Art Elements
Value is the degree of light and dark in a design. It is the contrast between black and white and all the tones in between. Value can be used with color as well as black and white. Contrast is the extreme changes between values.
Form is a three-dimensional shape with length, width, and depth. Balls, cylinders, boxes and pyramids are forms.
Color differentiates and defines lines, shapes, forms, and space. Even black and white images have a huge number of different shades of gray.
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Line is the most basic building block of formal analysis. Line can be used to create more complex shapes or to lead your eye from one area in the composition to another.
Shape is created when lines are combined to form a square, triangle, or circle. Shapes can be organic (irregular shapes found in nature) or geometric (shapes with strong lines and angles such as circles, triangles, and squares).
Space is the area between and around objects. Increasing or decreasing the amount of space around an object affects the way we view that object.
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Design Elements
Balance is created in a work of art when textures, colors, forms, or shapes are combined harmoniously. In this image, notice how the photographer achieves a sense of balance by dividing the image into two sections: one half occupied by trees, and the other half by the water.
Movement is the way a viewer's eye is directed to move through a composition, often to areas of emphasis. Movement can be directed by lines, contrasting shapes, or colors within the artwork.
Pattern is the repetition of a shape, form, or texture across a work of art.
Proportion and scale are created when the sizes of elements in a work of art are combined harmoniously. Sometimes changes in Scale - making large things small or large things small - can change our perceptions.
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Contrast is the use of elements of design that do not seem to go together to hold the viewer's attention and to guide the viewer's eye through the artwork by creating visual tension. In an image, elements that are quite different show contrast.
Emphasis, or focus, is created in a work of art when the artist contrasts colors, textures, or shapes to direct your viewing towards a particular part of the image.
Rhythm is the repetition of pattern to create the expectation that the pattern will continue.
Unity and harmony are created when the principles of analysis are present in a composition and in harmony - things go together. Some images have a complete sense of unity, while some artists deliberately avoid formal unity to create feelings of tension and anxiety. Unity is the other end of the spectrum from contrast.
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