bargue plate - The Da Vinci Initiative
Transcription
bargue plate - The Da Vinci Initiative
LESSON PLANS FROM 9-12 / DRAWING “BARGUE PL ATE” Written by Mandy Hallenius www.mandyhallenius.com OBJECTIVES • Students will identify and apply a drawing process • Students will practice observation skills • Students will discover and apply drawing theory • Students will increase their visual literacy through identifying errors in their drawings and correcting them STANDARDS This lesson meets National Arts Standards 1a, 1b, 1c, 1d, 2b, 2c, 4a, 4b, 4d, 5b This lesson meets Common Core Standards CCSS.MATH.CONTENT.HSG.MG.A.1 CCSS.MATH.CONTENT.HSG.MG.A.3 CCSS.MATH.CONTENT.HSG.GMD.B.4 Bargue Plate from the Charles Bargue Drawing Course SUMMARY In this lesson, students will increase their visual literacy by applying a drawing process, learning new techniques for identifying and correcting drawing errors, and practicing their hand-eye coordination. www.davinciinitiative.org MATERIALS • Barge Plates (attached) • Drawing Paper ~9”x12””””””” • Pencils - 2B preferred • Kneaded Erasers • Masking Tape • Skewers/thin dowels, or other thing, long straight tool • Drawing Boards or Foam Core Boards he nitiative “BARGUE PL ATE” 9-12 / DRAWING BACKGROUND INFORMATION How Does It Work? What Is a Bargue Plate? Bargue Plates are part of a French 19th century drawing course created by Jean-Léon Gérôme and Charles Bargue. The course was one of the first drawing curricula ever created for the equivalent of high school students to improve their draftsmanship and visual literacy. Bargue Plates teach students proportion, values, and other essential drawing skills, and are used by contemporary artists to increase their visual literacy. Many of the lessons found in these plates are used by contemporary artists in their artwork. In fact, even abstract artists such as Pablo Picasso studied Bargue Plates. Students learn drawing skills by re-creating the plates as carefully as possible, using methods similar to that of the original artist. Different plates are intended to focus on teaching different concepts, and some plates are more difficult than others to re-create accurately. For example, the plates exaggerate divisions between light and dark so that students can start identifying this important division when their eyes encounter it in 3D objects that they may wish to draw. The plates also show how to organize a lot of complex information into a few big shapes and lines. This teaches students how to capture and organize visual information that they absorb from their every day surroundings. Vocabulary Notional Space Box - the total amount of space a drawing takes up when surrounded by vertical and horizontal lines Envelope - a big shape that uses a few lines to surround the subject to be drawn. Follow-Through Line - a line that goes all the way through the subject that connects multiple objects or parts of objects. Teaching Notes It is important to emphasize with your students that they aren’t simply copying a drawing - they are identifying and applying a new drawing process that can be applied to anything they wish to draw in a realistic manner. Pablo Picasso – Copy after a Bargue plate, 1894 www.davinciinitiative.org In order to prevent students from rushing through the drawing, introduce one step at a time. he nitiative “BARGUE PL ATE” Please see accompanying PPT for detailed information about each step. You can download the PPT at www.davinciinitiative.org STEP 1 9-12 / DRAWING STEP 3 Find the plumb line on the Bargue plate. Use your skewer to measure where the plumb line goes on your drawing paper and place it appropriately. Tape the first stage of the Bargue Plate next to a clean piece of drawing paper on a drawing board. STEP 2 Make a notional space box on your original Bargue Plate, and then one the exact same size on your drawing paper. Use your skewer to measure the distances between sides to make sure they are the same. www.davinciinitiative.org STEP 4 Draw and envelope around the image on your original Bargue plate, and then one of the exact same size and shape on your drawing paper. he nitiative “BARGUE PL ATE” 9-12 / DRAWING STEP 5 Extend lines on the original Bargue Plate so that they become follow-through lines. Above: Identify the shorter line Below: Extend the line until it reaches the notional space box. Transfer this followthrough line to your drawing paper. Ask students if they notice anything about the way the original artist uses line. Most artists that work from observation will use just a handful of line angles when describing an object. Using a small number of line angles helps artists to organize a lot of very complex visual information into something easier to comprehend. STEP 7 STEP 6 Make more follow-through lines. It is important to extend the smaller lines every time. This way you can discover patterns and repetitions in the way line is used by the original artist. www.davinciinitiative.org Once you have extended several lines and found their pattern, it is ok to erase back the part of the line that you do not need. Continue placing lines until all of the lines from the original plate are placed on your drawing paper. he nitiative “BARGUE PL ATE” 9-12 / DRAWING STEP 8 STEP 10 Tape the next stage of the Bargue Plate over top of the first stage on your drawing board. This stage looks similar to the first stage, but has more information on it. After completing the second stage of the Bargue plate, tape the final stage onto your drawing board. STEP 9 Use the same process of creating followthrough lines on the second stage of the Bargue Plate. Be aware that there are some shifts that happen when placing the second plate because the original plates were lithographs and each plate is a new drawing. www.davinciinitiative.org he nitiative “BARGUE PL ATE” 9-12 / DRAWING STEP 11 STEP 13 Fill in the shadow shape with one even dark value. Do not press so hard that you “kill” the paper. Build up the value gradually. Pull out light spots with your kneaded eraser, and fill in light areas with the point of your pencil. Working from the shadow towards the light, lay down value with your pencil to match the values that you see in the plate. Remember that the shadow areas are much lighter than the darker areas in the light. The small amount of light in the beard, known as the reflected light, is actually quite dark, even though it seems light. Work slowly and carefully until your drawing looks the most like the original as possible. Careful observation will increase your visual literacy, and help your eye to see more nuanced differences in other subjects that you observe. STEP 12 Find additional details by finding the big shapes first. For example, on the hair, see if you can find the big triangle shape before breaking it into smaller pieces. www.davinciinitiative.org he nitiative “BARGUE PL ATE” 9-12 / DRAWING VERBAL ASSESSMENT OBSERVATIONAL ASSESSMENT 1. How did your drawing change from the beginning to the end of this drawing process? 1. Does the student correctly utilize a notional space box, an envelope, and follow-through lines? 2. If you could do your Bargue Plate drawing again, what would you do differently? 2. Does the student fill in the shadow shape with one flat value? 3. What do you see other students doing that you like? 3. Does the student work from the dark areas to the light areas in the drawing? 4. Does the student apply any of the skills learned in this lesson to other projects? RUBRIC 3 pts 4 pts 5 pts Notional Space Box The notional space box does not accurately reflect the proportion of the original image. The notional space box almost accurately reflects the proportions of the original image. The notional space box accurately reflects the proportions of the original image. Envelope The envelope is a complex instead of a simple shape, and/or student did not use straight lines for the envelope. Student mostly uses one big shape to encompass the image on the Bargue Plate, and most lines are straight. Student uses one big shape to encompass the image on the Bargue Plate. Envelope lines are straight. Follow-Through Lines Some line angles are care- fully observed. Most lines are straight and go through the entire image. Most line angles are carefully observed. Most lines are straight and go through the entire image. Line angles are carefully observed. Lines are straight and go through the entire image. Values There are many values that are too light in a dark area or too dark in a light area. There are some values that are too light in a dark area or too dark in a light area. Values are organized so that all the lights group together and all the darks group together. www.davinciinitiative.org he nitiative “BARGUE PL ATE” 9-12 / DRAWING ADDITIONAL RESOURCES Art Renewal Center Online Image Museum www.artrenewal.org Charles Bargue Drawing Course Charles Bargue drawing course: with the collaboration of Jean-Léon Gérôme Charles Bargue - Jean LéonGérôme - Gerald M.Ackerman - Graydon Parrish - ARC Edition - 2003 Classical Drawing Atelier: A Contemporary Guide to Traditional Studio Practice Juliette Aristides - Watson-Guptill Publications - 2006 Lessons in Classical Drawing: Essential Techniques from Inside the Atelier Juliette Aristides - Watson-Guptill Publications - 2011 Measuring Methods for Artists by Larry Withers Format DVD www.davinciinitiative.org he nitiative