Elements of 3D Design
Line: the edge or outline of a form, the meeting of planes; linear
materials include: wire, wood, metal rod, string or any materials with a long
thin shape.
Plane: a flat or level surface –– planar materials include foam
core, cardboard, sheet metal, plastic sheets, and plywood.
Mass/ Volume: closed, independent, three
dimensional form ––interpenetrable, completely surrounded by space –– volumetric
materials include blocks of plaster, wood or stone. Sometimes mass refers to a positive solid and volume refers
to a negative, open space surrounded by material, as in a bowl or other vessel.
Shape: positive and negative: positive shape is the totality of the mass lying between its
contours; in three-dimensional work, the visible shape or outer limit of a form
changes as the viewer's position is changed. These outer limits are seen as shapes moving back and forth
between major contours. Negative
space is empty space defined by positive shape. Sometimes referred to as occupied and unoccupied space.
Value: light and shadows on the surface of forms; quantity of light
actually reflected by an object's surface; value changes might be affected by
the addition of color to the surface of a work.
Texture: the surface quality of a form ––
rough, smooth, weathered and so on.
Color: in 3D design, the actual color of
the material being used.
Properties
Repetition
Variety
Rhythm
Balance
Emphasis
and Economy
Methods For Creating
Three-Dimensional Forms
The four
basic methods for creating three dimensional forms are as follows:
Subtraction: the old cliché of the sculptor seeing his "ideal
form" within a rock (or other mass of material) and carving or chipping
away at the excess until he finds it, or "frees" it (in critic
Rosalind Krauss's words, "releasing] the sculptural object like surgeons
assisting a birth.")
Manipulation: modeling malleable materials such as clay.
Addition: a sculptural method in which form is
created by building up materials. This method encompasses many contemporary
materials and techniques, such as the assemblage of objects from wood, metal,
plastics, adhesives, fasteners, etc.
Objects which use techniques derived from the world of furniture
construction and carpentry are included in this category, as are objects welded
or riveted together, or made from found materials.
Substitution: the creation of a duplicate of an object (either found or
made) by making a mold of that object and casting another material into the
mold to make the replica.
Vocabulary Commonly Used When
Describing 3-D Design
Abstract: referring
to art that simplifies, emphasizes, or distorts qualities of a real-life image
rather than art that tries to represent its surface details accurately. In some cases, the intent is to present
the essence of an object rather than its outer form.
Amorphous: having a shape without clarity of
definition/ formless, indistinct, and of uncertain dimension.
Anthropomorphic: Having qualities reminiscent of
the human form; referring, however remotely, to the human form or human gestures.
Articulated: attached with a flexible or movable
joint, as in the digits of a finger.
Assemblage: a work generated from a variety of objects and/or forms
originally intended for other purposes.
Attenuate: make thinner, more slender (e.g.
Giacometti’s human figures are attenuated.)
Axis: a
line, real or imagined, around which the material that composes an object
appears to be organized.
Cantilever: a structural member, as in architecture, projecting from an
upright, and unsupported at the opposite end.
Casting: a sculptural technique in which
liquid materials are shaped by being poured into a mold.
Composition: an ordered relationship among parts or elements of a design.
Concave: a
negative area in a plane or surface, a scooped out or indented form or area.
Content: the substance of a work of art, including its emotional,
intellectual, symbolic, thematic, and narrative connotations.
Contour: the outline of an object
Convex: a
protrusion, or outwardly pushing form like a nipple or breast.
Craftsmanship: aptitude, skill, or quality workmanship in use of tools and
materials.
Disparate: separate,
distinct, dissimilar (often applied to objects or elements placed together in a
composition).
Dominant: refers
to elements in a composition; the dominant volume is the largest element in a
group, the most interesting and dramatic in character.
Elegant: with
respect to design (or mathematics): ingeniously simple and effective, free of
extraneous detail.
Elevation: in
orthographic projection, the front, back, and side views of an object or
architectural structure.
Fabrication: the action or process of manufacturing or constructing
something.
Form: The organization or arrangement of
all the visual elements which develop a unity in the total work of art; the
totality of a work of art.
Found object: any object incorporated into a piece of art but not actually
“made” by the artist (e.g. Duchamp’s urinal--- a thing from the “real” world
transformed into a piece of art by the artist’s declaring it as art and placing
it in a museum.)
Frontal/ frontality: composition of volumes entirely from the front view.
Gesture: a
sense of direction or movement suggested by the arrangement of elements in a
work of art
Geometric: mechanical, human -made shapes (square, circle, triangle,)
with regular edges.
In-the-round: the allusion to tri-dimensionality
Joinery: the system which connects two or
more parts of a thing; usually refers to connections between pieces of wood.
Juxtaposition: placement side by side; relationship of two or more elements.
in a composition.
Kinetic: construction that contains moving elements set in motion by
air, motors or gravity.
Linear: involving or consisting of lines, looking like a line, narrow
and elongated.
Malleable, malleability: the capability of being molded, taking shape or being made to
receive desired form.
Maquette: a small, scale model for a work
intended to be enlarged.
Medium, media (pl): The material(s) and tool(s) used by
the artist to create the visual elements perceived by the viewer.
Minimal: in art, characterized by the use of simple or primary forms,
structures, etc., often geometric and massive.
Modular: involving the systematic use of a single unit of design,
repeated and varied in position, angle, or combinations creating larger forms
or units.
Object: anything that is visible or tangible
and stable in form. A thing.
Organic: free
forms representing living things that have irregular edges. Also, biomorphic.
Perforated: pierced with a hole or holes (like Swiss cheese, for
example.)
Planar: made of, or dealing with, planes (as
opposed to lines or volumes.)
Platonic solids: each of the five regular polyhedra (tetrahedron, cube, octahedron, dodecahedron, icosahedron).
Polyhedron: a solid figure or object with many (usually more than six)
plane faces.
Radial: compositions that have the major images or design parts
emanating from a central location.
Relief: sculpture
in which forms project from a background, usually mounted on a wall. It is classified according to the
degree to which it is raised from the surface: high relief, forms moving out from the surface; low relief, forms remaining close to
the surface.
Representational: presenting a subject (a person or
object) in such a way that the viewer is reminded of “real” people or objects.
Scale: the relationship between the size of an object and the size
of its surroundings.
Sculpture: the art of expressive shaping of
three-dimensional materials.
Serial: things in succession or installment, which vary from one
another but belong together through form or content.
Subdominant, subordinate: refers to the
"lesser" elements which complement or support the role of the
"dominant" element in a composition.
Style: the specific artistic character and dominant trends of form
noted during periods of history and art movements. Style may also refer to artists' expressive use of media to
give their works individual character.
Stylization: The simplification of a form to emphasize its design
qualities. Also, referring to
remembered “representations” of an object as opposed to what is actually
present.
Symbol: something used for or regarded as
representing something else, as in signs, emblems or tokens.
Tactile: perceptible to touch; that which is tangible.
Three-dimensional: having height, width, and depth; a
thing existing in space
Translucent: allowing light to pass through, but not defined objects.
Transparent: a form or plane which can be seen
through, such as glass.
Void: a hollow, concavity, or unoccupied
space within a solid object or mass.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.