Formal Analysis
Formal Analysis
visual elements
line
shape
space
texture
color
light
value
LINE is an extension of a point.
Actual lines are marks on a surface.
Henri Matisse, The Red Studio, 1911, oil on canvas, 5’11 ¼” x 7’2 ¼” (Museum of Modern Art, New York)
An implied line is created by an edge.
Chagall used numerous implied lines in his painting.
Marc Chagall, I And the Village, 1911, oil on canvas, 75 5/8” x 59 5/8”
(Museum of Modern Art, New York)
shapes
←negative
←negative
Willem Claesz. Heda, Still Life with Oysters, a Roemer, a Lemon, and a Silver Bowl, 1634, oil on panel, 16 7/8” x 22 7/8”
(Museum Boijmans-van Beruninge, Rotterdam, The Netherlands) Dutch Baroque – * Notice the reflections in the glass.
Methods of showing depth in a two-dimensional work of art
overlap →
vertical placement →
diminishing size →
Pond in a Garden, Wall painting from the tomb of Nebamun, Mu Qi, Six Persimmons, c. 1269, pen and ink on paper,
Egypt, c. 1400 B.C.E. 14 ¼” w
two -point
one-point
Leonardo da Vinci, The Last Supper, c. 1495-97, fresco, 15’1 1/8” x 28’10 ½”,
Refectory of Santa Maria delle Grazie, Milan
If you were to take a ruler and draw a line across the top of the wall hangings and over the lines in the ceiling, you would
find that the lines converge on the vanishing point located behind Christ.
Raphael, The School of Athens, c. 1510-11, fresco, 19’ x 27’ Stanza della Segnatura (Vatican, Rome)
Foreshortening: objects diminish in size as they move away from the viewer.
Raphael foreshortened the figures in the painting and most of them placed parallel to the picture plane. The man in blue on the steps is
foreshortened and placed on the diagonal in the painting.
Jacques-Louis David, Oath of the Horatii, 1784, oil on canvas, 10’10” x 13’11” (Musée du Louvre, Paris)
Linear perspective involves to use of orthogonal or sight lines (actual or implied) that converge on the vanishing point.
I have drawn a few of them in white over the image.
Atmospheric Perspective or aerial
perspective is used to give an illusion of
depth in a two-dimensional work of art.
The illusion is created by changing the
color, value, and details in a work of art.
Types of Palettes
John Constable, The Haywain (Landscape: Noon), Paul Gauguin, The Vision after the Sermon (Jacob
1821, oil on canvas, 51 14/” x 73” Wrestling with the Angel), 1888, oil on canvas, 28 ¾” x
(The National Gallery, London) style: Naturalism 36 ½” (The National Galleries of Scotland, Edinburgh)
A limited or restricted palette is dominated by one or two colors.
James McNeill Whistler, Nocturne in Black and Gold: The Falling Rocket, c. 1875, oil on panel, 23 ¾” x 183/8” (The
Detroit Institute of Arts)
Implied texture is an illusion of texture in a work of art.
Greuze used implied texture in his painting. The chickens are a different texture than the clothing.
Jean-Baptiste Greuze, The Village Bride, 1761, oil on canvas (Musée du Louvre, Paris)
Implied texture is an illusion of texture in a work of art. Gauguin did not use implied texture in this painting.
Jean-Baptiste Greuze, The Village Bride, 1761, oil on Paul Gauguin, The Vision after the Sermon (Jacob
canvas (Musée du Louvre, Paris) Wrestling with the Angel), 1888, oil on canvas, 28 ¾” x 36
½” (The National Galleries of Scotland, Edinburgh)
Actual texture is texture that you can touch.
Jacob Lawrence, Going Home, 1946, gouache, 21 ½” x 29 ½” (The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.)
Types of Balance
Suzuki Haranobu, The Evening Glow of the Ando ,1766, color woodblock print, 11 ¾” x 8 ½”
1. A large form is visually heavier than a small form.
Ogata Korin, Cranes (c. 1700, ink, color, & gold on paper, 65 3/8” x 146 ¼”
Rhythm is based on repetition.
Scale is the size in relation to a standard or “normal” size.
Oldenburg, Shuttlecocks, 1994, aluminum, fiberglass-reinforced plastic, & paint, 215 ¾” x 209” x 191 ¾”
monumental scale
scale relationships
Proportion refers to the size relationships between parts of a whole, or
between two or more items perceived as a unit.