Sunday, December 17, 2006

all sb assignments from mp2

Junior Portfolio
Sketchbook Assignments

Please put the week, the assignment, and the date in the lower right hand corner of each of your pages. It should look something like this Week 5 #1 12-18-06.

SB #1
Due: Nov. 20

A blind contour self portrait in a reflective surface (not a mirror). Super details! Take your time!
Draw 2 intersecting lines that divide your page into 4 different sections using light pencil lines. Over this, draw your unmade bed (wrinkled sheets and bunched up blankets and all). In one section use crosshatching (pencil or pen or marker) to add volume to the forms of the fabric, in the second section use just the pencil in a way that you get smooth transitions of value, the third use stippling (you may want to try a marker for this one), and in the fourth section experiment with expressive lines used in a way to suggest the forms.
Set up a small still life. Draw it without using lines. Use only shading and contrasting values to create the “outlines” of the objects and to suggest the volumes of the forms.
Set up a small still life (it can be the same one from #4, or you could try rearranging the objects or doing something completely different – and you will probably want to space the items out a bit for this one). Use markers, ink, or charcoal, (just because pencil will be a bit tedious, or you could give a whirl if you want) and draw only the negative space.
Look into a trash can (it will probably be a more interesting drawing if the trash can is full of stuff – freshly lysoled might be boring, but you make the call). Draw what you see, fill up your page.

SB #2
Due: Nov. 27

Draw the interior of something.
After you put on your pj's, draw the clothes you wore today wherever and however they happened to fall (on the floor, on a chair, in the hamper, etc.)
Something mechanical, use a specific color scheme (complementary, analogous, monochromatic, triadic, or split complements).
Find a quote about something that is going on in the world currently. Illustrate that quote however you see appropriate. Incorporate the quote into the final piece somehow.
Free – something that intrigues you

SB#3
Due: Dec. 4

Complete a blind contour drawing of an architectural element that fills up an entire page. Divide your page in half. On one half fill in the negative space with black (try marker, India ink, highly concentrated watercolor) and leave the positive space white. On the other half, do the inverse and fill in the positive space with black.
Draw a close view of a bike, tricycle, motorcycle, or an exercise bike with a close attention to detail. It should go off three sides of the page. Shade it with a full range of value. Try using a charcoal pencil for this one.
Draw an organic subject matter (person, animal, landscape, plant, something natural) by using only straight lines.
and 5. Choose two of the following subjects:
-Why are people afraid to visit cemeteries at night? Draw it.
-Draw a city on another planet.
-Draw a picture of yourself the way you will look 20 years from now.
-Draw a construction site.
-Free assignment – anything you would like!

SB #4
due: dec. 11
cut out a piece of newspaper the exact size of a page in your sketchbook. wrinkle it; fold it, if you wish. carefully paste it into your sketchbook. use charcoal, india ink, or black watercolor to create a drawing of something (hand, portrait, object, kitchen utensils, whatever) from direct observation.
use a soft drawing or charcoal pencil (2B, 4B or softer) to create a medium-light value on your entire piece of paper. use your finger or a soft tissue to help you blend your medium to create a soft, even value. choose something to draw, from direct observation. then use an eraser to begin to outline the highlighted areas. use your original medium to add darker values where needed.
set up a “landscape” using fabric (mountains, valleys, hills, rivers, etc) and small everyday objects (houses, cities, people, trees, etc). zoom in and draw the most interesting part of your landscape. try adding color.
draw a portrait of someone (you, family member, friend) with the light source being the sunlight coming in through mini-blinds or a lace curtain. pay attention to the subtleties in the light source as it changes and bends over the features of the face.
draw a sink full of dirty dishes. or the clean ones in the dishwasher or dish rack. this one might be interesting if done as a blind contour. try adding color.

SB #5
Due: Dec. 18
a crumpled paper bag
a figure
a still life
a plan for your next project (include notes about medium, technique, etc)
free

SB #6
Due: Jan. 2
a plan for a new project (include notes about medium, technique, etc)
a hand
a foot
free
free

SB #7
Due: Jan 8
1-5. a plan for a new project (include notes about medium, technique, etc)
begin a series of studies for your concentration

SB #8
Due: Jan 17
1-5. all sketches can be “free”, in a sense, but should be relevant studies for your concentration. plans/thumbnails/studies/etc. for your next projects.

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Painting
Sketchbook Assignments

Please put the week, the assignment, and the date in the lower right hand corner of each of your pages. It should look something like this Week 5 #1 12-18-06.

SB #1
Due: Nov. 20
1. Find a can or bucket of recyclables, look into it from above. Draw what you see, use a range of values from 1-10, fill up your entire page.
2. Set up a small still life. Use a desk lamp or other light source to light it from behind. Draw it; use values to accurately portray the direction of the light source.
3. Use the same set up as in #2, but this time move the light source to the side so that it is being lit dramatically from one side. Draw it; use values to accurately portray the direction of the light source.
4. Set up another still life of 3 different objects with 3 very different textures. Use value to imply the form of the objects, as well as the textures.
5. Find a quote about art, painting, or color. Illustrate that quote any way you feel appropriate. Find a way to incorporate the quote into the final composition. And please include the author.

SB #2
Due: Nov. 27
1. Pile up all your favorite shoes in the corner of your room (at least 3 pairs). Zoom in on the most interesting section (crop your composition). Fill up your entire page with a blind contour drawing. Add color where appropriate.
2. Draw an unsuspecting life model in a study hall, library, in class after you finish a test, in the cafeteria, etc. Draw large, try using expressive lines (quick, sketchy, gestural lines).
3. Listen to your favorite song. Draw what you hear. Do not use recognizable words, images, or symbols. Only use line and color.
4. Draw the inside of your closet. Use a 1-10 value scale.
5. Ask a family member to pose for you. Draw them reading a book, watching tv, napping, knitting, etc. on a couch or chair. Use a 1-10 value scale.

SB #3
Due: Dec. 4
1. "Full of Contours Page"
Do a page full (20 to 25) of "mini" blind and modified blind contour drawings. (May take 2 facing pages.)
These are quick studies of people/children in different positions doing things.
Perhaps go to a park or a sporting event of some kind. Observe and quickly draw people being active
Do this in pen/marker please!! Add some color to complete the composition
2. "Fallen Leaves"
Find several different types (shapes) of leaves and trace them into your sketchbook. These may have to be repeated several times to make a good composition.
Now divide the page into four separate areas. Please do this creatively also! Then using colored pencils, color each area in one of these four color schemes:
1. Complimentary colors: colors opposite each other on the color wheel
2. Analogous colors: three or more colors touching each other on the color wheel
3. Monochromatic - Tints and shades: one of the above two color schemes with white and black added to lighten or darken.
4. Neutrals – Color with its complement added to create a “duller” version of the original color.

3. "Size Distortions"
Choose two ordinary objects at home which have a relationship to one another but are not the same size at all. (Like: the front door and a key -- or -- the refrigerator and an apple.
Draw the two different sized objects as if they are the same size, and draw them so they have a new relationship at the new size.(So: the key is as big as the door in the new relationship, and can only lean upon it!)(So: the apple could be so big that it occupied the entire inside of the refrigerator!)
Be inventive! Think up your own two related objects, and observe and draw their details carefully. Plan an interesting composition on the page.
4. "Magazine Reflection"
Step 1. Use facing pages in your sketchbook.Side by side if your book opens that way, or up-down if your book opens that way.Step 2. Find a full page magazine photo (not a magazine illustration) that you like. B/W or color, but B/W is easier on this.Step 3. Cut the photo into 10 pieces that are about the same area. They don't have to be the same shape. Shapes can be regular or not. Try to cut through interesting areas of the photo (like the face!)
Step 4 Select alternating pieces, and paste them in their correct positions on the right side of the paper. Paste the remainders on the left, also in their correct positions.
Step 5: Choose one side and shade in the missing areas in pencil, using the opposite page of pieces as reference for what to draw. Try to recreate the values (lights and darks) of the original photo.
5. Free – something that inspires you.

SB #4
due: dec. 11
1. draw a sink full of dirty dishes. or the clean ones in the dishwasher or dish rack. this one might be interesting if done as a blind contour. try adding color.
2. set up a still life of things you find in the kitchen (spoons, spatulas, whisks, shiny pots and pans, etc). draw it using pencil, a value scale of 1-10. pay attention to details, reflections, etc.
3. the view from your window. draw it using pencil, a value scale of 1-10, and pay attention to details.
4. sit in front of a mirror. draw a blind contour self portrait. do not lift up the pencil; do not look at your paper. stare at every detail of every feature of your face. do not move your pencil until you are absolutely positive of where the line is going.
5. stay in front of the mirror. now draw a self portrait using pencil and a value scale of 1-10, but this time you can look at the paper.

SB #5
Due Dec. 18
1. A blind contour drawing of an architectural element, fill your entire page.
2. 2 hands, in 2 different positions, on the same page. Super detailed rendering, add value and texture.
3. Look into a mirror and make an exaggerated facial expression. Draw it, fill up your entire page, and pay attention to all the details/volumes of your face.
4. free – must be from direct observation
5. free – can be from your imagination

SB #6
Due: Jan. 2
1. Illustrate your favorite quote, lyrics, or poem.
2. Use light pencil lines to divide your page into at least 6 different sections (any size or shape). Set up a still life, and use light pencil lines to block it in. In some of the sections, use color to complete your still life, and in the alternating sections, use only pencil to add value to your drawing.
3. A plant or foliage. Zoom in so that the plant fills up the entire page, don’t leave any negative space around your plant. Pay attention to all of the directions that the leaves and stems go, render it as accurately as possible. Use your pencil to portray accurate volumes and values.
4. A crumpled paper bad/wrapping paper/etc. Pay attention to volumes. Use accurate rendering of value to create the shapes of the wrinkled paper.
5. A family member

SB #7
Due: Jan 8
1. A shoe. Must be super detailed, add value and texture.
2. Assemble an assortment of bottles. Take one bottle at a time to your table/desk, and do a blind contour line drawing of it, starting anywhere on your page. Then do the same thing with another bottle. Fill your page with overlapping bottle shapes. Bottles that are meant to be in front must have a base that is lower on the page than the object that is behind it. You are creating a “landscape” of bottles.
3. A page full of several different blind contour drawings of hands. They should all be in different poses, can overlap, and should add color where appropriate.
4. free – must be from direct observations
5. free – can be from your imagination

SB #8
Due: Jan 17
1. Add value and color to the bottle landscape you drew last week. Think about “atmospheric perspective” – things that are farther away have bluer, lighter, and duller hues. (try adding the complement to create a duller color for the background objects) Also, warm colors tend to come forward in a composition, while cool colors appear to recede.
2. A blind contour of a junk drawer, closet or other sort of cluttered storage space.
3. Free – must be from direct observation
4. Free – must be from direct observation
5. Free – can be from your imagination

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Design Fundamentals
Sketchbook Assignments

Please put the week, the assignment, and the date in the lower right hand corner of each of your pages. It should look something like this Week 5 #1 12-20-06.

*all drawings should be large and fill up your entire page.

SB #1
Due: Nov. 22

1. Create a page of different value scales. Divide your page using a ruler into 5-1x10” rectangles. Each 1x10” rectangle should be divided into 10 1” squares. Go from darkest to lightest using the following techniques:
Lines (pencil - one direction only), stippling (fine point black marker - tiny dots), crosshatching (pencil - criss crossed lines), “squiggles” (pencil), and smooth shading (pencil – pencil strokes should not be visible)
2. Draw an object in your room. Your drawing should touch at least 3 edges of the paper. Use pencil in a way similar to the way we used the charcoal pencil in the still life drawings to add value to imply the volume of the form. Do not use your finger to blend!
3. A blind contour portrait of a family member. This should take at least 20 minutes, so take your time, do not look at the paper, and fill up the entire page.
4. Find a crumpled paper or plastic shopping bag. Use a regular pencil to draw it, use a range of values from 1-10. Show every wrinkle, shape, edge, etc.
5. Make a really funny, goofy, angry or otherwise exaggerated facial expression. Use a mirror to draw yourself. Remember to use a value scale 1-10.

SB #2
Due: Nov. 29

1. Where are the cleaning supplies kept in your house? (The windex, lysol, sponges, mops, etc.) Open the draw, cabinet, or closet, and draw a blind contour of exactly how you see what you see. Your drawing should fill up the entire page, don't lift up your pencil or look at the paper!
2. A bowl or plate of food. Recreate all the textures, make it look delicious!
3. A tiny, sentimental object. Enlarge it to heroic scale and let if fill up your entire page (touch 3 edges of your paper), use values 1-10.
4. Find an interesting color photo/ad in a magazine. Carefully remove the page, and then tear it in half. Carefully paste one half of the page into your sketchbook. Then, using just pencil, recreate the missing half of the image. Remember values 1-10, recreation of shapes, lines, textures.
5. Illustrate this quote by Joan Miro (and you may want to research the artist a bit...) “I try to apply colors like words that shape poems, like notes that shape music.”

SB #3
Due: Dec. 6
1. A still life set up of at least 3 objects. Use a pen or ultra fine point sharpie, use cross hatching OR stippling to create a value scale of 1-10 in shading the forms.
2. Begin by drawing an abstract, free-form line on the page. Then use other lines to echo the original line, flowing with it, into it, and away from it. Add color on or between the lines. You must create new variations away from your first lines to make it look different!
3. Try to make as many types of expressive lines as you can. Repeat each type of line several times. Try all types of lines: wavy, curly, jagged, dashes, fat, thin, etc. Fill your page with as many lines as you can. Use color to complete your composition.
4. Fill the page with overlapping shapes that run off the page on all sides. No negative spaces larger than a quarter. Fill each pos/neg space with smooth pencil gradations (from light to dark).
5. An observational drawing, any subject matter. Must be drawn from direct observation.

SB #4
due: Dec. 13
1. set up a small still life. use a desk lamp or other light source to light it from behind. draw it; use values to accurately portray the direction of the light source.
2. use the same set up as in #1, but this time move the light source to the side so that it is being lit dramatically from one side. draw it; use values to accurately portray the direction of the light source.
3. set up another still life of 3 different objects with 3 very different textures. use value to imply the form of the objects, as well as the textures.
4 & 5. collect a bunch of items with very different textures. scraps of fabric, lace, burlap, etc, different types of paper or cardboard, wood, sea shells, sand paper, sand, dried beans or grains, different kinds of plastic, packages, etc. don’t bring in anything valuable! Most of the items you bring in should be scavenged from the trash or recycling. put it all in a bag or box with your name on it.
(this part counts as 2 sketches, so 20 points)

SB#5
Due: Dec. 20
1. Draw 9 2”x2” squares on your page. Find three different objects with the different real textures. In the 1st row of squares, use line and value to create a very accurate rendering of each texture, label each square as to what it represents. In the 2nd row, simplify the texture into a pattern, using line and value. In the 3rd row, abstract the texture into pure geometric forms and lines.
2. Take home 8 sheets of 9x12 newsprint. Use a peeled crayon on its side to complete a series of rubbings of different textures (the technical term is “frottage” - The technique of rubbing with crayon or graphite on a piece of paper which has been placed over an object. Such impressions are usually made from such highly textured subjects as leaves, wood, wire screen, gravestones, and manhole covers). Now, in your sketchbook, divide a page into at least 8 sections, can be any size or shape (i.e., they do not have to be rectangles. If you use more than 8 sections, repeat the textures – this could add more unity to your composition...) and fill up each section with a drawn representation of the frottages. You are reducing the texture rubbings into patterns. Use color to make a successful composition.
3. Color Wheel – use color!
Create an interesting shape to repeat and fill with primary colors (R, Y, B)
Create another shape to repeat and fill with secondary colors (O, G, V)
Create a third shape to use for tertiary colors (RO, YO, YG, BG, BV, RV)
Label the color names (Notice that primaries and secondaries have their own names, but tertiary color names are a double-name)
Plan your drawing in pencil so that it will be big on the page. OK to use object shapes - Shapes with a related theme work best! Make it decorative! Embellish the page! OK to make the lettering part of the design! Finish with an ink outline.


SB#6
Due: Jan. 3
1. 2 hands, in 2 different positions, on the same page. Super detailed rendering, add value and texture.
2. Use light pencil lines to divide your page into at least 6 different sections (any size or shape). Set up a still life, and use light pencil lines to block it in. In some of the sections, use color to complete your still life, and in the alternating sections, use only pencil to add value to your drawing.
3. A plant or foliage. Zoom in so that the plant fills up the entire page, don’t leave any negative space around your plant. Pay attention to all of the directions that the leaves and stems go, render it as accurately as possible. Use your pencil to portray accurate volumes and values.
4. A crumpled paper bad/wrapping paper/etc. Pay attention to volumes. Use accurate rendering of value to create the shapes of the wrinkled paper.
5. Free – must be from direct observation.

SB#7
Due: Jan. 10
1. Find an asymmetrical 3-D object (NOT a rubix cube). Draw it from the front. Rotate it 90° clockwise, draw it. Rotate it another 90° and draw it from the back. Rotate it another 90° and draw it. Now look at from above and draw it. So, you should have 5 completely different views of the same subject on the same page. A line drawing is sufficient for this exercise, shading is not necessary.
2. Use value (lights and darks) to create the illusion of form (meaning 3-D shapes). Draw your unmade bed and pay attention to all the wrinkles, folds, and volumes of the fabric.
3. Find two objects, one that is a “cube” and one that is a sphere. Do not use outlines to draw them, only value. Show the volumes of the form without using hard outlines. Use pencil.
4. Find two objects, one that is a “cone” or “pyramid” and another that is a “cylinder”. Use the same technique in #3 to draw them.
5. Free – must be from direct observation.

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