Crea 2110
Crea 2110
Crea 2110
The Visual Arts include a wide array of media, tools and processes.
The area’s most people associate with the visual arts include
drawing, painting, printmaking, sculpture and photography. There
are, however, many other areas that fall entirely or partially within
the visual arts, ranging from design areas such as architecture and
the built environment, fiber and clothing to the folk arts and from
crafts to video animation. One of the challenges to art educators
as they design local curricula is to select appropriately among the
many media available, choosing those that provide the best
vehicle for their students to meet local program goals and
objectives by creating and responding to art. In other words,
curriculum objectives should drive the choice of media, rather
than vice versa. Students need breadth, through experiencing and
working with a variety of media, and depth, through mastering at
least a few media sufficiently those they are able to use them to
express or communicate their ideas and feelings. Through those
experiences, they also need to gain insight into the enormous
body of visual work that has been created throughout the
centuries, from early cave paintings to the present.
1. Line - It is the most basic of all the elements. A line is a visible
path traced by a moving point which may vary in types. We have
straight, horizontal, vertical, diagonal or curved. These lines are
used to signify different emotions, feelings and idea for example:
Color as light
Color as tone
Color as pattern
Color as form
Color as symbol
Color as movement
Color as harmony
Color as contrast
Color as mood
INTRODUCTION TO SKETCHING
It's best to use free flowing lines that are loosely and lightly
drawn. To do that, adjust your grip on the pencil so that your
hand is relaxed instead of tense. If your hand usually gets tired
after you've drawn for less than an hour, you're probably gripping
it too tightly.
It's okay if your lines are wobbly because you may not be used to
drawing certain lines and curves yet. Drawing is very different
from writing, so you'll need to improve your muscle memory by
drawing as frequently as you can. When making an initial sketch,
you'll want to leave your perfectionism behind and focus on
general shapes. Think about the size, shape, angle, etc. The last
thing you want to think about is detail.
HISTORY OF SKETCHING
However, artists kept sketches for their own inspiration; they were
not viewed as a proper form of fine art, to be sold in their own
right. However by the 18th and 19th century sketching became an
independent type of art, even acquiring the additional sense of a
stand-alone artwork. It coincided with a time when there was a
surge in naturalism and tourists started carrying sketchbooks with
them to capture impressions of day-trips to the countryside or
tours abroad. They sketched landscapes, animals, new cities,
vegetation and flowers. It became a popular hobby enjoyed by
both amateur and professional artists alike and was a useful tool
for retaining memories at a time before photography was
invented. Popular mediums for sketching were similar to those for
drawing, and included pencil and crayon, as well as pen-and-
ink and charcoal. Even pastel drawings were made.
1. Croquis
A croquis was intended to remind the artist of some person or
scene he wished to remember in a more permanent form - they
were not necessarily for a finished product. Today fashion
designers use the term croquis to indicate a quick sketch of a live
model. It is even possible to download croquis templates (outlines
of the body in different positions) to use in a computer program
like Adobe Illustrator.
2. Pochade
Artists use colour to record a scene's atmospheric effect and to
capture the fleeting effect of light for a planned landscape
painting. Where croquis is a quick sketch using lines to record an
event or person, pochade is a quick colour sketch to capture
atmosphere. Many artists use pochade when painting plein
air and return with their sketches to the studio to use them in
planning large-scale landscape paintings. Impressionists
like Claude Monet (1840-1926) and Edouard Manet (1832-83)
took this even further turning their pochades into an end product.
The same could be said of Vincent Van Gogh who would take his
canvas outdoor, sketch directly onto it and then continue to paint
until the end product was achieved (usually within a few hours).
3. Portrait Sketch
This is used in portrait art to record moments where a person's
character is momentarily revealed, a mischievous twinkle in the
eye or a sour smile. Sketching was also used to draw the sitter
from different angles before deciding which angle was best for
the main project. These sketches - whether made with oil paint,
watercolour, charcoal or acrylics - typically had a dynamic
rhythmic flow which made them worthy stand-alone artworks.
When we speak of drawing as an art form, we are referring mainly to an artist's use of line to
make a picture. However, the definition of drawing can be expanded to include the use of
color, shading, and other elements in addition to line.
The history of drawing is as old as the history of humankind. People drew pictures even
before they learned how to write. Like other art forms, drawing has changed and developed
through history. Each new style grew out of the style that came before it. This evolution of
drawing styles closely parallels the development of painting. As drawing styles changed, so
did drawing materials.
Early History
The earliest known drawings date from 30,000 to 10,000 B.C.. They were found on the walls
of caves in France and Spain. Other examples of early drawing are designs that were
scratched, carved, or painted on the surfaces of primitive tools. Ancient Egyptians
(beginning about 3000 B.C.) decorated the walls of their temples and tombs with scenes of
daily life. These drawings had a flat, linear style. Texts written on papyrus (an early form of
paper) were illustrated with similar designs in pen and ink.
Nearly all that survives to show the drawing and painting skills of the ancient Greeks are
their decorated pottery vases. These great works of art show the Greeks' ability to draw
graceful figures and decorative lines.
The Middle Ages
In the Middle Ages, from about the 400's to the 1400's, art was produced mainly to glorify
God and to teach religion. Painting and drawing merged in the illustration of Bibles and
prayer books produced by monks. These beautifully decorated manuscripts were hand-
lettered on vellum (calfskin), or later, on paper. Those made for royalty contained miniature
paintings ornamented with gold. Those made for less wealthy persons were decorated with
pen-and-ink drawings. The flat, linear forms often resembled the ornamental patterns made
by metalworkers.
Drawings were used in the preparatory stages of a work of art during the Middle Ages, but
few survive. Paper was not made in Europe until the 1100's, and at first it was expensive and
difficult to obtain. Artists sometimes drew on prepared animal skins such as parchment or
vellum. But these were also expensive. For centuries, artists made their preparatory drawings
on tablets made of slate, wood, or wax. These tablets were thrown away or reused. Some
painters made their preparatory drawings directly on the panel or wall that was to be
painted. These were covered in the final stage of painting.
Drawings had another important function during the Middle Ages. They helped artists keep
a record of images they frequently used. Pen-and-ink drawings of the human figure,
costumes, plants and animals, and many other forms were collected in model books. Artists
then copied the drawings instead of working directly from live models or from nature.
The Renaissance
Modern drawing in Europe began in the 1400's in Italy, during the period known as the
Renaissance. A special love of drawing was born at this time. The production of drawings
also increased steadily. This was because paper had become easier to obtain and because of
the new importance attached to drawing.
Drawing came to be considered the foundation for work in all the arts. Art students first
trained in drawing before going on to painting, sculpture, or architecture. Drawing was used
as a tool for the study of nature, which was becoming increasingly important. Artists
carefully studied the physical structure of the human body for the first time and began to
draw from nude models. The portrayal of the human figure became increasingly realistic.
The need for preparatory drawings also grew during the Renaissance. In Italy, many large-
scale paintings were produced to decorate the interiors of churches, palaces, and public
buildings. Paintings of this size required extensive preparation. Drawings were an important
step in creating the finished work. The artist often made a very detailed working drawing
before beginning to paint.
Renaissance artists continued to use pen and ink for drawing. But they turned increasingly
to softer materials, such as black and red chalks and charcoal, to make larger drawings and
to achieve a greater variety of effects. Shading was introduced to suggest solids and
textures. Among the most celebrated draftsmen (masters of drawing) of this period are
Michelangelo and Leonardo Da Vinci.
The Netherlands had its greatest period of artistic flowering in the 1600's. Rembrandt van
Rijn was the most famous painter and printmaker of Amsterdam. He was also one of the
world's greatest draftsmen. He was able to convey form, movement, and emotion with just a
few simple pen lines. Dutch artists made a specialty of landscape painting. They often went
into the countryside with sketchbook in hand and produced finished drawings or studies for
paintings to be completed in the studio.
The rococo period of the 1700's was dominated by French taste and culture. Decorative
lines and cheerful subjects are characteristic of the work of Jean-Antoine Watteau and
François Boucher. Both artists often drew with red, black, and white chalks. Sometimes they
combined all three.
The tradition of academic training founded on drawing had dominated European art since
the Renaissance. In the last quarter of the 1800's, artists began to question the merits of this
training. The change began with the impressionists. They painted directly on the canvas
without using preparatory drawings.
Since the beginning of the 1900's, art has been liberated from past traditions. This means
that the definition of drawing has also been expanded. It can be almost anything an artist
wishes it to be. All modern western art movements are represented in the drawing medium.
These include cubism ( Pablo Picasso), abstract expressionism ( Jackson Pollock), fauvism
( Henri Matisse), and postmodernism (Robert Rauschenberg). Artists continue to express
themselves through drawing, just as our ancestors felt the impulse to draw on their cave
walls so many years ago.
WHAT IS DRAWING?
Drawing as formal artistic creation might be defined as the primarily linear rendition of
objects in the visible world, as well as of concepts, thoughts, attitudes, emotions, and
fantasies given visual form, of symbols and even of abstract forms. This definition, however,
applies to all graphic arts and techniques that are characterized by an emphasis on form or
shape rather than mass and colour, as in painting. Drawing as such differs from graphic
printing processes in that a direct relationship exists between production and result.
Drawing, in short, is the end product of a successive effort applied directly to the carrier.
Whereas a drawing may form the basis for reproduction or copying, it is nonetheless unique
by its very nature.
Although not every artwork has been preceded by a drawing in the form of a
preliminary sketch, drawing is in effect the basis of all visual arts. Often the drawing is
absorbed by the completed work or destroyed in the course of completion. Thus, the
usefulness of a ground plan drawing of a building that is to be erected decreases as the
building goes up. Similarly, points and lines marked on a raw stone block
represent auxiliary drawings for the sculpture that will be hewn out of the material.
Essentially, every painting is built up of lines and pre-sketched in its main contours; only as
the work proceeds is it consolidated into coloured surfaces. As shown by an increasing
number of findings and investigations, drawings form the material basis of mural, panel, and
book paintings. Such preliminary sketches may merely indicate the main contours or may
predetermine the final execution down to exact details. They may also be mere probing
sketches. Long before the appearance of actual small-scale drawing, this procedure was
much used for monumental murals. With sinopia—the preliminary sketch found on a layer
of its own on the wall underneath the fresco, or painting on freshly spread, moist plaster—
one reaches the point at which a work that merely served as technical preparation becomes
a formal drawing expressing an artistic intention.
Sketches are typically created as preliminary drawings in order to prepare for a more
finished work of art. Sketches are typically created with quick marks and are usually lacking
some of the details that a finished drawing may have.
Often, the “nuts and bolts” of a finished drawing is worked out in the sketching stage of the
artistic process. Composition, balance between values, and proportion can all be worked out
in a quick sketch, rather than jumping right into a finished drawing, risking mistakes.
Mostly, sketches are created on lower quality papers such as newsprint, while finished
drawings are created on higher quality surfaces, like Bristol paper, rag paper, or drawing
paper. But this definition of sketching isn’t quite complete. There are no rules here, just
assumptions and generalizations.
• While sketching is a freehand drawing that focuses on capturing the essence rather than
going into details, drawing is a slow and more careful expression that makes use of tools
and uses colors too.
• Sketching is done using pencils and charcoal only. Drawing is done using pencils, crayons,
pastel, markers, etc.
• Sketching produces a picture made with minimum details while drawing produces a very
detailed picture.
• Drawings are always the final, finished product while sketches are preliminary attempts to
catch a beautiful scene or an experience.
• Sketching does not take much time, but drawing takes a lot of time.
Throughout history, drawing has occupied a central role in the early stages of the artistic
process, the immediacy of the medium granting artists the ability to commit ideas and
motifs to paper and to record the world around them before putting brush to canvas.
Several such “cartoons” have even become famous in their own right, for example a
preliminary drawing for Hans Holbein’s portrait of Henry VIII, currently on display in
London’s National Portrait Gallery, which has outlived the original painting, destroyed in a
fire in 1698.
Yet whilst such figurative works may be more commonly associated with the medium, we
should not overlook the importance of abstract drawing in art history. Drawings paved the
road to abstraction for artists such as Picasso, whose famed bull studies, progressing from a
lifelike visual representation of the animal to a powerful and abstract composition of lines
via a series of gradual steps, represent an important milestone in the development of
abstract art. Indeed, drawing has played a prominent role in the work of many of the most
celebrated abstract artists in history, including the likes of Richard Serra and Anish Kapoor.
However we choose to define drawing, there is no doubt that the medium has brought us
some of our most important works and ground-breaking innovations over the course of art
history. Though often dwarfed by painting or sculpture in terms of prestige, sale prices,
representation in institutions, as British contemporary artist Grayson Perry remarks, “until we
can insert a USB into our ear and download our thoughts, drawing remains the best way of
getting visual information onto the page.”
2. Modified Contour
Drawing - Drawing
exercise where you spend 90% of your time looking at the object and only glancing at your
drawing paper 10% of the drawing time.
3. Cross-Contour Drawing - Lines that show the form of an object. Cross-Contour lines lie
across the object rather than form the outline.
4. Contour Drawing - An informed line drawing. It can encompass all forms of contour
drawing like blind and modified. The quality of the line is most important in this type of
drawing.
5. Gesture Drawing - Quick drawing that shows movement or the mass of an object. It is
made through quick sketches and reflects the thinking of the artist.
6. Value to Model Form - Using light and dark values to give the sense of form to two-
dimensional drawings.
There are innumerable drawing styles to be studied and explored, each one conveying a
different final product. Naturally, different types of illustration call upon different skills from
the artist. Some are quite detailed and meticulous, requiring a lot of patience, while others
work well when the artist is able to be loose and free with their strokes. The most skilled
illustrators don’t stick to just one type of drawing, but experiment freely in order to stretch
their skills. Of course, they may specialize in one particular way of sketching, but by being
flexible with their work they are able to test of different drawing styles and bring those
lessons back to their main work. For instance, Leonardo da Vinci may be known for
the Mona Lisa, but he was also known to fill hundreds of notebooks with refined finished
sketches and spontaneous doodles.
As you look to carve out your own personal style, consider playing with these different types
of drawing in order to understand the positive impact they’ll have on your creative growth.
1. Line Drawing
While lines form the basis of all drawing styles, line drawings use contours without shading
to create memorable sketches. If you really want to exercise your drawing skills, try
continuous line drawing. In this exercise, the pen or pencil never leaves the sheet of paper,
so the end result is formed from one single line.
2. Doodling
While we may think of doodling as a mindless
past time, this type of drawing is a wonderful way to let your subconscious mind flow. Great
artists like Leonardo da Vinci are known for their doodles, which populate the margins of
his notebooks. Illustrator Vincent Bal plays with the shadows and shapes he finds in
everyday like and transforms them into whimsical works of art with his doodles. Meant to be
executed quickly and with simple, clear lines, doodles are wonderful, immediate impressions
of the world in front of us.
3. Cartoon
Cartoons have a long history, dating back to print magazines in the 19th century when they
were used as satirical and comical illustrations. Cartoon illustration is a large category,
having evolved over time. Some different cartoon styles include caricature, anime or manga,
and classic Disney. Playing with cartoon drawings means liberating yourself from
hyperrealistic representations, while still attempting to capture the essence of a figure in a
semi-realistic manner.
4. Pointillism
5. Photorealism/Hyperrealism
7. Anamorphic
Another technical style, 3D drawings require mastery of perspective to create depth and
illusion. While it may take some practice to get the hang of, the results are stunning and
surprising works of art that will delight viewers. Sometimes called anamorphic drawing,
there are lots of great YouTube drawing tutorials that can help beginners get the hang of
this style.
What is Painting?
The expression of ideas and emotions, with the creation
of certain aesthetic qualities that could be done in a two-
dimensional visual language is greatly known as Painting.
The elements of this language—its shapes, lines, colours,
tones, and textures—are used in various ways to produce
sensations of volume, space, movement, and light on a
flat surface. These elements are combined into
expressive patterns in order to represent real or
supernatural phenomena, to interpret a narrative theme,
or to create wholly abstract visual relationships. An
artist’s decision to use a particular medium, such
as tempera, fresco, oil, acrylic, watercolor or other water-
based paints, ink, gouache, encaustic, or casein, as well
as the choice of a particular form, such as mural, easel,
panel, miniature, manuscript illumination scroll, screen or
fan, panorama or any of a variety of modern forms, is
based on the sensuous qualities and the expressive
possibilities and limitations of those options. The choices
of the medium and the form, as well as the artist’s own
technique, combine to realize a unique visual image.
History of Painting
Each style grows out of the styles that came before it.
Every great artist adds to the accomplishments of earlier
painters and influences later painters. We can enjoy a
painting for its beauty alone. Its lines, forms, colors, and
composition (arrangement of parts) may appeal to our
senses and linger in our memories. But enjoyment of art
increases as we learn when and why and how it was
created. A painting always describes something. It may
describe the artist's impression of a scene or person. It
also describes the artist's feelings about the art of
painting itself. Suppose. Many factors have influenced
the history of painting. Geography, religion, national
characteristics, historic events, the development of new
materials—all help to shape the artist's vision.
Throughout history, painting has mirrored the changing
world and our ideas about it. In turn, artists have
provided some of the best records of the development
of civilization, sometimes revealing more than the written
word.
Prehistoric Painting
Cave dwellers were the earliest artists. Colored drawings
of animals, dating from about 30,000 to 10,000 B.C., have
been found on the walls of caves in southern France and
in Spain. Many of these drawings are amazingly well
preserved because the caves were sealed up for many
centuries. Early people drew the wild animals that they
saw all around them. Very crude human figures, drawn in
lifelike positions, have been found in Africa and eastern
Spain.
The cave artists filled the cave walls with drawings in rich,
bright colors. Some of the most beautiful paintings are in
the Cave of Altamira, in Spain. One detail shows a
wounded bison, no longer able to stand—probably the
victim of a hunter. It is painted in reddish brown and
outlined simply but skillfully in black. The pigments used
by cave painters were earth ochers (iron oxides varying in
color from light yellow to deep orange) and manganese
(a metallic element). These were crushe
The first part of the Middle Ages, from about the 6th to
the 11th centuries A.D., is commonly called the Dark
Ages. In this time of unrest, art was kept alive mainly in
the monasteries. In the 5th century A.D. barbarian tribes
from northern and central Europe roamed over the
continent. For hundreds of years they dominated
Western Europe. These people produced an art that has
a strong emphasis on pattern. They were especially fond
of designs of intertwining dragons and birds.
In Jan Brueghel the Elder’s still life oil painting you can
see many of the qualities mentioned above. The richness
of the paint itself is evident in both the resonant lights
and inky dark colors of the work. The working of the
paint allows for many different effects to be created,
from the softness of the flower petals to the reflection on
the vase and the many visual textures in between.
Printmaking is a fine art process that allows the artist to produce multiple copies of his original
image. But in no sense is the original print a copy or a reproduction or a giclée: the artist's hands
steer its creation from start to finish. As Carl Zigrosser has written, "The print is created through
contact with an inked or uninked plate, stone, block, or screen that has been worked on directly
by the artist alone or with others." There are four main categories of printmaking: relief, intaglio,
lithography, and screenprinting. Each color in a print usually requires a separate stone, plate,
block, or stencil, and any of these basic processes may be combined in the creation of a finished
work. Unique works (or works in an exceedingly limited number of copies) are sometimes
produced as monotypes or monoprints. Printmaking uses a transfer process to make multiples
from an original image or template. The multiple images are printed in an edition, with each
print signed and numbered by the artist. Most printmaking media result in images reversed from
the original. Print results depend on how the template (or matrix) is prepared. There are three
basic techniques of printmaking: relief, intaglio and planar. You can get an idea of how they
differ from the cross-section images below, and view how each technique works from this site at
the Museum of Modern Art in New York.
What are the printmaking processes?
Etching begins by first applying a protective wax-based coating to a thin metal plate. The artist
then scratches an image with a burin through the protective coating into the surface of the metal.
The plate is then submersed in a strong acid bath, etching the exposed lines. The plate is
removed from the acid and the protective coating is removed from the plate. Now the bare plate
is inked, wiped and printed. The image is created from the ink in the etched channels. The
amount of time a plate is kept in the acid bath determines the quality of tones in the resulting
print: the longer it is etched the darker the tones will be. Correccion by the Spanish master
Francisco Goya shows the clear linear quality etching can produce. The acid bath removes any
burrs created by the initial dry point work, leaving details and value contrasts consistent with the
amount of lines and the distance between them. Goya presents a fantastic image of people,
animals and strange winged creatures. His work often involved biting social
commentary. Correccion is a contrast between the pious and the absurd.
Because of the media used to create the imagery, lithographic images show characteristics much
like drawings or paintings. In A Brush for the Lead by Currier and Ives (below), a full range of
shading and more linear details of description combine to illustrate a winter’s race down the
town’s main road.
Currier and Ives, A Brush for the Lead; New York Flyers on the Snow, 1867. Lithograph Library
of Congress. Image is in the public domain.
Serigraphy, also known as screen printing, is a third type of planar printing medium. Screen
printing is a printing technique that uses a woven mesh to support an ink-blocking stencil. The
attached stencil forms open areas of mesh that transfer ink or other printable materials that can be
pressed through the mesh as a sharp-edged image onto a substrate such as paper or fabric. A
roller or squeegee is moved across the screen stencil, forcing or pumping ink past the threads of
the woven mesh in the open areas. The image below shows how a stencil’s positive (image)
areas are isolated from the negative (non-image) areas.
In serigraphy, each color needs a separate stencil. You can watch how this process develops in
the accompanying video. Screen printing is an efficient way to print posters, announcements, and
other kinds of popular culture images. Andy Warhol’s silk screens use images and iconography
from popular culture.
HISTORY OF PRINTMAKING
An original print is the printed impression produced from a block, plate, stone or screen on
which the artist has worked. By choosing to use a fine art print medium, it is possible to produce
a number of identical images, each one a hand-made original by the artist. Normally there is a
separate inking, wiping and printing of each color and for each copy within the edition. The total
number of prints is predetermined by the artist and thereafter; the blocks, plates, stones, or
screens are destroyed or recycled so that no further impressions may be taken. Only in modem
times have editions been limited to make them more desirable as an investment. Each original
print must bear the signature of the artist (usually in the lower right-hand comer or margin) and
also an indication of the total edition and serial number of the print. This appears like a fraction;
1/5 meaning the first print out of an edition of five.
Besides numbered prints, a fine art edition usually includes artist's proofs. These proofs are
designated P/A. The number of these proofs is usually 5 -- 10% of the total number of the
edition, more would be considered abusive. So an edition of 50 would have a maximum of five
artist's proofs. Sometimes these proofs are numbered with Roman numerals, e.g. I/V, II/V, III/V
etc. Some of the most valuable proofs do not form part of the edition. These are the trial proofs,
P/E, which the artist pulls in the process of creating the final print. A series of trial proofs
represents a unique record of the work in process, and as such is highly sought after by fine art
print collectors. Sometimes H/C is seen written in the margin of a print. This is a French
annotation "hors de commerce", which means the print was a gift or unsuitable for selling. Every
edition has a single "bon a tirer”, which is the artist's final proof, the ideal which all the prints in
the edition must emulate.
I. RELIEF PRINTING A relief print is any print in which an image is printed from the raised
portion of a carved, etched, or cast block. A simple example would be a rubber stamp. The most
common relief prints are woodcuts.
Printmaking originated in China after paper was invented around AD 105. Relief printing
appeared in Europe in the 15th Century, when the process of papermaking was imported from
the East. Stone rubbing predates any form of woodcut. To enable Chinese scholars to study their
scriptures, the classic texts and accompanying holy images were carved into large, flat stone
slabs. After lines were cut into the stone, damp paper was pressed and molded on the surface, so
that the paper was held in the incised lines. Ink was applied and the paper was carefully
removed. The resulting image appeared as white lines on a black background. This technique
was the foundation of printing. The development of printing continued with the spread of
Buddhism from India to China; images and text were printed on paper from a single block. This
method of combining text and image is called blockbook printing.
WOODCUTS
Woodcuts are the oldest method of printmaking. They were first developed in China in the 9th
Century. European examples date from the 14th Century. It is called a relief process because the
lines and surfaces to which the ink adheres are higher than the parts that are not printed.
To create a woodcut, the artist draws a design on a piece of wood sawed lengthwise across the
grain. Pine is the wood most commonly used, although fruitwoods such as pear or cherry may
also be used. After smoothing the surface, the wood may be hardened by treating it with shellac.
This makes it more durable under the pressure of a press and also makes it easier to carve strong,
bold images. The artist then paints or draws an image on the surface. The wood between the
drawn lines is cut away, leaving only the drawn image standing on the surface. To make the cuts
chisels, gouges or knives may be used.
A roller holding a film of oil-based ink is rolled completely over the block. A sheet of paper,
ideally an absorbent paper like rice paper, is placed over the block and the artist may then print
the image by hand rubbing the surface with the bowl of a spoon or with another burnishing
instrument. The block and paper may be run through a press; under the pressure of the press the
image is transferred to paper. The impression is pulled by carefully lifting a corner of the paper
and peeling it off the block. Separate blocks are used for color woodcuts, one block is used for
each color.
In the Middle Ages woodcuts were used to print patterns on textiles. Beginning in the 1400's,
artists made woodcuts to portray religious subjects, to decorate and illustrate books, and to make
playing cards. In the late 1400's and early 1500's the German artist, Albrecht Dürer brought the
art of woodcuts to a new level with his expert artistic and technical skills.
During the 1700's and 1800's Japanese artists produced outstanding woodcuts that greatly
influenced such European artists as Degas, Manet, Toulouse-Lautrec and Van Gogh.
In the 1900's expressionist artists such as Ernst Ludwig Kirchner of Germany and Edvard Munch
of Norway created many fine woodcuts.
Museum examples: A la Víbora de la Mar (To the Viper of the Sea), Luis Garcia Robledo (1960)
Alexander Gallery; Au Dormir de Lantar (The Dormant Lantara) from La Forête de Fontainbleau
(The Forest of Fontainbleau) Auguste-Louis Lepère (1887-1890) Belk Gallery
LINOLEUM CUT
Linoleum cut is a relief print carved into linoleum rather than wood. Linoleum is composed of
burlap coated with linoxyn; polymerized oil mixed with ground cork and pigments. The best
grade, battleship linoleum, is usually brown or gray. Linoleum is more easily cut than wood and
lighter weight tools are now made and sold for this process. Generally speaking, linocuts are less
esteemed by artists than woodcuts. Linoleum will not take very delicate or subtle cuts. The end
result may appear block or poster like. However it is a good medium for artists who enjoy
producing less exacting, more casual work. Museum Examples: Untitled, Luis Garcia Robledo
(1960) Williamson Gallery
II. INTAGLIO
The intaglio method of printing involves cutting or incising an image into a metal plate with
various tools or acids. The wide variety of methods used gives this medium enormous range. The
two basic typed of intaglio printing are engraving and etching. In engraving the image is cut into
the plate with tools called needles, burnishers, scrapers or rockers. In etching the image is cut
into the plate with acids.
ENGRAVING
Engraving is a form of intaglio printing (from Italian meaning to carve or to cut) in which the
lines that print are incised into the surface of the print form. The print form is a thin metallic
plate, usually made of copper. A sharply pointed steel instrument called a burin is used to cut the
grooves into the surface of the plate. Burin engraving requires considerable force and is done
from the strength of the arm (this differs from etching which is done more from the fingertips
like a fine drawing). The finished plate is inked with heavy, viscous ink and wiped with a rag,
leaving ink in the grooves. Slightly moistened paper is applied to the inked plate. Plate and paper
are run through a printing press, which can apply sufficient pressure to force the paper to pick up
the ink in the grooves. The resulting printed lines are sharply defined and slightly raised. Several
hundred prints can be made before weak lines on the print reveal the plate is wearing down.
Most early engravings were book illustrations and religious images intended for popular
use.Today these are sought after by museums and collectors.
GICLEE PRINT
Giclee is a relatively new and exciting form of fine art reproduction. It is a French term,
pronounced "zhee-clay", meaning "that which is sprayed". This plateless fine art printing method
was developed in 1989, and was used mainly for printing posters and proofs. Giclee prints are
sometimes referred to as Iris prints due to the fact they were printed on an Iris printer, one of the
first high-end digital printers. Giclee prints can be original works of art generated with a
computer, multiple originals based on artwork (created with or without a computer) made with
the Giclee process in mind, or high quality reproductions of original artwork.
One of the drawbacks of the early Iris printers was the lack of durability of their inks. The initial
colors were rich and beautiful, but tended to fade noticeably in two to three years. As the Iris
giclee evolved from the Iris print process, the permanence of the inks has improved dramatically.
A typical giclee now resists fading for thirty to sixty years. Ongoing advancements in ink
technology include inks that will remain stable for up to seventy-five years.
Prints can be made on most absorbent media, from glossy or textured photo papers to canvas to
watercolor paper. When prints are executed using high visual resolution, even artists have a hard
time telling the original from the copy. Obviously, using quality paper and inks are key to this
process.
After determining the paper, size and quantity of the edition, the printmaking process begins. A
roll of paper or canvas is loaded on the machine. The system's computer processes the digital file
with the final approved pre-press version. The artist chooses (this final version). The computer
controls six heads which each spray pigmented ink. The heads move back and forth across the
width of the paper as it slowly moves through the printer at a rate of about one-inch per minute.
Giclee has several advantages over other printmaking methods such as streamlining production,
reducing upfront costs and eliminating the need for storage. The artist works with the printer to
approve the Giclee print; he can then order prints as needed without huge upfront costs and
storage problems. This method gives the artist a chance to test market a new idea without
investing time and money on an image that may not sell in large quantities. Also artist can build
inventory slowly over time in response to the market.
Taking a continuous tone image and processing it through a screen makes offset lithographs. The
result is an image created with a series of dots, each one proportional in size to the density of the
original at the location of the dot. The human eye is tricked into seeing something that
approximates a continuous tone image. Most printed material such as newspapers and magazines
are made this way.
Serigraphs are really screenprints. These prints are made by creating a set of screens, each
representing one color. Ink is squeeged through the screen and onto the media. For fine art
reproduction, the number of screens required to approximate the tonal qualities of the original
are typically from 20 to more than 100. The larger the number of screens the closer a serigraph
can appear to be continuous tone and the more expensive it is to reproduce.
Giclee prints have advantages over both of these methods. The color available for giclee
processing is limited only by the color gamut of the inks. Therefore, literally millions of colors
are available and the limitation imposed by the screening process does not exist. The giclee
process uses such small dots and so many of them that they are not discernible to the eye. So a
giclee print is essentially a continuous tone print showing every color and tone nuance. And
lastly, giclee prints are available to "print on demand", meaning you only print what you need
and can reorder additional quantities as needed.
Giclee prints are not "computer-generated" in the way we usually know and think of that term.
Computers control the complex and technologically advanced printers that create the
reproductions, much as computers are used to create offset lithographs and serigraph. The giclee
process is simply a new and significant step in the creation of limited edition fine art prints.
It is also interesting to note that many photographers are using giclee-reproduced photographs.
They like the soft, painterly look of giclee prints, and photos reproduced in this way do not have
the reflectance of traditional photographic prints.
Artists such as Robert Rauschenberg, Jim Dine, David Hockney and Andrew and Jamie Wyeth
are using giclee to create original works of art, multiple originals or reproductions. Also, giclee
prints are shown at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the Los Angeles Museum of
Modem Art and the Corcoran Gallery in Washington, DC.
But it isn't just high-profile artists and galleries who are making and showing giclees. Artists at
all levels are working in a wide variety of media to create prints and original works using giclee
technology. While the fine art market increases by about three percent annually, the giclee
market is growing more than 60 percent annually. The growth in the print market of giclees has
been mostly at the expense of the serigraphs.
III. LITHOGRAPHY
Process
Lithography is a method of printmaking based on the chemical repellence of oil and water. It is a
process of printing from a smooth plate; the printing and non-printing surfaces are all at the same
level, as opposed to intaglio or relief processes in which the design is cut into the printing block.
Designs are drawn or painted on a level, porous surface with a greasy material, such as conte
crayon, grease pencil or a greasy substance called tusche. The most commonly used surfaces are
limestone or plates made of metal or plastic.
After the image is drawn, the stone is dampened and ink is applied with a roller. The greasy
image repels the water and holds the oily ink while the rest of the surface does the opposite. The
stone is chemically treated after the image is created in order to enhance the effect.
The artist then places a sheet of paper on the printing surface and runs the paper and the stone or
plate through a printing press under heavy pressure. The pressure transfers the inked design onto
the paper. To make additional impressions the artist redampens and reinks the surface.
It is interesting to note that because of the equipment used and the knowledge and skill required
for the printing process, lithography lends itself to collaboration between artist and printer. Also
pulling a large print requires two people.
History
Lithography was the first fundamentally new printing technology since the invention of relief
printing in the 15th Century. Alois Senefelder invented it in Germany in 1798. He was a comedic
playwright looking for a way to publish multiple copies of his works. Realizing the commercial
possibilities of this technique, Senefelder patented it a year later in Munich. Within 20 years
lithography appeared in England and the United States.
Although lithography enjoyed early commercial success as a leading method of printing books,
magazines and newspapers, it took a while longer to be accepted as a legitimate art form. In the
19th and early 20th century many people saw it only as a less expensive means to own a work of
art by a well-known painter.
However many European artists began experimenting with lithography soon after its invention in
1798. They liked the spontaneous effect they could achieve by drawing directly on the printing
surface. Some of these early masters included Eugene Delacroix, Pierre Bonnard, Henri de
Toulouse-Lautrec and Edvard Munch.
Today it has come to be seen as a well-respected art form with very unique expressive
capabilities. Many artists combine lithography with other printmaking processes, such as silk-
screen. Some leading lithographers of the 1900's included Marc Chagall, Edvard Munch, Pablo
Picasso, Willem de Kooning, Jasper Johns and Robert Rauschenberg to name only a few.
Museum Examples: Family Arc, John Biggers (1992) - Harris Gallery; $20 Bank of Charlotte
bill (1853) - Alexander Gallery
COLOR LITHOGRAPHY
Almost immediately after lithography was invented, attempts were made to create works in
color. In 1837, Godefroy Engelmann patented a color printing technique called
"Lithocolorprinting or Lithographs in color imitating printing". His use of the word "imitating"
illustrates the initial attitude toward this procedure as an accepted art form.
Color lithography is a complex process that usually involves multiple pressings, one for each
color in the image. According to one text on the technique, "The original color drawing should
be treated as a guide for the final print, not as a finished work to be exactly duplicated". When
different stones are used for each color (the same stone may also be used for multiple colors), it
is very important to keep the print in register each time it passes through the press. This means
insuring that the print is lined up exactly each time it goes through so that each color is in the
right position and the overlaying colors merge correctly.
Museum Examples: “Siren’s Song” from the Odysseus Suite, Romare Bearden (1979) Dalton
Gallery
IV. MONOPRINT
A monoprint or monotype refers to any print made in one version and incapable of being exactly
duplicated. It cannot be editioned.
They may be unique prints or variations on a theme. The artist paints, rubs or wipes designs
directly onto a plate using a slow drying paint or ink. The image must be printed before the ink
dries. It is printed by press or hand. The artist gets only one strong impression. The remaining
pigment can be reworked, but the next print will not be an exact copy of the first print. The final
effect can only be guessed at as no trial proofs can be done. This method allows the artist much
freedom and spontaneity. No Museum Examples on Exhibit.
V. SCREEN PRINTING
The most important part of the process is the preparation of the screen. Stencils may be applied
in a variety of ways, including the use of filling-in liquid, varnish or plastic film. A drawing can
be made directly on the surface with a special ink which is removed in readiness for printing
after the rest of the screen has been blocked out. A photographic stencil is made by initially
sensitizing the screen.
SERIGRAPHY
Serigraphy (silk-screen printing or screen printing) is a 20th Century printmaking technique that
was developed in America. It was introduced as a fine art technique with an exhibition of
serigraphs at the New York World's Fair in 1939.
Anthony Velonis of New York City developed the term serigraphy. In 1940, Velonis was
working for the WPA as head of the Fine Arts Project. The WPA was a depression era project
aimed at finding work for the unemployed. The Fine Arts Project was developed to find
government projects for unemployed artists to work on. The work was mostly of a commercial
nature, such as producing poster and other mass media type work. Velonis noticed that many of
the artists in his employ were suffering depression and a lack of self-esteem due to their
situation. He consulted with gallery owner Carl Zigrosser about this problem, and also spent
much of his own time thinking about and researching the situation. Finally he came up with the
word Serigraphy to differentiate the creative art in silkscreen produced by the artists from the
commercial applications. Seri comes from the Latin work for silk and graphein, from the Greek,
means to write or draw. This simple word change did much to elevate the feelings of fine artists
such as Elizabeth Olds, Ruth Chaney and Harry Gottleib, who were working with the FAP at the
time.
The origin of screen-printing may have been in Japan, where artist made large, delicate paper
cuttings in which the elements were joined and held together by human hair. The hairs served as
stencil ties without interfering with the printmaking process.
In its simplest form, screen-printing involves forcing ink through a stencil that is embedded or
securely attached to a silk or synthetic mesh screen. The screen is tightly stretched on a wooden
or metal frame. Viscous ink is squeegee through the screen depositing the ink on the paper under
the frame. A separate screen is used for each color and selected parts of the stencil can be
blocked out, if desired, during the reprinting. Wet prints are usually hung to dry.
In the 1930's and 1940's artists used the touche-washout method. This involved painting directly
on the top surface of the screen fabric with a grease crayon or touche. Once the image is drawn,
the screen is elevated and a water based glue solution is pulled evenly across the fabric. When
this solution dries, the grease marks on the fabric are removed leaving the image areas of the
fabric open for painting. It is interesting to note that according to Velonis these depression era
artists used fabric remnants for mesh, literally “anything they could get their hands on!” They
used paint from the hardware store in lieu of today's fine art inks. Today many artists use
photographic techniques to make stencils directly on the screen.
STENCIL (Pochoir)
Stencils are an essential part of screenprinting: they are attached to or incorporated with the
screen to ensure that the ink passes through in the correct places. They can be made in many
different forms, e. g. as a simple masking or covering stencil; as a “wash-out” stencil, which
involves drawing the design on the screen in a greasy substance, then covering the whole screen
with filler or gum, and finally dissolving the greasy image in turns, thereby forming a 1. positive
stencil; or as a photo-stencil, whereby photographic images are incorporated into the screen. 2.
Stencils are also used for coloring prints by hand. Stencils of the areas to be colored are cut out
in zinc or aluminum; the colors are dabbed on with a large brush (known as a pompon in
French); they may be juxtaposed or superimposed over each other. The method was much used
in the coloring of maps, topographical prints and devotional woodcuts. It is still used today for
book illustration and on greeting cards.
Printmaking in the Philippines did not gain popularity as an art form until the early
1960s. Manuel Rodrigo Sr. and Rodolfo Paras-Perez were responsible for the development of
interest in contemporary printmaking techniques. Rodriguez in particular became known as the
Father of Philippine Printmaking.
Printmaking was soon taught in several schools. Rodriguez taught at the Philippine Women’s
University, making it the unofficial center of printmaking in the country. He helped organize
the Philippine Association of Printmakers. The majority of the first young printmakers were
taught by Rodriguez either in PWU or in his workshops. Among these are Virgilio
Avadio, Lucio Martines, Lamberto Hechanova, Restituto Embuscado, Mario Parial, Adiel
Arevalo, Petite Calaguas, Emet Valente, Brenda Fajardo, Nelfa Querubin, Ivi Avellana-Cosio ,
and Nonon Padilla as well as his own sons Manuel Jr., Marcelino, and Ray Rodriguez.
In the 1930s Rodriguez was first introduced to the art of printmaking and in 19 4 8 he spent a lot
of his time reproducing his paintings via screen printing methods. Rodriguez began to really
experiment with printmaking in the 1950s, making greeting cards of rural Philippine life.
Rodriguez was born in Cibu in 1912. His father was an engraver and goldsmith for liturgical
vestments and church ornaments. Rodriguez left Cibu in 1935 and moved to Manila to attend the
University of the Philippines School of Fine Arts, where he was mentored by Philippine
artistsToribio Herrera, Fernando and Pablo Amorsolo, Fabian de la Rosa, and Ramon Peralta. He
left the Philippines in the 19 6 0 sfor New York to pursue a Rockefeller printmaking scholarship
at the prestigious Pratt Graphic Center. It was during 19 6 0 - 6 2 that Rodriguez worked in
the print department of the Museum of Modern Art, after which he repeatedly visited the
famed Atelier 17 in Paris, run by British artist and teacher Stanley William Hayter.
HISTORY OF SCULPTURES
For thousands of years sculpture has filled many roles in human life. The
earliest sculpture was probably made to supply magical help to hunters. After
the dawn of civilization, statues were used to represent gods. Ancient kings,
possibly in the hope of making themselves immortal, had likenesses carved,
and portrait sculpture was born. The Greeks made statues that depicted
perfectly formed men and women. Early Christians decorated churches with
demons and devils, reminders of the presence of evil for the many
churchgoers who could neither read nor write.
From its beginnings until the present, sculpture has been largely monumental.
In the 15th century, monuments to biblical heroes were built on the streets of
Italian cities, and in the 20th century a monument to a songwriter was built in
the heart of New York City. Great fountains with sculpture in the center are as
commonplace beside modern skyscrapers as they were in the courts of old
palaces. The ancient Sumerians celebrated military victory with sculpture. The
participants of World War II also used sculpture to honor their soldiers.
Prehistoric Sculpture
Sculpture may be the oldest of the arts. People carved before they painted or
designed dwellings. The earliest drawings were probably carved on rock or
incised (scratched) in earth. Therefore, these drawings were as much
forerunners of relief sculpture as of painting.
Only a few objects survive to show
what sculpture was like thousands of
years ago. There are, however,
hundreds of recent examples of
sculpture made by people living in
primitive cultures. These examples
may be similar to prehistoric
sculpture.
From recent primitive sculpture and from the few surviving prehistoric pieces,
we can judge that prehistoric sculpture was never made to be beautiful. It was
always made to be used in rituals. In their constant fight for survival, early
people made sculpture to provide spiritual support.
Figures of men, women, and animals and combinations of all these served to
honor the strange and sometimes frightening forces of nature, which were
worshiped as evil or good spirits. Oddly shaped figures must have represented
prayers for strong sons, good crops, and abundant game and fish. Sculpture in
the form of masks was worn by priests or medicine men in dances designed to
drive away evil spirits or beg favors from good ones.
Egypt
Egyptian sculpture and all Egyptian art was based on the belief in a life after
death. The body of the Egyptian ruler, or pharaoh, was carefully preserved,
and goods were buried with him to provide for his needs forever. The
pyramids, great monumental tombs of
Giza, were built for the most powerful
early rulers. The pharaoh and his wife
were buried in chambers cut deep inside
the huge blocks of stone.
Egyptian sculptors made standing and seated figures in the round and in
relief. Changes in style reveal changed circumstances. The portraits of rulers of
the Middle Kingdom (2134-1778 BC) Lose the strength and vigor of those of
their ancestors at Giza. The faces are drawn, sad, and weary. A greater energy
and force returns in the period of Egypt's greatest power, the New Kingdom
(1567-1080 B.C.). Colossal figures like those of Ramses II at the entrance to his
tomb at Abu-Simbel are broad, powerful, and commanding. A smaller portrait
of Ramses II shows the smooth finish, precise craftsmanship, and elegance of
late New Kingdom art.
Mesopotamia
Stone sculpture from such heavily fortified city palaces as Nineveh, Nimrud,
and Khorsabad reveal the aggressive, warlike character of later (10th-century
B.C.) conquerors of this region, the Assyrians. At the entrances of their palaces
the Assyrians placed huge symbols of the king's might and majesty in the
form of colossal guardian monsters--five-legged, winged bulls with human
heads. Slabs of stone carved in relief with scenes of hunts, battles, victory
banquets, and ceremonial rituals were placed along the lower walls inside the
palaces.
A greater lightness and brilliance can be seen in a still later center of this
region, Babylon. The Babylonians used brightly colored tiles in their reliefs.
Persian conquerors who occupied Babylon in the 6th century B.C. brought with
them a tradition of fine craftsmanship. This skill persisted as they continued
creating superb designs in bronze and gold. Sometimes the designs are purely
abstract ornamental patterns; sometimes they are animal forms freely shaped
into graceful figures. Relief sculpture from the great palace of Darius at
Persepolis (begun about 520 B.C.) retains some Assyrian features. The figures
have heads with tightly curled hair and beards. Flat areas bounded by sharply
cut lines contrast with richly patterned ones. The figures in this sculpture are
softly curved and rounded; draperies are fine and light.
Aegean Civilization
Just a few examples of sculpture remain from the
colorful Minoan civilization on the island of
Crete. Ivory and terra-cotta; small statuettes of
snake goddesses, priestesses, and acrobats; and
cups with such scenes in relief as a bull being
caught in a net or harvesters returning from the fields give lively suggestions
of Minoans in action.
Just a few examples of sculpture remain from the colorful Minoan civilization
on the island of Crete. Ivory and terra-cotta; small statuettes of snake
goddesses, priestesses, and acrobats; and cups with such scenes in relief as a
bull being caught in a net or harvesters returning from the fields give lively
suggestions of Minoans in action.
Power passed from Crete to the mainland, but little sculpture from such sites
as Tiryns or Mycenae has been found. The Lion Gate at Mycenae (about 1250
B.C.), with its two massive beasts guarding the entrance to the fortified city, is
an exceptional monumental sculpture from this time. The beaten-gold mask of
Agamemnon is memorable for its suggestion of the great heroes of Homeric
legends. The mask was found buried with golden cups, daggers, breastplates,
and other objects in the tombs and shaft graves of Mycenae.
Greek Sculpture
The Greeks developed a standing figure of a nude male, called the Kouros or
Apollo. The Kouros served to depict gods and heroes. The Kore, or standing
figure of a draped female, was more graceful and was used to portray maidens
and goddesses. The winged female figure, or Nike, became the personification
of victory.
The fact that Greek sculptors concentrated their energies on a limited number
of problems may have helped bring about the rapid changes that occurred in
Greek sculpture between the 7th century and the late 4th century B.C. The
change from abstraction to naturalism, from simple figures to realistic ones,
took place during this period. Later figures have normal proportions and stand
or sit easily in perfectly balanced poses.
The most important function of Greek sculpture was to honor gods and
goddesses. Statues were placed in temples or were carved as part of a temple.
Greek temples were shrines created to preserve the images of the gods. The
people worshiped outdoors.
The Greeks were defeated by the Romans, but the Hellenistic style lasted for
centuries. Greek sculpture survived because the Romans were greatly
impressed by Greek art. From the early days of the republic, Romans imported
examples of Greek art, ordered copies of famous Greek works, and
commissioned Greek sculptors to do Roman subjects.
Rome profited from the double artistic inheritance of Greek and Etruscan
sculpture. The inventiveness of Roman sculptors added to this heritage. The
most important contributions of the Roman sculptors were portraits.
In the 5th century A.D. the western half of the Roman Empire fell to invading
Germanic tribes from northern and central Europe. These peoples soon
became Christians and spread the religion throughout Europe. Unlike the
Romans, the Germanic peoples had no tradition of human representation in
art. Their art consisted mainly of complex patterns and shapes used for
decoration. It influenced Christian art as much as Greco-Roman art did.
There are relatively few examples of sculpture made in the first 1,000 years of
Christianity. Among these rare examples are portable altars, reliquaries
(containers for the remains of Christian saints and martyrs), chalices, and other
objects used in the services of Christian worship. These were shaped with
great care and were often made of precious materials. Sculptors used the
fragile and lovely medium of ivory in many ways. They carved it in relief for
small altars or as covers for the Gospels, the Bible, or prayerbooks. Small,
freestanding figures represented the Madonna and the Christ Child, angels, or
Christian saints.
Romanesque Sculpture
A new and brilliant chapter in Christian art began after the year 1000. For the
next three centuries sculptors, architects, masons, carpenters, and hundreds of
other craftsmen created some of the most impressive Christian churches ever
built.
These artists worked on a bolder and larger scale than had been possible for
hundreds of years. For their ideas they looked to the best examples of great
structures they knew—Roman buildings. The term "Romanesque" suggests the
Roman qualities of the art of the 11th and 12th centuries. Important changes
were made by these later artists. German Romanesque churches differ from
Italian ones, and Spanish from French ones. Ideas of carving, building, and
painting circulated freely, for people often went on pilgrimages to worship at
sacred sites in different countries.
Gothic Sculpture
The great era of building drew to a close by the early 14th century. A series of
wars and crises prevented the building of anything more than small chapels
and a few additions to earlier structures. One finds only small statuettes and
objects, used for private devotions, instead of the great programs of
monumental sculpture that in the 13th century had enriched such cathedrals
as those at Amiens, Paris, Rheims, Wells, Burgos, and Strasbourg.
Renaissance Sculpture
As early as the 13th century the Italians planted the seeds of a new age: the
Renaissance. Although the elements of medieval and Byzantine art
contributed a great deal to the formation of Renaissance sculpture, Italian
artists were interested in reviving the classical approach to art. ("Renaissance"
means "rebirth.")
The most significant change in art that occurred in the Renaissance was the
new emphasis on glorifying the human figure. No longer was sculpture to deal
only with idealized saints and angels; sculpted figures began to look more
lifelike.
The relief sculpture of Nicola Pisano (1220-84) forecast the new age. In the
late 13th century Pisano carved nude male figures on a church pulpit. (The
nude figure had not been used in sculpture since the fall of Rome.) Although
Pisano obviously tried to copy the heroic figures of classical art, he knew little
about human anatomy, and his work was still proportioned like Byzantine and
medieval sculpture.
By the early 15th century the Renaissance was well under way. The sculptor
Donatello created the first freestanding nude since classical times, a bronze
figure of David. Donatello clearly understood the whole anatomy of the figure
so well that he could present the young biblical hero with an ease and
assurance. By the early 16th century the sculptural heritage of another
Florentine, the great painter and sculptor Michelangelo Buonarroti, was such
that his version of David is almost superhuman in its force and strength.
A host of sculptors worked with these men and, in turn, trained younger
sculptors. Their individual talents varied, and these were applied to a number
of different sculptural problems. Christian themes continued to be important,
but in addition, fountains, portraits, tombs, equestrian statues, and subjects
from classical mythology were all created to meet a lively demand. Luca della
Robbia (1400?-82) and others developed a new medium--glazed terra-cotta. It
was a popular and attractive substitute for the more expensive marble.
Michelangelo unquestionably became the dominant figure in 16th-century
sculpture, and he is thought by many people to be the greatest single figure in
the history of art. All his sculpture, from the early, beautifully finished Pietà to
the tragic fragment the Rondanini Pietà, left unfinished at his death, was made
with skill and power. Michelangelo's contemporaries and the sculptors who
lived in later years in Italy and elsewhere developed a more elegant,
decorative style, relying on a smooth, precise finish and complex, elaborate
designs. This style was called mannerism.
Baroque Sculpture
Rococo Sculpture
Statuettes and statues of small groups were designed as pleasant and often
witty additions to lovely rooms. The individual talents of the sculptors and
their joint efforts created an ornamental effect. The same brilliance and skill
also created a group of superbly beautiful churches in southern Germany.
The most commanding figure of neoclassical sculpture was the Italian Antonio
Canova (1757-1822). Canova was a favorite of the kings and noblemen of
Europe. His specialty was the monument in which a statesman or other
important figure was dressed in the robes and garlands of classical figures.
Canova frankly imitated antique sculptors. His Perseus and The Pugilists are
exhibited in the Vatican with ancient classical sculpture.
During the 19th century many sculptors rebelled against the neoclassical
tradition. They wanted their works of art to say something, to express an idea
or a feeling. They wanted to copy nature, not the works of other sculptors.
François Rude (1784-1855) was one of the first to react against the coldness of
the neoclassical style.
An intensity of emotion brings to life the work of Antoine Louis Barye (1795-
1875). Jaguar Devouring a Hare is an exciting scene of conflict and violent
struggle.
20th-Century Sculpture
Pablo Picasso, one of the greatest sculptors as well as perhaps the greatest
painter of the 20th century, saw another quality in primitive art. In the
simplicity of forms he saw that objects of nature are not necessarily solid
masses but are made up of circles, squares, triangles, and cubes. This led to a
style called cubism, which was developed by Picasso and Georges Braque.
Picasso's Head of a Woman (1909) is one of the first cubist sculptures. In it
Picasso divided the surface of a head into many different planes.
As World War I began, the atmosphere in Europe was anxious. Some artists
reflected the tensions of the uneasy times in a new form of art called dada--
meaningless, representing nothing, and opposed to all other art. "Found
objects" and household items, such as the sinks and hangers of Marcel
Duchamp (1887-1968), were exhibited as sculpture. At the same time, a group
of Italian artists called futurists were excited by the pace of the machine age.
Their sculpture showed objects in motion. Umberto Boccioni (1882-1916) was
a leading futurist.
After World War I, the movement called surrealism developed. Many artists
who had been cubists or dadaists became surrealists. The work of Jean Arp
(1887-1966), with its fanciful forms that seem to float in space, belongs to this
movement.
During the 1920's and 1930's, the constructivists built rather than carved or
modeled their sculptures. The beauty of pure form and space excited them.
The Russian brothers Naum Gabo (1890-1977) and Antoine Pevsner (1886-
1962) used blades of metal and plastic to achieve an effect of lightness and
transparency. Julio Gonzalez (1876-1942) introduced the use of forged iron.
The tremendous influence of his technique is seen particularly in the work of
Picasso, a student of Gonzalez in the technique of welding.
In the 1960's and 1970's, still more new styles developed. Some artists chose
to portray subjects from the everyday world around them—the Brillo boxes
and soup cans of Andy Warhol (1928-87), the surrealist boxes of Joseph
Cornell (1903-72), the plaster hamburgers and "soft typewriters" of Claes
Oldenburg (1929-). Others combined painting, sculpture, and "found objects,"
as in the work of Marisol Escobar (1930-). George Segal (1924-2000) used
plaster casts of human figures in everyday poses. Louise Nevelson (1900-88)
combined small units of metal and wood (often table and chair legs, bed
posts) into huge structures that she called "environments." Sculptors like
Barnett Newman (1905-70) and Tony Smith (1912-80) created massive pieces
that are often shown outdoors. Some sculpture not only moves but is run by
computer.
Form and space, reality, emotion, and perfect beauty are the interests of artists
in all centuries. The 20th century only gave them new shape.
WHAT IS SCULPTURE?
"Sculpture is the only branch of the visual arts that is specifically
concerned with expressive three-dimension form."
The term refers to the three dimensions of space—length, breadth, and depth.
It is a useful way of distinguishing between art such as painting, drawing, and
prints, which are two-dimensional (flat), and sculpture, which is three-
dimensional.
Not all sculptures are carved in the round. Relief sculptures are carved on one
side only, and stand out from a background surface. Relief panels have been
used since ancient times, often to decorate important buildings, such as
temples and churches.
Techniques depend upon the materials used. When carving stone or wood,
the sculptor chips away with a hammer and chisel. When sculpting clay, artists
may use their hands. Clay models may be cast in bronze to create a strong,
permanent sculpture. Other techniques include welding metal, molding plastic
or concrete, and using fiberglass.
Often statures will be close to life size and usually represent the whole figure,
there is also a class of ‘equestrian statuary’ where the subject is mounted on a
horse. Smaller statues are often described as ‘statuettes’. The terms also tends
to imply that the subject is a specific, recognisable figure, either a real person
or an embodiment of some attribute, usually presented in a positive light,
often including a certain amount of symbolism and very often intended for
display in a public place.
There are also a few related forms such as portrait busts which are the head
and neck of the subjects and effigies which are specifically funerary sculptures,
often forming the ‘lid’ of a tomb in a lying position. In terms of the difference
statuary is essentially one type of sculpture. Not all sculptures are figurative
and not all figurative sculpture would necessarily be considered statues.
VOLUME ELEMENT
A single volume is the fundamental unit of three-dimensional solid form that can be
conceived in the round. Some sculptures consist of only one volume, others are
configurations of a number of volumes. The human figure is often treated by sculptors
as a configuration of volumes, each of which corresponds to a major part of the body,
such as the head, neck, thorax, and thigh.
Holes and cavities in sculpture, which are as carefully shaped as the solid
forms and are of equal importance to the overall design, are sometimes
referred to as negative volumes.
SURFACE ELEMENT
The surfaces of sculpture are in fact all that one actually sees. It is from their
inflections that one makes inferences about the internal structure of the sculpture. A
surface has, so to speak, two aspects:
01. It contains and defines the internal structure of the masses of the
sculpture.
02. It is the part of the sculpture that enters into relations with external space.
Unlike the painter, who creates light effects within the work, the sculptor manipulates
actual light on the work. The distribution of light and shade over the forms of his
work depends upon the direction and intensity of light from external sources.
Nevertheless, to some extent he can determine the kinds of effect this external light
will have. If he knows where the work is to be sited, he can adapt it to the kind of light
it is likely to receive. The brilliant overhead sunlight of Egypt and India demands a
different treatment from the dim interior light of a northern medieval cathedral.
COLOUR ELEMENT
The colouring of sculpture may be either natural or applied. In the recent past,
sculptors became more aware than ever before of the inherent beauty of sculptural
materials. Under the slogan of “truth to materials” many of them worked their
materials in ways that exploited their natural properties, including colour and texture.
More recently, however, there has been a growing tendency to use bright artificial
colouring as an important element in the design of sculpture.
In the ancient world and during the Middle Ages almost all sculpture was
artificially coloured, usually in a bold and decorative rather than a naturalistic
manner. The sculptured portal of a cathedral, for example, would be coloured
and gilded with all the brilliance of a contemporary illuminated manuscript.
Combinations of differently coloured materials, such as the ivory and gold of
some Greek sculpture, were not unknown before the 17th century; but the
early Baroque sculptor Gian Lorenzo Bernini greatly extended the practice by
combining variously coloured marbles with white marble and gilt bronze.
It is doubtful whether any principles of sculpture design are universal in the art
of sculpture as the principles of sculpture that govern the organization of the
elements of sculpture into expressive compositions differ from style to style. In
fact, distinctions made among the major styles of sculpture are largely based
on recognition of differences in the principles of design that underlie them.
Thus, the art historian Erwin Panofsky was attempting to define a difference of
principle in the design of Romanesque and Gothic sculpture. He stated that
the forms of Romanesque were conceived as projections from a plane outside
themselves. Those of Gothic were conceived as being centred on an axis
within themselves. The “principle of axiality” was considered by Panofsky to be
“the essential principle of classical statuary,” which Gothic had rediscovered.
The principles of sculptural design govern the approaches of sculptors to such
fundamental matters as orientation, proportion, scale, articulation, and
balance.
The principles of sculpture that govern the characteristic poses and spatial
compositions of upright figures in different styles of sculpture are formulated
with reference to axes and the four cardinal planes. For example:
The principle of axiality already referred to.
The principle of frontality, which governs the design of Archaic sculpture.
The characteristic contrapposto (pose in which parts of the body, such as
upper and lower, tilt or even twist in opposite directions) of Michelangelo’s
figures.
And in standing Greek sculpture of the Classical period the frequently used
balanced “chiastic” pose. Stance in which the body weight is taken principally
on one leg. Thereby creating a contrast of tension and relaxation between the
opposite sides of a figure.
Proportions of Sculpture
Hierarchic Scale
In ancient and medieval sculpture the relative scale of the figures in a
composition is often determined by their importance; e.g., slaves are much
smaller than kings or nobles. This is sometimes known as hierarchic scale.
Sculpture is the branch of the visual arts that operates in three dimensions. It is one of the plastic
arts. Durable sculptural processes originally used carving (the removal of material) and
modelling (the addition of material, as clay), in stone, metal, ceramics, wood and other materials
but, since Modernism, there has been an almost complete freedom of materials and process. A
wide variety of materials may be worked by removal such as carving, assembled by welding or
modelling, or molded or cast. Sculpture in stone survives far better than works of art in
perishable materials, and often represents the majority of the surviving works (other than pottery)
from ancient cultures, though conversely traditions of sculpture in wood may have vanished
almost entirely. However, most ancient sculpture was brightly painted, and this has been lost.
Sculpture has been central in religious devotion in many cultures, and until recent centuries large
sculptures, too expensive for private individuals to create, were usually an expression of religion
or politics. Those cultures whose sculptures have survived in quantities include the cultures of
the ancient Mediterranean, India and China, as well as many in Central and South America and
Africa.
Sculpture can be divided into two classes: relief sculpture and sculpture in the round. There are
three methods for making sculpture: modeling, carving, and assembly.
The Three Basic Sculpture Processes Sculpture is the creation of three-dimensional forms. A
form is an object defined by contour, height, depth, and width. Sculpture is created through three
basic processes: carving, modeling, or assembly.
Carving: The sculptor removes unwanted material to create the form. This is also called
subtractive sculpture. Generally, materials such as a block of wood, stone, and other hard
materials are used. Can be thought of as the opposite of modeling because it involves removing
rather than adding material. With knife or chisel, the sculptor carves from a block of wood or
stone until the form is made.
Modeling: The sculptor creates a form by building it up from an amorphous lump of plastic
material. This is also called additive sculpture. Clay, paper machê, and other pliable materials are
modeled into a sculpture. Modeling with clay is generally the first process for creating a cast
metal sculpture.
Assembly (or construction): The sculptor joins prefabricated elements as in welded metal
constructions. This is also additive sculpture. Materials such as steel, wood, and found materials
are glued, welded, or connected in some other fashion to create a sculpture.
Relief sculpture is sculpture in which images are set against a flat background. A coin is a good
example of relief sculpture: the inscription, the date, and the figure--sometimes a portrait of a
statesman—are slightly raised above a flat surface when the image is only slightly raised, as with
the coin, the sculpture is called low relief or bas-relief. The ancient Egyptians sometimes carved
figures into a flat surface. This type of carving is known as sunken relief. Statues that are almost
three-dimensional but still are attached to backgrounds are regarded as high relief.
Sculpture in the round is freestanding, attached to no background. Most statues and portrait
busts are carved in the round.
Joining, or constructing, was not widely practiced until the 20th century. In this method the
artist uses pieces of wood, metal, or plastic and joins them together into a construction. The airy,
abstract kinds of forms that are popular in modern times lend themselves to the joining system.
The sculptor must have a great deal of technical knowledge. He or she must know a good piece
of stone from a bad one and just how much force that stone can take before it cracks. The
sculptor must judge the quality of woods and learn how much water different kinds of clays need
to stay workable. For casting models, the sculptor must know the chemistry of metals and their
melting points. And the modern sculptor is frequently a competent welder, riveter, and machinist
as well as an artist.
Materials
Before beginning to work, the sculptor must decide what material to use. Materials range from
something as rare and costly as ivory, which comes from elephants' tusks, to common clay. Good
clay is highly prized, but almost anyone can afford it, since it is found in many places all over the
world.
The sculptor must decide between a material that is permanent and one that must be made
permanent. Each kind has its advantages and disadvantages. A stone like marble is, of course,
very hard. Carving must be done with great strength and at the same time with great delicacy.
Mistakes are difficult to repair, and too much force can cause breakage. But when a marble
statue is carved and polished, the sculptor's work is done. Clay, in contrast, is very soft. The
artist can experiment a great deal, adding pieces and remodeling sections. If a mistake is made,
the error can be removed quickly. However, clay must be kept workable. Every day the
unfinished work must be covered with damp rags, and from time to time the unused clay in the
bin must be moistened with water and pounded. Moreover, when the modeling is finished, the
statue is by no means ready for exhibition, for clay does not last long. Therefore, the statue must
be converted to another kind of material. A number of systems may be used, each requiring
additional work. These systems--pointing, firing, and casting--will be described later.
Perhaps because they are permanent, stone and metal have always been important materials for
the sculptor. Other materials that have been used include wood, ivory, jade, bone, glass, and
plaster. For sculpture that is to be converted to another material, clay is by far the most
frequently used substance, but various kinds of wax have also been employed.
In modern times the sculptor has turned to new materials such as one of the plastics, fiberglass,
stainless steel, and aluminum.
Tools
Sculpting tools are an extension of the artist's hands. Some tools let a sculptor work a soft
substance easily and precisely. Other tools allow the use of materials otherwise too hard to
handle.
Loops of wire held in wooden handles can drag off large sections from a mass of clay more
quickly and neatly than can a person's hands. Sticks or blades of wood, ivory, or light, flexible
metals can give clean edges and draw fine lines across the surface of wax, clay, or soft metal.
Hardwood and all forms of stone demand different kinds of tools. Hammers, mallets, chisels, and
drills are needed for the process of carving. Today sculptors often use welding torches and
soldering irons to join metal together for sculpture. Special machines that join or separate
plastics with heat and pressure may also be used.
Many sculptors begin working from their sketches, while others work directly with their
materials. Whatever the approach, the sculptor's aim is to produce a lasting work of art.
Pointing is not used very much today, but to sculptors in the past it was a dependable system for
converting clay or wax sculpture into stone. First, the sculptor made a clay model of a statue. The
sculptor then placed points, or marks, on the model, measuring the distances between the points.
Using hundreds and sometimes thousands of points as guides, the exact proportions of the model
could be transferred to the stone.
Firing is the only system that converts clay sculpture itself into a durable object. Not all clay
sculpture is suitable for firing, for the system requires the object to be hollow and free from
impurities and air bubbles. Therefore, as a rule, only small statues are fired. After the sculpture is
completed, it must be left uncovered while the moisture in the clay evaporates. Then it is placed
in a kiln, a high-temperature oven, and fired (baked) until very hard.
Casting is the most common system of converting a clay or wax sculpture into another material.
There are many systems of casting, most of which are used in foundries. Basically, casting
involves making a mold of the clay or wax model. This mold may be made of plaster, rubber,
clay, or any of several other substances that are both workable and tough. If the sculpture is clay,
the mold must be made in several parts, so that it can be removed from the model and then
reassembled. If the figure is made of wax, the mold may be of one piece; for the mold can be
heated, causing the wax to melt and run out. Hot liquid metal--usually bronze--is poured into the
mold. When the metal has hardened, the mold is broken away and the sculpture is cleaned and
finished. Casting Sculptures that are cast are made from a material that is melted down—usually
a metal—that is then poured into a mold. The mold is allowed to cool, thereby hardening the
metal, usually bronze. Casting is an additive process.
HISTORY OF ARCHITECTURE
Long before the magnificent structures of ancient Greece and Rome, humans
were designing and constructing. The period known as the Classical Era grew
from ideas and construction techniques that evolved centuries and eons apart
in distant locations.
This review illustrates how each new movement builds on the one before.
Although our timeline lists dates related mostly to American architecture,
historic periods do not start and stop at precise points on a map or a calendar.
Periods and styles flow together, sometimes merging contradictory ideas,
sometimes inventing new approaches, and often re-awakening and re-
inventing older movements. Dates are always approximate — architecture is a
fluid art.
Prehistoric builders moved earth and stone into geometric forms, creating our
earliest human-made formations. We don't know why primitive people began
building geometric structures. Archaeologists can only guess that prehistoric
people looked to the heavens to imitate the sun and the moon, using that
circular shape in their creations of earth mounds and monolithic henges.
Why does the circle dominate man's earliest architecture? It is the shape of the
sun and the moon, the first shape humans realized to be significant to their
lives. The duo of architecture and geometry goes way back in time and may be
the source of what humans find "beautiful" even today.
Wood was not widely available in the arid Egyptian landscape. Houses in
ancient Egypt were made with blocks of sun-baked mud. Flooding of the Nile
River and the ravages of time destroyed most of these ancient homes. Much
of what we know about ancient Egypt is based on great temples and tombs,
which were made with granite and limestone and decorated with
hieroglyphics, carvings, and brightly colored frescoes. The ancient Egyptians
didn't use mortar, so the stones were carefully cut to fit together.
The pyramid form was a marvel of engineering that allowed ancient Egyptians
to build enormous structures. The development of the pyramid form allowed
Egyptians to build enormous tombs for their kings. The sloping walls could
reach great heights because their weight was supported by the wide pyramid
base. An innovative Egyptian named Imhotep is said to have designed one of
the earliest of the massive stone monuments, the Step Pyramid of Djoser
(2,667 B.C. to 2,648 B.C.).
700 to 323 B.C. — Greek. The Doric column was first developed in Greece
and it was used for great temples, including the famous Parthenon in Athens.
Simple Ionic columns were used for smaller temples and building interiors.
323 to 146 B.C. — Hellenistic. When Greece was at the height of its power in
Europe and Asia, the empire built elaborate temples and secular buildings with
Ionic and Corinthian columns. The Hellenistic period ended with conquests by
the Roman Empire.
44 B.C. to A.D. 476 — Roman. The Romans borrowed heavily from the earlier
Greek and Hellenistic styles, but their buildings were more highly ornamented.
They used Corinthian and composite style columns along with decorative
brackets. The invention of concrete allowed the Romans to build arches,
vaults, and domes. Famous examples of Roman architecture include the
Roman Colosseum and the Pantheon in Rome.
Even as the Roman Empire faded, Roman ideas reached far across Europe.
Built between 1070 and 1120, the Basilica of St. Sernin in Toulouse, France is a
good example of this transitional architecture, with a Byzantine-domed apse
and an added Gothic-like steeple. The floor plan is that of the Latin cross,
Gothic-like again, with a high alter and tower at the cross intersection.
Constructed of stone and brick, St. Sernin is on the pilgrimage route to
Santiago de Compostela.
Early in the 12th century, new ways of building meant that cathedrals and
other large buildings could soar to new heights. Gothic architecture became
characterized by the elements that supported taller, more graceful architecture
— innovations such as pointed arch, flying buttresses, and ribbed vaulting. In
addition, elaborate stained glass could take the place of walls that no longer
were used to support high ceilings. Gargoyles and other sculpting enabled
practical and decorative functions.
Gothic architecture began mainly in France where builders began to adapt the
earlier Romanesque style. Builders were also influenced by the pointed arches
and elaborate stonework of Moorish architecture in Spain. One of the earliest
Gothic buildings was the ambulatory of the abbey of St. Denis in France, built
between 1140 and 1144.
Originally, Gothic architecture was known as the French Style. During the
Renaissance, after the French Style had fallen out of fashion, artisans mocked
it. They coined the word Gothic to suggest that French Style buildings were
the crude work of German (Goth) barbarians. Although the label wasn't
accurate, the name Gothic remained.
While builders were creating the great Gothic cathedrals of Europe, painters
and sculptors in northern Italy were breaking away from rigid medieval styles
and laying the foundation for the Renaissance. Art historians call the period
between 1200 to 1400 the Early Renaissance or the Proto-Renaissance of art
history.
Fascination for medieval Gothic architecture was reawakened in the 19th and
20th centuries. Architects in Europe and the United States designed great
buildings and private homes that imitated the cathedrals of medieval Europe.
If a building looks Gothic and has Gothic elements and characteristics, but it
was built in the 1800s or later, its style is Gothic Revival.
More than 1,500 years after the Roman architect Vitruvius wrote his important
book, the Renaissance architect Giacomo da Vignola outlined Vitruvius's ideas.
Published in 1563, Vignola's The Five Orders of Architecture became a guide
for builders throughout western Europe. In 1570 Andrea Palladio used the new
technology of movable type to publish I Quattro Libri dell' Architettura, or The
Four Books of Architecture. In this book, Palladio showed how Classical rules
could be used not just for grand temples but also for private villas.
1600 to 1830 — Baroque
Architecture was only one expression of the Baroque style. In music, famous
names included Bach, Handel, and Vivaldi. In the art world, Caravaggio,
Bernini, Rubens, Rembrandt, Vermeer, and Velázquez are remembered.
Famous inventors and scientists of the day include Blaise Pascal and Isaac
Newton.
During the last phase of the Baroque period, builders constructed graceful
white buildings with sweeping curves. Rococo art and architecture is
characterized by elegant decorative designs with scrolls, vines, shell-shapes,
and delicate geometric patterns.
Rococo architects applied Baroque ideas with a lighter, more graceful touch. In
fact, some historians suggest that Rococo is simply a later phase of the
Baroque period. Architects of this period include the great Bavarian stucco
masters like Dominikus Zimmermann, whose 1750 Pilgrimage Church of Wies
is a UNESCO World Heritage site.
By the 1700s, European architects were turning away from elaborate Baroque
and Rococo styles in favor of restrained Neoclassical approaches. Orderly,
symmetrical Neoclassical architecture reflected the intellectual awakening
among the middle and upper classes in Europe during the period historians
often call the Enlightenment. Ornate Baroque and Rococo styles fell out of
favor as architects for a growing middle class reacted to and rejected the
opulence of the ruling class. French and American revolutions returned design
to Classical ideals — including equality and democracy — emblematic of the
civilizations of ancient Greece and Rome. A keen interest in ideas of
Renaissance architect Andrea Palladio inspired a return of Classical shapes in
Europe, Great Britain, and the United States. These buildings were
proportioned according to the classical orders with details borrowed from
ancient Greece and Rome.
In the late 1700s and early 1800s, the newly-formed United States drew upon
Classical ideals to construct grand government buildings and an array of
smaller, private homes.
Note that the name Art Nouveau is French, but the philosophy — to some
extent spread by the ideas of William Morris and the writings of John
Ruskin — gave rise to similar movements throughout Europe. In Germany it
was called Jugendstil; in Austria it was Sezessionsstil; in Spain it
was Modernismo, which predicts or event begins the modern era. The works of
Spanish architect Antoni Gaudí (1852-1926) are said to be influenced by Art
Nouveau or Modernismo, and Gaudi is often called one of the first modernist
architects.
1895 to 1925 — Beaux Arts
With their sleek forms and ziggurat designs, Art Deco architecture embraced
both the machine age and ancient times. Zigzag patterns and vertical lines
create dramatic effect on jazz-age, Art Deco buildings. Interestingly, many Art
Deco motifs were inspired by the architecture of ancient Egypt.
The Art Deco style evolved from many sources. The austere shapes of the
modernist Bauhaus School and streamlined styling of modern technology
combined with patterns and icons taken from the Far East, classical Greece
and Rome, Africa, ancient Egypt and the Middle East, India, and Mayan and
Aztec cultures.
Art Deco buildings have many of these features: cubic forms; ziggurat,
terraced pyramid shapes with each story smaller than the one below it;
complex groupings of rectangles or trapezoids; bands of color; zigzag designs
like lightening bolts; strong sense of line; and the illusion of pillars.
By the 1930s, Art Deco evolved into a more simplified style known as
Streamlined Moderne, or Art Moderne. The emphasis was on sleek, curving
forms and long horizontal lines. These buildings did not feature zigzag or
colorful designs found on earlier Art Deco architecture.
Some of the most famous art deco buildings have become tourist destinations
in New York City — the Empire State Building and Radio City Music Hall may
be the most famous. The 1930 Chrysler Building in New York City was one of
the first buildings composed of stainless steel over a large exposed surface.
The architect, William Van Alen, drew inspiration from machine technology for
the ornamental details on the Chrysler Building: There are eagle hood
ornaments, hubcaps, and abstract images of cars.
The 20th and 21st centuries have seen dramatic changes and astonishing
diversity. Modernist styles have come and gone — and continue to evolve.
Modern-day trends include Art Moderne and the Bauhaus school coined by
Walter Gropius, Deconstructivism, Formalism, Brutalism, and Structuralism.
The basic methods of building design and construction have been used for
thousands of years. Stacking stones, laying brick, or lashing wood together in
one form or another are still used today in all parts of the world. But over the
centuries, innovations in methods and materials have given new expression to
architecture and the human footprint on the landscape. We can look to
historical examples for clues that give context to different style periods.
Greek and Roman capitals: Top row: Doric. Middle Row: Ionic. Bottom Row:
Corinthian and a composite Ionic Corinthian. Classical Orders, engraving from
the Encyclopédie vol. 18. Public domain.
The Parthenon, a Greek temple to the mythic goddess Athena, was built in the
fifth century BCE in Athens and is part of a larger community of structures in
the Acropolis. All are considered pinnacles of classic Greek architecture. Doric
colonnades march across all sides of the Parthenon, the outer boundary of a
very ordered interior floor plan.
The Parthenon, Athens, Greece. 447 BCE. Digital image by Kallistos and
licensed under Creative Commons
Another example is the colonnade surrounding St. Peter’s Square in the
Vatican, Rome.
The colonnade is part of our contemporary surroundings too. Parks and other
public spaces use them to the same effect: providing visual and material
stability in spanning areas of open space.
The Colosseum, Rome, Italy. First century CE. Photo by David Iliff. Image
licensed through Creative Commons.
Roman aqueducts are another example of how effectively the arch was used.
Tall and graceful, the arches support themselves in a colonnade and were used
to transport a network of water channels throughout ancient Rome.
Roman aqueduct, c. First century CE. Image in the public domain.
From the arch came two more important developments: extending an arch in
a linear direction formed a vault, encapsulating tall, narrow spaces with
inverted “U” shaped ceilings. The compressive force of the vault required thick
walls on each side to keep it from collapsing. Because of this many vaults were
situated underground – essentially tunnels – connecting areas of a larger
building or providing covered transport of people, goods and materials
throughout the city.
An arch rotated on its vertical axis creates a dome, with its curving organic
scoop of space reserved for the tops of the most important buildings.
The Pantheon in Rome sports a dome with an oculus – a round or elliptical
opening at the top, that is the massive building’s only light source.
St. Denis basilica in France (above) is one of the first Gothic-style churches,
known for its high vaulted ceilings and extensive use of stained glass windows.
The architecture of the church became a symbol of spirituality itself: soaring
heights, magnificently embellished interiors and exteriors, elaborate lighting
and sheer grandeur on a massive scale.
The Doges Palace in Venice, Italy (pictured below) housed the political
aristocracy of the Republic of Venice for a thousand years. Built in 1309 CE, its
rhythmic levels of columns and pointed arches, divided by fractals as they rise,
give way to elaborate geometric patterns in the pink brick façade. The
ornamental additions at the top edge reinforce the patterns below.
The Doges Palace, 1309 CE, viewed from St. Mark’s Square, Venice, Italy. Image
by Martti Mustonen and licensed through Creative Commons.
CROSS-CULTURAL INFLUENCES
As overland and marine trade routes expanded between Eastern and Western
civilizations so did the influence of cultural styles in architecture, religion and
commerce. The most important of these passages was the Silk Road, a system
of routes that developed over hundreds of years across the European and
Asian continents. Along this route are buildings that show cross-cultural
influences in their design.
The Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem offers different cultural influences manifest
in one building: a classic Greek colonnade at the main entrance, the gold
dome and central turret supporting it, western style arches and colorful Islamic
surface embellishment.
The Dome of the Rock, on the Temple Mount, in the Old City of Jerusalem,
Photo Credit Andrew Shiva, Image licensed through Creative Commons
The Louvre Palace in Paris, once the official royal residence and now one of
the world’s biggest museums, had its beginnings in the 12th century but
didn’t achieve its present form until recently. The building’s style is French
Renaissance – marked by a formal symmetry, horizontal stability and
restrained ornamentation. The Louvre executive board chose architect I. M.
Pei’s glass pyramid design as the defining element for the new main entry in
1989. The choice was a great success: the pyramid further defines the public
space above ground and gives natural light and a sense of openness to the
underground lobby beneath it.
Eiffel Tower, Start of construction of second stage, May 1888. Image in the
public domain
Forged iron and milled steel began to replace wood, brick and stone as
primary materials for large buildings. This change is encapsulated in the Eiffel
Tower, built in 1889. Standing on four huge arched legs, the iron lattice tower
rises narrowly to just over 1000 feet high. The Eiffel Tower not only became an
icon for France but for industry itself – heralding a new age in materials,
design and construction methods.
In America, the development of cheap, versatile steel in the second half of the
19th century helped change the urban landscape. The country was in the
midst of rapid social and economic growth that made for great opportunities
in architectural design. A much more urbanized society was forming and the
society called out for new, larger buildings. By the middle of the 19th century
downtown areas in big cities began to transform themselves with new roads
and buildings to accommodate the growth. The mass production of steel was
the main driving force behind the ability to build skyscrapers during the mid
1880s.
MODERNIST ARCHITECTURE
The move to modernism was introduced with the opening of the Bauhaus
school in Weimar Germany. Founded in 1919 by the German architect Walter
Gropius, Bauhaus (literal translation “house of construction”) was a teaching
and learning center for modern industrial and architectural design. Though
not a movement or style in itself, Bauhaus instructors and staff reflected
different artistic perspectives, all of them born from the modern aesthetic. It
was partly the product of a post- World War I search for new artistic
definitions in Europe. Gropius’s commitment to the principle of bringing all
the arts together with a focus on practical, utilitarian applications. This view
rejected the notion of “art for art’s sake”, putting a premium on the
knowledge of materials and their effective design. This idea shows the
influence of Constructivism, a similar philosophy developed concurrently in
Russia that used the arts for social purposes. Bauhaus existed for fourteen
years, relocating three times, and influencing a whole generation of architects,
artists, graphic and industrial designers and typographers.
In 1924 Gropius designed the Bauhaus main building in Dessau. Its modern
form includes bold lines, an asymmetric balance and curtain walls of glass. It’s
painted in neutral tones of white and gray accented by strong primary colors
on selected doors.
Frank Lloyd Wright is considered one of the 20th century’s greatest architects.
Wright designed buildings, churches, homes and schools, but is best known
for his design of Falling Water, a home in the Pennsylvania countryside for
Chicago department store owner Edgar Kaufman. His design innovations
include unified open floor plans, a balance of traditional and modern materials
and the use of cantilevered forms that extends horizontal balance.
GREEN ARCHITECTURE
In the last decade there has emerged a strong interest in developing “green”
architecture – designs that incorporate ecologically and environmentally
sustainable practices in site preparation, materials, energy use and waste
systems. Some are simple: buildings oriented to the south or west helps with
passive solar heating. Others are more complex: Solar voltaic cells on the roof
to generate power to the building. Green roofs are made of sod and other
organic material and act as a cooling agent and recycle rainwater too. In
addition, technological innovations in lighting, heating and cooling systems
have made them more efficient.
A branch of the Seattle Public Library uses green design. A glass curtain wall
on the north side makes use of natural lighting. Overhanging wooden roof
beams shades harsh light. The whole structure is nestled under a green roof of
sod and over 18,000 low water use plants. Seven skylights on the roof provide
more natural lighting.
DEFINITION OF ARCHITECTURE
What is architecture? The word architecture can have many meanings.
Architecture can be an art and a science, a process and a result, and both an
idea and a reality. People often use the words "architecture" and "design"
interchangeably, which naturally broadens the definition of architecture. If you
can "design" your own career goals, aren't you the architect of your own
life? It seems there are no easy answers, so let's explore and debate the many
definitions of architecture, design, and what architects and social scientists call
"the built environment."
Depending on the context, the word "architecture" can refer to any man-made
building or structure, like a tower or monument; a man-made building or
structure that is important, large, or highly creative; a carefully designed
object, such as a chair, a spoon, or a tea kettle; a design for a large area such
as a city, town, park, or landscaped gardens; the art or science of designing
and building buildings, structures, objects, and outdoor spaces; a building
style, method, or process; a plan for organizing space; elegant engineering;
the planned design of any kind of system; a systematic arrangement of
information or ideas; and the flow of information on a web page.
Building structures can be a part of this job, even though you are working with
outdoor areas. For example, many landscaping jobs entail erecting gazebos
and other outdoor structures such as follies. Unlike residential architects and
public and industrial architects, however, you will be doing a lot of work
directly with trees, plants, and other living materials. As such, your body of
knowledge will have to go beyond simple construction. You will have to
understand aspects of horticulture, and know how you can integrate living
growth into your settings. A well-designed landscape will incorporate plants in
a system that is beneficial to them and allows them to thrive.
Interior Design
For this reason, it may be worthwhile for you also to cultivate study in both
fields, and learn interior design along with architecture. In fact, some architects
also learn to tie in landscaping with the rest of their design skills. By doing this,
you can create spaces which flow both indoors and outdoors for the best
possible effect. It is often the effect of the whole that leaves such an impact on
visitors.
How many different specializations you want to integrate into your work is
really up to you. Some architects do best if they are extremely specialized and
focused on one aspect of design, while others excel by learning how to
integrate different aspects of design. You may work well controlling all
elements that go into a building or you may work better in an environment
where you are sharing the responsibility of design with a number of other
architects.
You will also need to figure out where you fit best on a team. Do you work
better taking cues from a lead architect, or would you like to be the head
architect, calling the shots? You probably will not jump into that kind of
position straight off the top. You will need ample work experience first.
Architecture is a tough and competitive field. And the more radical your ideas
are, the more challenging your path is likely to be. It is usually the more
unusual ideas which capture or imaginations.
Site Planning – This is the planning that goes into the most
efficient use of a specific land site for its intended purpose
and also considers its appearance through the services of
a company experienced in professional landscape
maintenance.