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Observational Drawing Portfolio

Showcase your observational drawing skills with a diverse range of media, featuring still lifes, portraits, figure drawings, landscapes, and more. Include scans of your sketchbook pages to highlight your creative process.

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Observational Drawing Portfolio

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  1. Remove placeholder text with requested text.Place your full name herePlace city and state herePlace your High School or Transfer InstitutionPlace your area of concentration here • Do NOT add background graphics, animation or sounds. • Do NOT attempt to insert video files or links into the PowerPoint. • Do NOT submit duplicate portfolios. • Replace black placeholder text with your own information. • Instructions appear in blue text and should be deleted from the final PowerPoint. • Save your PowerPoint with the title your last name_portfolio

  2. 1. Observational Drawing Click to add image • Slides 2-4 to include Observational Drawings. We recommend that at least three drawings from direct observation are included in your portfolio. Drawing from observation means drawing directly from a real object, environment, or person (not from a photograph, magazine, or copied from a reproduction of another artist’s work). Still lifes, portraits, figure drawings, landscapes, and interiors or exterior environments. • Observational drawing is a required component your portfolio and should reflect some diversity in media such as graphite, charcoal, conte crayon, pastels, colored pencil, or pen and ink. • 150 dpi, no more than 844 pixels on longest side landscape orientation • No more than 594 pixels on longest side portrait orientation Title: Dimensions: Medium: Description: Title, Size, Media, Date/Term.

  3. 1. Observational Drawing Click to add image • Slides 2-4 to include Observational Drawings. We recommend that at least three drawings from direct observation are included in your portfolio. Drawing from observation means drawing directly from a real object, environment, or person (not from a photograph, magazine, or copied from a reproduction of another artist’s work). Still lifes, portraits, figure drawings, landscapes, and interiors or exterior environments. • Observational drawing is a required component in your portfolio and should reflect some diversity in media such as graphite, charcoal, conte crayon, pastels, colored pencil, or pen and ink. • 150 dpi, no more than 844 pixels on longest side landscape orientation • No more than 594 pixels on longest side portrait orientation Title: Dimensions: Medium: Description: Title, Size, Media, Date/Term.

  4. 1. Observational Drawing Click to add image • Slides 2-4 to include Observational Drawings. We recommend that at least three drawings from direct observation are included in your portfolio. Drawing from observation means drawing directly from a real object, environment, or person (not from a photograph, magazine, or copied from a reproduction of another artist’s work). Still lifes, portraits, figure drawings, landscapes, and interiors or exterior environments. • Observational drawing is a required component in your portfolio and should reflect some diversity in media such as graphite, charcoal, conté crayon, pastels, colored pencil, or pen and ink. • 150 dpi, no more than 844 pixels on longest side landscape orientation • No more than 594 pixels on longest side portrait orientation Title: Dimensions: Medium: Description: Title, Size, Media, Date/Term.

  5. 1. Observational Drawing Click to add image • Slides 5-7 to include scans of Sketchbook pages. Sketchbooks offer insights into your thinking and creative process. Include scanned pages from your most recent sketchbooks, and consider including some pages that show the development of a finished work or works you have included in your portfolio. • Sketchbook pages are a required component in your portfolio. • 150 dpi, no more than 844 pixels on longest side landscape orientation • No more than 594 pixels on longest side portrait orientation Title: Dimensions: Medium: Description: Title, Size, Media, Date/Term.

  6. 1. Observational Drawing Click to add image • Slides 5-7 to include scans of Sketchbook pages. Sketchbooks offer insights into your thinking and creative process. Include scanned pages from your most recent sketchbooks, and consider including some pages that show the development of a finished work or works you have included in your portfolio. • Sketchbook pages are a required component in your portfolio. • 150 dpi, no more than 844 pixels on longest side landscape orientation • No more than 594 pixels on longest side portrait orientation Title: Dimensions: Medium: Description: Title, Size, Media, Date/Term.

  7. 1. Observational Drawing Click to add image • Slides 5-7 to include scans of Sketchbook pages. Sketchbooks offer insights into your thinking and creative process. Include scanned pages from your most recent sketchbooks, and consider including some pages that show the development of a finished work or works you have included in your portfolio. • Sketchbook pages are a required component in your portfolio. • 150 dpi, no more than 844 pixels on longest side landscape orientation • No more than 594 pixels on longest side portrait orientation Title: Dimensions: Medium: Description: Title, Size, Media, Date/Term.

  8. 1. Observational Drawing Click to add image • Slides 8-10 Optional additional works to include • Printmaking, collage works, and/or paintings demonstrate your sense of color and surface. • Three-dimensional works exhibit use of form and spatial relationships, use of light and shadow, surface and composition. • Design projects demonstrate your critical thinking and problem solving skills. These works should not be about what a computer can do, but what you can do as a creative and critical thinker. • Animation, simulation, and/or time-based projects demonstrate character and narrative development. You are encouraged to show your individual aesthetic and not works derived from existing works. • 150 dpi, no more than 844 pixels on longest side landscape orientation • No more than 594 pixels on longest side portrait orientation Title: Dimensions: Medium: Description: Title, Size, Media, Date/Term.

  9. 1. Observational Drawing Click to add image • Slides 8-10 Optional additional works to include • Printmaking, collage works, and/or paintings demonstrate your sense of color and surface. • Three-dimensional works exhibit use of form and spatial relationships, use of light and shadow, surface and composition. • Design projects demonstrate your critical thinking and problem solving skills. These works should not be about what a computer can do, but what you can do as a creative and critical thinker. • Animation, simulation, and/or time-based projects demonstrate character and narrative development. You are encouraged to show your individual aesthetic and not works derived from existing works. • 150 dpi, no more than 844 pixels on longest side landscape orientation • No more than 594 pixels on longest side portrait orientation Title: Dimensions: Medium: Description: Title, Size, Media, Date/Term.

  10. 1. Observational Drawing Click to add image • Slides 8-10 Optional additional works to include • Printmaking, collage works, and/or paintings demonstrate your sense of color and surface. • Three-dimensional works exhibit use of form and spatial relationships, use of light and shadow, surface and composition. • Design projects demonstrate your critical thinking and problem solving skills. These works should not be about what a computer can do, but what you can do as a creative and critical thinker. • Animation, simulation, and/or time-based projects demonstrate character and narrative development. You are encouraged to show your individual aesthetic and not works derived from existing works. • 150 dpi, no more than 844 pixels on longest side landscape orientation • No more than 594 pixels on longest side portrait orientation Title: Dimensions: Medium: Description: Title, Size, Media, Date/Term.

  11. 5. Additional Work If you are submitting a video, please upload your video files to YouTube or Vimeo, and e-mail the links to: loughkw@longwood.edu Do not attempt to insert video files or links into the PowerPoint. Title, Size, Media, Date/Term.

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