers creating a feather like effect.
Different Media for Drawing:
• C) Scumbling - Is like layering but using pastel. The side of
the pastel is lightly drawn on top of an existing color but still
making the color of the first layer visible.
Different Media for Drawing
• D) Impasto - Is the technique of thickly applying the pastel by
pressing it hard on the paper creating an opaque effect.
Different Media for Drawing
• E) Sgrafitto - Is applying a thick deposit of pastel on the
support then using a blunt pen, scrapes it off to reveal the
underlying color and create the design.
Different Media for Drawing:
4)
Charcoal - This is an organic medium that
comes from burnt wood.
• 2 kinds of charcoal
- The Compressed Charcoal or
Manufactured Charcoal - Is made from
loose charcoal mixed with a binder and
pressed into sticks vine charcoal which
comes in thin sticks that is easy to blend
and erase.
Different Media for Drawing:
5) Paper - Is an organic material made from wood, grass, linen
rags.
6) Painting - Described as the art of creating beautiful effects on
a flat surface.
Different Media used for Drawing:
1) Water Color - That pigments are mixed with water and applied to paper.
2) Gouache - This is paint in which the pigment has been mixed with water
and added with a chalk like material to give it an opaque effect.
3) Oil Paints - The pigments are mixed with oil as its binder.
4) Tempera - This pigment mixed with egg yolks (sometimes with the
white) as binder.
5) Fresco - This is pigment mixed with water and applied on a portion of
the wall with wet plaster.
Different Media used for Drawing:
7) Collage - Is derived from a French World "Coller" which
means to stick. A collage is a technique of making an art work
by giving or pasting on a firm support materials or found
objects.
Different Media used for Drawing:
8) Printmaking - This is a process used for making reproductions of
graphics works.
- Relief Printing (raised) - The oldest method of print making. The
technique involves cutting away certain parts of the surface, usually
a block of wood and leaving the ‘raised’ parts to produce the image.
Different Media used for Drawing:
- Intaglio Printing (depressed) - The technique is an opposite
of relief printing, instead of using the surface of the plate for
the image, the line of the image are cut or incised to a metal
plate.
Different Media used for Drawing:
- Surface printing (flat) - This includes all processes in which
printing is done from a flat surface (plane).
B. Plastic or three Dimensional Art
Sculpture - The word sculpture has originated from the
Latin word "sculpers" which means to carve. It is defined as the
art of practice of creating three Dimensional forms or figure _it
is the art form that is described as having length, width and
volume.
3 Kinds of Sculpture:
1. Freestanding - These are sculpture which can be viewed from all sides.
3 Kinds of Sculpture
2. Relief - This are sculptures in which
the figures project from a background.
2 Variation of Relief Sculpture
Low relief - The figures are slightly
raised/projected from its background, less
shadow are created.
-High relief - Almost half of the figures
project from its background, more
shadows are created.
3. Kinetic (mobiles) – A sculpture that is
capable of movement by wind, water or
other forms of energy.
The Process of Creating
Sculpture
REPORTER: MS. SASTADO, BABY MAE
Substractive Process
• This process involves removing or
cutting away pieces of the material to
form the figure.
• The sculptor achieves this through
the use of special tools like chisels,
hammers, saw and grinders.
• For a sculptor, removing pieces of
the material is like ‘freeing’ the figure
that is hidden or trapped within the
material.
Additive Process
• Process involves the
construction of a figure by
putting together bits of the
material or by welding
together metal together metal
parts to create figures.
• Modeling and assembling are
example of this process.
MODELING
ASSEMBLING
Process of Substitution
• This process is also known as casting
• This method involves using a mold to produce a 3D figure in
another materials.
• The material should be in liquid form for it to a poured to the
mold.
Process of Substitution
MOLD
SAND CASTING
PLASTIC CASTING
LOST-WAX CASTING
Different Media
Sculpture
REPORTER: MR. COLLADO, CARL
Different Media Sculpture
• Through the centuries, sculptors have experimented on
materials to be used for their sculptures. They have
discovered that they can use natural and man-made materials
to achieve expression in a three-dimensional form.
1. Stone
• Hard and relatively permanent.
• Sculptures made from stone will last for many years.
• Marble is deemed by sculptors as the most beautiful stone for
sculpture.
2. Wood
• Easy to work on
• Wood varies in hardness and durability depending on the
kind of tree Philippines best woods for Sculptures Molave,
Acacia, Langka wood, Ipil wood, Kamagong, Palm wood and
Bamboo
3. Metal
• This is use for sculpture because of its three unique qualities
Tensile strength, Ductility and Malleability o
• Two ways to make beautiful sculptures using metal o
• Assembling (welding) o
• Casting Ideal metals for sculptures are alloys that has a
combination of two elements.
3. Metal
• Stainless steel (Inox steel). Made from the combination of steel and chromium.
• Bronze Is an alloy of two elements: tin and copper.
• Brass Is an alloy of copper and zinc.
• Plaster, specifically, Plaster of Paris Finely ground gypsum mixed with water
poured into mold.
• Terra cotta (cooked Earth) Baked clay or clay fired in a kiln at a relatively high
temperature.
• Glass This is made by heating and cooling a combination of sand and soda lime.
• Plastic Synthetic medium made from organic polymer
Architecture
REPORTER: MS. SANDOVAL, JOY MARIZ
Architecture
• Architecture - Art of designing buildings and other structure
which will serve a definite function.
• "Architecture is always about something, specifically, it is
about values held by the people who had it built their attitude
to life their assumptions of what is real and what is
important" - Alan Gowans
Construction Principles
• Post and lintel - the oldest construction system that makes
use of two vertical support (post) spanned by a horizontal
beam (lintel).
Construction Principles
• Arch - consist of separate pieces of wedge, shape block called
voussoirs arranged in semi circle.
Construction Principle
• Keystone - is the most important part of arch.
1. Barrel Vault - one place directly behind another to produce a
structure similar to a tunnel.
Construction Principle
2. Groin Vault - formed by intersecting arches resulting in four
openings.
Construction Principle
• Bay - the area at the center of a groin vault.
3. Dome – structure with the shape of an inverted cup.
Construction Principle
• Drum - form by series of arches rising from consecutive
points on a base.
Truss - triangular form assemble to form a rigid framework.
Construction Principle
Cantilever - use of a beam or slab that extend horizontally into
space beyond its supporting post.
Construction Principle
Buttress - built as a support for the wall.
Media of Architecture
REPORTER: MS. IBAÑEZ, MARY ROSE
Media of Architecture
• Compressive strength refers to those materials that can
support heavy weights without crumbling or breaking down
while tensile strength refers to those materials that can
withstand being pulled or stretch without breaking.
Media of Architecture
• The following are materials that are used for creating
buildings and infrastructure:
• Stones and Bricks - stones are favored over other materials
for its durability, adaptability to sculptural treatment and its
use for building simple structures in its natural state. Bricks
compare favorably with stones as a structural material.
• Lumber (wood) - all parts of a building can be constructed
using wood except the foundations; its major disadvantages
are susceptibility to fire, mold and termites.
Media of Architecture
• Iron and Steel - these metals can produce greater
unsupported spans over openings in the interior or exterior
spaces.
• Concrete - this is a mixture of cement and water, with
aggregates of sand and gravel, which hardens rapidly resulting
in a fire resisting solid of great compressive strength.
Literature and the
Combined Arts
REPORTER: MR. BERBERABE, RAVEN BERON
Literature
• Literature is the art of combining spoken or written words
and their meanings into forms which have artistic and
emotional appeal. Language is the medium of literture. The
writer uses words to build his compositions. The words are
used in combination with other words and arranged in certain
patterns to suggest feelings and images.
Literature
• Written works that share similar characteristics are said to belong
to the same genre: In literature, there are four main genres. In each
genre are specific types of literature:
1. Poetry - All poems share similar characteristics which makes it
easy for the reader to recognize them. Poems are written in lines and
not in sentences or paragraph form. Poets use devices like simile,
metaphor, hyperbole, rhyme, and others. Poetry's emphasis is an
imaginations, emotions, and ideas.
Literature:
2. Fiction - This is any written work that is not real and which uses
elaborate figurative language. Fiction, however, is more structured than
poetry. It is written in sentences and paragraphs with all the proper
punctuation and grammar, which makes it a prose. Fiction is divided
into chapters.
3. Nonfiction - This is the opposite of fiction because the subject matter
comes from real life. Nonfiction works are all based on real people and
real world experience. Literary nonfiction which includes biographic,
autobiographic, and essays and informative fiction. The purpose of
informative nonfiction is to explain or inform the readers about a
concept or situation.
Literature
4. Drama - This genre includes all plays or any written works
that are meant to be performed. This type of literature is
written with the intention of being performed for an audience.
Music
REPORTER: MS. ABDON, MISHA
What is Music?
Music
• Music is defined as the art of combining and regulating
sounds of varying pitch to produce compositions that express
various ideas and feelings.
• Music particularly appeals to the emotions.
• As an art form, it can convey emotions with great intensity
which can affect people directly.
Media in Music
REPORTER: MS. CAMACHO, ALLEAH KYLA
Media in Music
• Vocal Medium: the oldest and most popular medium for
music is the human voice. It is the most personal as it comes
from within the person.
As music developed as an art form, the medium which is the
human voice has been classified (Komien, 2008) :
Media in Music
1. Soprano: is the highest female singing voice.
2. Contra Alto: a female singing voice that is low and rich in
quality.
3. Tenor: the highest adult male singing voice.
4. Bass: a male singing voice that is low and rich rich in quality.
5. Baritone: a male singing voice that is between tenor or bass.
Media in Music
• Instrumental Medium: these medium may be natural or invented
to produce a distinct type of sound.
The following are descriptions of the traditional instruments of
music:
1. String Instruments: provide the basic orchestral sounds. They
produce tones by means of the vibration of the stretched string.
Two kinds of string instruments:
A. Bowed Strings: produce tones by means of bow of horse hair.
B. Plucked Strings: produce tones by plucking the strings with a
ginger or with a plectrum held in one's hand.
Media in Music
2. Woodwind Instruments: create sounds by blowing into
them. The air blown causes vibration which can be altered by
shortening or lengthening the column of air inside the
instrument.
3. Brass Instruments: it has a cup-shaped mouthpieces and
expands into a bell-shaped end. Sound is produce by blowing
into the mouthpiece.
Media in Music
4. Percussion Instruments: make sound by hitting them with
the hands, special sticks or by striking or shaking their parts
together.
5. Keyboard Instruments: make sound by means of a keyboard
which consist of a series of black and white keys.
Some Genres of Music
REPORTER: MS. LALONGISIP, AVEGAIL MENA
Some Genres of Music
• 1) Classical Music - Was written in the European tradition
covering the years 1750-1830,during the period ,forms such as
the symphony, concerto, and sonata were standardized.
• 2) Folk Music - Originated in the traditional popular culture
or is written in such a style, folk music is created by unknown
composers and a basically transmitted orally from generation
to generation.
Some Genres of Music
• 3) Pop Music - Is a genre of popular music which began in the
1950s and is inspired in the tradition of rock and roll.
• 4) Jazz - Originated in the African-American communities of
New Orleans in the United state, in the late 19th and early
20th centuries.
Some Genres of Music
• 5) Blues - This musical genre incorporated spiritual songs,
work, songs, chants, and rhymed simple narrative ballads.
• 6) Rock Music - Is a form of popular music that evolved from
rock and roll and pop music.
Some Genres of Music
• 7) Alternative Music - Is a style is rock music that emerged
from the independent music. The word "alternative“ refers to
the Genres distinction from mainstream rock music
Dance
REPORTER: MS. SASTADO, BABY MAE
What is Dance?
Dance
• Dance is said to be the oldest of all arts Man’s gesture express
emotions through rhythmic movements.
• The medium of dance is the body of the dancer.
• Dancer may move only part of his/her body or the whole body intune to the music.
• Dancing is a personal expression of something within the person
that connects him to others.
• Dancing as a performing art may be telling the audience a story,
setting the mood or expressing an idea.
Types of Dance
REPORTER: MR. COLLADO, CARL
Types of Dance
• Dances may vary depending on the place of origin, the music, the
reason or the dance and the type of dancers. General Classification
of Dances
• • Ethnologic (ethnic) Dances include folk dances associated with a
national and/cultural groups.
• • Social or Ballroom Type of dancing that are generally performed
in pairs.
• • Ballet Type of dance which originated in royal courts of the
medieval era.
Types of Dance
• • Social or Ballroom Sometimes called contemporary or
interpretative dances. These dances emphasize personal
communication of moods and themes and is strongly
influenced by societal trends in music.
• • Musical Comedy (musicale) Performed by one dancer or a
group of dancers in theaters, night clubs, motion pictures and
t.v.
Types of Dance
• Drama and Theater Drama is a genre of literature that is
intended to be acted-out or performed on stage in front of an
audience. Once the drama is performed then it becomes a
theatrical presentation. Theatrical presentations are not only
of the story in the drama but are a combination of almost all
of art forms. This is a combined art that includes music,
dance, painting, sculpture, and architecture (for costume and
stage design).
Genres of Drama
REPORTER: MS. IBAÑEZ, MARY ROSE
Genres of Drama
• Genres of Drama
Drama is life presented on stage. But unlike life, the audience
experiences the story in its totality, from beginning to end.
• The genres of drama:
• Tragedy - is one of literature's greatest dramatic genre. It is drama
that presents life as solemn and serious.
•Melodrama - is a type of drama that emphasizes the never ending
battle between good and evil wherein good always win.
Genres of Drama
• Comedy - is drama that is the exact opposite of a tragedy.
• Satire - portrays human weakness and criticizes human
behavior to pave the path to some form of salvation for human
actions.
• Farce - is a light humorous play in which the emphasis is on
jokes, humorous physical action, exaggerated situations and
improbable characters.
Cinema
REPORTER: MR. BERBERABE, RAVEN BERON
Cinema
• The cinema can be describe as a series of images that are
projected onto a screen to create the illusion of motion. This
also known as motion pictures, movies or films and is
considered to be one of the most popular forms of
entertainment today.
Genres of Motion
Pictures
REPORTER: MS. ABDON, MISHA S.
Feature Films
• Feature Films are the
movies most commonly
shows in large movie
theaters. They typically last
from 1 to 2 hours.
Animated Movies
• Animated Movies follow the
same format as ature films, but
use images created by
artist/animators.
• These film create the illusion
of movement from a series of
two-dimensional drawings,
three-dimensional objects or
computer generated images.
Documentary Movies
• Documentary Movies deal primarily with facts, not fiction.
• Documentary are usually not shown in theaters but are
broadcast regulary on a cable and television.
• National Geographic, Discovery Channel and History are
some cable networks that show documentaries.
Experimental Films
• Experimental Films are sequence of images, literal or abstract,
which do not necessarily form a narrative.
• An experimental films can be animated, live action, computer
generated, or a combination of all three.
Educational Films
• Educational Films are specifically intended to facilitate
learning at home or in classrooms.
• Their aim to provide instructions on various subjects ranging
from history to cooking.
People Behind a Motion
Picture
REPORTER: MS. SASTADO, BABY MAE
People Behind a Motion Picture
• The task of making a good motion picture entails tremendous
effort and a lot of money. From the story to the actors, the
setting, costumes and special effect, it takes a lot of planning
to really make a good movie.
ACTORS
• 1. Actors play the roles of
the characters in the film.
PRODUCER
• 2. Producers handles
finances which includes;
paying for the production of
the project, hiring actors and
the production team, the
production team,
supervising the production
process and making
arrangement for
distributing the finished
film to theaters.
SCREENWRITER
• 3.
Screenwriter develops
stories and ideas for the screen
or adapts interesting written
pieces of work as motion
pictures.
Example: “Star Wars Saga”, “Lord
of the Rings Trilogy”, “Harry
Potter” and “Pirates of the
Caribbean”
DIRECTOR
• 4. Director studies the
script, plans and visualizes
how the film should be
portrayed, and guides the
actors and the production
crew as the carry out the
project.
End of Discussion..
Thank you &
Godbless us All…….
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