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Capturing a Crowd. Creating Space and Depth. Capturing a crowd. Have you ever taken a family photograph? Check out this family “photo”… This is the Family of Charles IV, but it’s not a photo, raise your hand if you can tell me what medium (type of artwork) it is…. Capturing a crowd.
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Capturing a Crowd Creating Space and Depth
Capturing a crowd • Have you ever taken a family photograph? • Check out this family “photo”… • This is the Family of Charles IV, but it’s not a photo, raise your hand if you can tell me what medium (type of artwork) it is…
Capturing a crowd • Yes! You guessed correctly – it’s actually a painting! • This painting was done by the Spanish artist Francisco de Goya and completed in 1801 (That’s 212 years ago!) • Why do you they did NOT use a camera to take this family portrait? Because they did not have cameras 212 years ago!
Capturing a crowd • Check out this crowd captured in the form of a mural (artwork on a wall, ceiling or other permanent surface) • Raise your hand if you have seen this before - • It’s located right here in Naperville! • It’s called “Naperville Loves a Parade” and the artists working on this mural are; DodieMondero, Marianne LissonKuhn, Adela Vystejnova and Ashley Samack
Capturing a crowd • Take a look at Goya’s family and the mural in downtown Naperville – We notice that in both of these works, there is a foreground (front), background and space between • People are in the front (foreground) look bigger and we see their whole body
Capturing a crowd • Take a look at Goya’s family and the mural in downtown Naperville – We notice that in both of these works, there is a foreground (front), background and space between • As people move into middle or back of crowd, we can only see part of their bodies and that is called overlapping. The person in front is overlapping the person in back.
Capturing a crowd • Take a look at Goya’s family and the mural in downtown Naperville – We notice that in both of these works, there is a foreground (front), background and space between • This is how we show depth in our picture!
Capturing a crowd Now we are going to create our very own “crowd” of people! • First…we will make sure our paper has all the lines looking like a crowd of Letter U’s • We start sketching the first U closest to the bottom of paper because we will see the whole upper part of their body. • The U is the head of the person, add a rectangle for upper body, tubes for arms and legs, and mitten kind of shapes for hands. • Remember to make your people in your crowd look like a family, a group of holiday carolers or random people waiting for the elevator. It’s your crowd!
Capturing a crowd Let’s review what we learned today: • A portrait is a picture of a person • Overlapping is when we can only see a part of a figure to represent that it is behind something • Foreground space is the space in the front of the picture • Background space is the space in the back of the picture • We create depth by overlapping our figures and having a foreground and background
Capturing a crowd Discussion questions: • Who can use your hands to show overlapping? • What is a portrait? • What is the foreground? • What is the background? • Name an artist we talked about today – • Where is the painting of the mural we looked at? • Where is your crowd of people? • Who is in your crowd? • Who wants to show us their crowd picture? • What’s the name of your picture?