Elements of Art
Line - AQA
Lines are used by artists and designers to describe objects, add detail or create expression. Lines define an artwork and reveal the artist鈥檚 techniques.
Colour - AQA
Choices of colour and the relationships between colours have a huge influence on how a piece or art or design looks and feels and the emotions it provokes.
Tone - AQA
Tone means how light or dark something is. The tones artists and designers use and the contrast between them can create very different moods and visual effects.
Shape - AQA
Shapes are two-dimensional. Positive shapes represent solid objects and negative shapes show the surrounding space. Geometric shapes are perfect and regular. Organic shapes are irregular and natural.
Form - AQA
Form refers to three dimensional objects. While shapes have two dimensions (height and width), forms have three dimensions (height, width and depth).
Space - AQA
Three-dimensional work creates real space. Two-dimensional works can create implied space using artistic technique. Objects take up positive space, while negative space is the empty space around them.
Texture - AQA
Artists and designers can use actual texture in their work or they can suggest how something feels using techniques that imply texture.
Pattern - AQA
A pattern is a design in which lines, shapes, forms or colours are repeated. The part that is repeated is called a motif. Patterns can be regular or irregular.
Links
- External linkExternal link
- External linkExternal link
- External linkExternal link
- External linkExternal link