At some point in our lives we have all encountered art. When thinking about the topic of art, creations such as paintings, drawings, and sculptures run through our minds. In today’s society, art is extremely prevalent. There are now more mediums than ever, which people can utilize to produce breath-taking artworks. Though everyone is familiar with art, people have difficulty coming up with a set definition for the term. Art is not the same as it was in the past, and is different throughout various parts of the globe. Some people are interested to get a deeper understanding of the concept and learn why it doesn’t have a specific definition.…
In this archive file of CGD 218 Entire Course you will find the next documents: CGD 218 Week 1 Assignment Why is Visual Literacy Important.doc…
This is a class in which we survey the history of Western art to chronicle the development of our mass media society. We will examine art monuments generally studied in art history classes (that is, paintings, sculptures, etc.), as well as photography, film, and video. The purpose of this class is to help you develop what is often called "visual literacy." This means the ability to "read" the images that surround you in our information society.…
Artwork is laid out all around us whether it is seen across city buildings or in galleries around the world. In this advertisement, they incorporated the artwork of a man named Cheeming Böey, who created a different kind of art form by using Sharpie pens and paper cups. Although it may sound bizarre that this artist used paper cups as his canvas and sharpie pens as his drawing materials, his artwork is truly commendable. However, the graphic designers of this advertisement choose his artwork for a completely different reason. In hopes that they could relate Sharpie pens to the people by showing the people that there are unknown possibilities in using their product. However, this message is not the only tool that the graphic designer used for instance: the way that they manipulated space and light as well as adding an asymmetrical balance and emphasis on the advertisement. The purpose of any advertisement is to…
‘The ability to read images is just as important as the ability to read text’…
· Under the Ch. 2 heading, click on Howling Wolf’s Treaty Signing at Medicine Creek Lodge…
All throughout history art has been around to appeal to those who were willing to take the time to understand it. While a large majority can appreciate art in itself, it is clear that not everyone has the patience or sometimes are just not even willing to attempt, to appreciate it. In the last century or so film has brought art to the attention of a larger audience through a way that, to many, comes across as more appealing.…
Society today has been slacking in a sense of art. “Low art” has become more popular…
After viewing the presentation on Howling Wolf’s Treaty Signing at the Medicine Creek Lodge, I feel that the reason why we think that his record of the Treaty Signing event is more honest than other artist’s illustration of the event is because, Wolf’s painting even though it may have looked a bit naïve had more detail of what went on in that event. In Wolf’s painting he had in it where Cheyenne, Arapaho, Kiowa and Comanche peoples and the U.S. government met at the intersection of Elm and medicine Lodge Creek by some cotton wood and elms he made sure to draw in the creek and cotton wood and elms, in this location that is where the Treaty was negotiated. In Wolf’s painting it also showed detail of the Comanche people, it showed their teepee’s, it also shows how the warriors that were committed to a woman painted their hair red to confirm his affection also with the woman in the picture shows the importance of woman in their Plain Society. The difference in Wolf and in Taylor’s painting was that wolf carries out himself and others through signifying adornment and decoration and Taylor is more lifeless and only has painted is what I think is what he felt was important.…
Image is the main support for Media with the development of new technologies such as TV in the 50’s and Internet in the 90’s; Media rely increasingly on image as a support tool for providing information. Image has seen its place in our society boom over the past 50 years as an information, communication and advertising tool. Such as in magazines, Internet or simply in public places one can see images everywhere, on walls, bus stops, etc……
I think it is because I am an amateur artist and art critique that I failed to understand fully the message behind the works of art. There was a majority of uninterpretable pieces of art which really made me feel inferior and uninterested. The color combinations were eccentric and the bold, sharp lines looked nothing like the real world. I was at a loss.…
* “Something is happening. We are becoming a visually mediated society. For many, understanding of the world is being accomplished, not through words, but by reading images.” - Paul Martin Lester, “Syntactic Theory of Visual Communication”…
But is this really the truth? How do people think about Art and Photography today and how did they before?…
Seen differently throughout each individual, art serves a purpose of expression. Expressed in different forms, the nature of art is everywhere, including publicity. Publicity provides culture with images that convey meaning and messages. Images are the strongest, most powerful aspect publicity holds. In Ways of Seeing, John Berger identifies the relationship between two media images, modern day publicity and the language of traditional oil painting. These images intend to demonstrate reality to the spectator but not a reality of the common life, a socially constructed reality called glamour.…
5. Using Social Media to Teach Visual literacy in the 21st-Century Classroom, George Luca Educational Foundation, http://www.edutopia.org/blog/social-media-visual-literacy-classroom-dave-guymon…