UNIVERSITY
OF NORTH CAROLINA AT GREENSBORO
INTERMEDIATE DRAWING (ART 220)
CREDITS
(3:1:6)
PREREQUISTES
Fundamentals of Drawing, ART 120
FOR WHOM PLANNED
This
course is for undergraduate BA and BFA studio art majors. All BFA studio art majors are required to
take Intermediate Drawing.
INSTRUCTION INFORMATION
Professor: Michael Ananian
Office:
Room 224, Gatewood Studio Arts Center
Office
Hours: By appointment
Phone:
334-5909
COURSE INFORMATION
Room
234, Gatewood Studio Art Center
Monday
and Wednesday, 11:00 AM- 1:50 PM
COURSE OBJECTIVES AND
STUDENT LEARNING OUTCOMES
This
course is a continuation of ART 120, Fundamentals of Drawing. The course shall expand upon the students'
understanding and appreciation of sculptural form as it works and functions in
illusionist/ notional space. The human
skeleton will be the major vehicle for studying the above-mentioned notions of
volume and space. Also, bones including
animal skulls and shells will be used.
TEACHING METHODS FOR
ACHIEVING LEARNING OUTCOMES
Most
of the instruction is “hands-on” and empirical.
The professor will provide constant, one-on-one conferences or
“critiques” in relation to the actual experience of drawing the live model. Outside assignments that hone the students’
life drawing skills will be critiqued.
Additionally, students will participate in these critiques and sharpen
their speaking and visual analytical skills.
Lectures, primarily demonstrations of concepts, will complement course
instruction. Examples of drawings by
past and contemporary masters will supplement course activity and set the
standard for excellence.
EVALUATION AND GRADING
Because
there is never only one correct solution to visual problems, the professor
cannot assign a cut-and-dry numerical grade to concepts that are not
quantifiable. Thus, in order to do well
in this kind of course, the student must investigate and probe the broader
truths behind visual concepts, and the professor must grade accordingly. Regurgitating the “correct answer,” so to
speak, will land the student with a “B” grade, but not an “A.” An “A” reflects initiative and ingenuity as
well as a successful understanding of the concepts. A “C” grade means that you fulfilled
successfully the attendance, tardiness, homework policy, and honor code. It also indicates that the student
demonstrated competence in understanding the concepts but only tentatively and
inchoately, without vigor and control. A
“D” and “F’ have virtually the same meaning:
incompetence and negligence. While this
may seem very harsh, a student usually receives this grade if she or he
blatantly abuses the attendance, tardiness, and homework policy. Disruptive and threatening behavior
negatively affects the student’s progress and could be a factor in a grade of “D”
or “F.”
The
concepts to be graded are outlined below in the TOPICAL OUTLINE/CALENDAR.
The basic meanings of each letter grade are consistent with the
Undergraduate Bulletin of UNCG. Criteria
for the letter grade are: competence of execution and understanding of
concepts, plus initiative. Ingenuity in
execution and understanding of concepts as well as adherence to attendance,
tardiness, and homework policy is necessary for a “B” or “A” grade.
Individual
conferences and examination of student portfolios at the end of the semester
are required, and will illuminate the reasons for each student’s final
grade. The final grade takes into
consideration attendance, tardiness, and completion of homework. Please note that the professor constantly
evaluates and provides feedback to each student in the form of critiques and
one-on-one instruction; this should give the student a clear indication of her
or his progress. It is the
responsibility of the student if he or she is not certain of his or her grade
to ask the professor.
All
grades are final and are only considered for discussion and changes if there is
a clerical error.
SUGGESTED TEXTS AND
REFERENCES
None suggested for this course.
TOPICAL OUTLINE AND
CALENDAR
SYSTEMS OF
MEASUREMENT—GENERAL (Weeks 1-6)
GESTURE (Scanning and covering
the entire page quickly)
-Sketching
-Big Measurements
-Movement,
Thrust, General Direction, and Basic Angles/ Relative Positions
CONSTRUCTION
LINES AND CONSTRUCTION POINTS (See Landmarks)
-These
points and lines are used: to measure
the height, width, depth, length of an object, and, thereby, create the general shape or mass
conception of that object and determining the relationship of one part or object of the body to another
-There
are many positive results when construction points and lines are used
conscientiously:
Accurate
proportion, foreshortening, position/ angle (relative
to another part of an object, and mark, or entire
object), and movement/ thrust
LANDMARKS (Points of interest or distinctive spots)
-Hatchmarks/Landmarks: marks that indicate changes in direction of a
contour.
NEGATIVE SPACE OR SHAPE
-An exercise in comparative seeing and
accurately judging size relationships in space
ANGLES
-As they are determined
from using negative space and constructions plumb lines and horizontal lines
PROPORTION
-Relative sizes of
objects and negative spaces
SHAPE
CONCEPTIONS AND MASS CONCEPTIONS
-Hatchmarks/Landmarks—ie, Construction Points:
marks that indicate changes in direction of a contour.
-The most important
changes in contour add up to a shape or mass conception
-Circle, triangle,
trapezoid, rectangle or square
-Point to line to plane,
or construction point to construction line to plane equals mass conception
-Sphere, cylinder, cone,
truncated cone, keystone or wedge, rectangular solid or cube
-Thinking
two-dimensionally and three-dimensionally at the same time
VALUE
-The meaning of line in
relation to light and dark
-Light and dark in
relation to planes and graded surfaces
SYSTEMS OF
MEAUSUREMENT—The Skeleton (Weeks 7-15)
GESTURE (Scanning and covering
the entire length of the human body)
-The ‘Toe to Head” experience: the pose is
generated from the feet
-Finding the large rhythm that runs the entire
length of the skeleton and capturing the general movement, thrust, direction of the
pose—involving angles in this procedure
-Large architectural/structural rhythms, arches
and spirals
-Hanging the large, immobile skeletal masses off
of the large architectural/ structural rhythms
CONSTRUCTION
LINES AND CONSTRUCTION POINTS (See Landmarks)
LANDMARKS (Points of interest or distinctive spots on the
body’s surface)
-Skeletal landmarks
-The sum of these
skeletal landmarks create the basic shapes of the body
PROPORTION
-Relative sizes,
distances, and lengths of the skeleton parts from one another
MASS CONCEPTIONS OF THE
SKELETON AND ITS SIMPLIFICATION
-Misconception of the skeleton,
that it is round, graded, and soft
-Planes vs.
graded surfaces
-Convex vs.
concave forms
-Controlling or gross mass
conceptions
-Skeletal anatomy
VALUE
-As patches of light and dark, no lines
-Cross-contour vs. cross-hatching (line
creating value)
-Cross-contour for describing form as well
as value
-Spirals and
cross-contour
-Putting it all
together, line and value
FINAL REVIEW (Week 16)
One-on-one
conferences with the professor that include the review of a portfolio of
student work
HOMEWORK
The
professor will give regular take home assignments that hone the concepts taught
in class. Group critiques, that involve
the students and are lead by the professor, will follow.
ACADEMIC HONOR CODE
The
Student Code of Conduct and The Academic Integrity Policy can be
found in the UNCG Undergraduate Bulletin
or at the following website: http://studentconduct.uncg.edu/policy/code/
ATTENDANCE POLICY &
ADDITIONAL REQUIREMENTS
Attendance
In
this course a student may have three absences.
A fourth absence will incur an automatic lowering of a student’s final
grade by a full letter grade. Five
absences will incur the lowering of the final grade by two full letter
grades. Six absences constitute an “F”
for the course. The professor will tally
and review absences with students at the midterm and end of the semester
one-on-one conferences; otherwise, it is the student’s responsibility for
keeping track of his or her absences.
Therefore, students who want an account of their absences, tardiness,
and late homework assignments may ask the professor for one anytime during the
semester. Students are responsible for
communicating problems attending class with the professor.
Tardiness
Students
may be tardy three times. The professor
considers this disruptive behavior and will not tolerate excessive
tardiness. A fourth tardy will incur an
automatic lowering of a student’s final letter grade by one full letter
grade. A fifth will incur the lowering of
the final letter grade by two full letter grades. Six tardies and the
student will fail the course. . The
professor will tally and review tardiness with students at the midterm and end
of the semester one-on-one conferences; otherwise, it is the student’s
responsibility for keeping track of their tardiness. Therefore, students who want an account of
their absences, tardies, and late homework
assignments may ask the professor for one anytime during the semester. Students are responsible for communicating
tardiness problems class with the professor.
Late Homework
Students
may have two late homework assignments.
A third will constitute a lowering of the student’s final letter grade
by a full letter grade. A fourth will
incur a two-letter grade-lowering penalty on the student’s final letter
grade. Five late homework assignments
and the student will fail the course.
All late homework assignments must be made up and are due in the
portfolio at the midterm and end of the semester reviews; otherwise, the
portfolio will be incomplete, and the student will receive an “F” for the
portfolio and fail the midterm or fail the course.
FINAL EXAMS
The
End-of-the-Semester Portfolio reviews and conferences are the final exam for
this course. Students are required to
attend; non-attendance will result in failing the course.
ADDITIONAL REQUIREMENTS
It
is worth reiterating that the attendance policy and other polices stated above
must be observed in order to successfully complete this course. A portfolio of ten drawings from class and
all the homework assignments is required at the time of the midterm and end of
the semester conferences. The professor
will discuss with the class the portfolio specifications and construction
during the semester.
*This
syllabus is subject to change at the discretion of the professor to accommodate
instructional and/or student needs. It
is the student's responsibility to keep abreast of such changes.