Skip to main content

Elements of Visual Design

The elements and principles of design are the foundational building blocks used to create a visual work. 
The elements of design are the A, B, C's that are put together by any artist or designer to create an image or object.  

The grammar of how these elements are used create the overall visual work.  

Good or bad, all visual works will contain most of these elements, if not all, the nine elements of design.

The principles of design can be thought of as what we do to the elements of design.  

Go to the page on Principles of Design for more information.

How we manipulate the elements and principles of design, or, how we employ them, creates an impression that an audience will then interpret

These are the artist and designers writing tools of how they express an idea, if you will. 


How we apply the principles of design determines how  successful we are in creating a work of art that delivers an idea the maker intended.

THE ELEMENTS OF VISUAL DESIGN

LINE
Line can be considered in two ways. The linear marks made with any mark making tool onto a ground or substrate. Line can also be implied -- the direction that implied between forms and the edge that is created when forms meet in space.


Wassily Kandinsky

Red Grooms


Tom Freidman


Michael Heizer - Earth Art


SHAPE 
A shape is a self contained defined area of geometric or biomorphic organic form. A shape is a flat area that expresses two dimensions.



VOLUME + MASS
Constitutes the actual three dimensional area a form takes up. This thus expresses actual three dimensionality in space, or, the illusion of three dimensionality.




Alberto Giacometti









DIRECTION + MOVEMENT
All lines have direction - Horizontal, Vertical, Diagonal Horizontal suggests calmness, stability and tranquillity. 
A horizon line.
Vertical gives a feeling of balance, formality, alertness and activity. 
Diagonal direction suggests a faster, visual speed of line.



Isamu Noguchi

SCALE
Scale is simply the relationship of a form occupying one shape to that of another. 

Jim Dine


SPACE
Space is the scale between objects.


Rene Magritte

Christo

Christo

Christo

It can also imply depth full space as in the illusion of three dimensionality.  
Linear perspective is a two dimensional drawing invention developed in the Renaissance for target practice and to understand the trajectory of cannon balls, visually suggests depth full space on a two dimensional plane. 



TEXTURE 
Texture is the surface quality of a shape - rough, smooth, soft hard glossy etc. Texture can be physically tactile as well as visually interpreted as having a certain feel.


P.S. This is a drawing of graphite on a smooth piece of paper

COLOR
Also is also known as Hue
Primary Colors + R B Y
Secondary Colors + O G Violet (purple)
Local color - the actual color of things
Optical color - a suggested or express color of things


Jim Dine Pinocchio



Jim Dine


VALUE
Value is the lightness or darkness of a color.
We know Value as the shades of a color.
A value that is darker is known as a Tone.
Those that are lighter are known as Tints.


George Seurat

George Seurat


Popular posts from this blog

Project #9: White Conte on a Dark Ground

This is a fun exercise to try your hand at and your mind, as you must think in reverse! Similar to charcoal drawings we have been involved with, you must, must, MUST work this type of a drawing up slowly, allowing your values to separate slowly -- and pushing the highest contrast areas of value at the very end. Your goal is to develop a separation of values that identify a foreground, a middle ground, and a background. Video: Ficitional Landscape watch for assistance Homework: On a dark piece of paper -- darker than middle grey, create a drawing with white Conte, pastel or chalk. 10 x 14" The subject matter is taken from observation such as  still life, a landscape from a photograph, human figure Here are some examples:

Student Multi Media Explorations

Sighting Strategies Abstract Wet Media Explorations The Abstracted Self - Value Studies Beginning Figure Drawing SPRING 2019 Negative Shape Drawings and  Explorations of media Explorations of media Self Portraiture Local/Optical Color selections

Project #2 Sighting Practices & Atmospheric Perspective

Drawing by Marina Fridman We can depict what we see most effectively by simplifying our observations. Simplifying values  produces a much more cohesive, believable drawing than recording every value and minute detail that you see. Artists realized this hundred of years ago and created a system of simplifying and organizing values called... The Value Scale Artists use a system of nine (or more) values ranging from white to black, called a value scale. The scale consists of four light values (values 1 to 4”), a middle value (also called a half-tone), and four dark values (values 6 to 9”). A value scale is essentially a simplified gradation. Further Link: https://www.thedrawingsource.com/value-drawing.html Dynamic Value Ranges There is a difference between how we see values in our experience and how an artist or designer may wish to depict those values.  The lightest object in our world humans experienc...