Drawing I

Projects

Project 1: Isolated Object Drawing

Medium: Graphite
Students created drawings of a chosen object- in isolation (without environment). They used direct observation in the beginning drafting phase, and then worked from photos for shading (lights and shadows) assessment. Students used the 5 Perceptual Skills of Drawing (Edges, Spaces, Relationships, Lights & Shadows, and Gestalt) to guide them.

Isolated Object
Isolated Object

Project 2: Still Life

Medium: Charcoal
Students created a charcoal drawing of a chosen framed section of the classroom still life. Students used vine charcoal for both drafting and the lightest areas of the drawing. While drafting, they did sight measurements to establish both proportional and spatial relationships between objects. They used compressed charcoal and charcoal pencils for medium to darkest areas, inventing marks that could communicate texture, mood, and atmosphere. Students used the 5 Perceptual Skills of Drawing (Edges, Spaces, Relationships, Lights & Shadows, and Gestalt) to guide them.

Project 3: Landscape Collage

Media: Ink, Brush, Paper, Glue
Students created a series of ink washes in a variety of textures and value ranges through experimental and invented ways of making marks. Students then used these washes to collage a landscape based on photographs. Students were challenged to think about space, distance, and atmosphere, and how one can communicate these with methods of overlap, choice of washes, ripped vs cut edges, etc. Students were also challenged to think about value range as area rather than beginning with line. Students used the 5 Perceptual Skills of Drawing (Edges, Spaces, Relationships, Lights & Shadows, and Gestalt) to guide them.

Landscape Collage
Landscape Collage
Landscape Collage
Landscape Collage
 Landscape
Landscape Collage

Project 4: Plant Abstraction (diptych)

Medium: Charcoal on toned paper
Students created a 2 panel series of plant life, up close. In capturing these unlikely and abstracted views with camera first, they were able to sustain an intimate perspective. In rendering the drawings, they drafted using a grid system that broke the picture plane into subsections. These subsections allowed them to follow major diagonals, angles, and shapes as they entered and exited the limited view. Toned paper was used to establish a mid value range that they were able to build into both the darker and lighter end, using compressed charcoal, and white charcoal, respectively. Of particular challenge, was the invention of layered mark making techniques that would communicate both surface and form as needed. Students used the 5 Perceptual Skills of Drawing (Edges, Spaces, Relationships, Lights & Shadows, and Gestalt) to guide them.

Abstracted Plants (diptych)

Final Project: Experimental (mini) Sketchbook

Media: Graphite, Ink, mixed media
Students chose a topic of depth and timeliness, either from their majors/minors, or from COVID-19 and their pandemic experience. Students were encouraged to use their art making as a form of one or more of the following: discovery, reflection, commentary, questioning, escapism, observation. From here, students used a 12 panel, 2 cover accordion book format to problem-solve a compelling composition rooted in both visual communication and meaning; combining layout design principles with drawing. There are a variety of approaches and media represented- serial images, flowing concepts, continuous narratives, repetition, unity, and variety. They worked with familiar tools and approaches rooted in realism, but worked within this construct to be imaginative with layout, composition, combination, and focus.

"I'm Bad At Art"
III
 One Night Away
Self Care
Experimental Mini Sketchbook
Experimental Mini Sketchbook
Experimental Mini Sketchbook
Experimental Mini Sketchbook
Experimental Mini Sketchbook

Sketchbook Assignments: various subject matter

Medium: Graphite on bristol paper
Through a variety of exploratory/observational exercises, students were asked to draw independently each week as homework assignments. They explored various settings, scenarios, objects, anatomies, unexpected and intimate views - all rooted in realism - and imbued with life, atmosphere, opinion, and examination. These works supported, through practice and process, the major projects of the course throughout the semester.

Abstracted Reality
Abstracted Reality
Geometric & Natural Scenes
Hands