tailieunhanh - Above, On and Below the Horizon Line

Tài liệu tham khảo chuyên nghành hội họa, mỹ thuật - Above, On and Below the Horizon Line. | In many everyday scenes you see objects above your eye level such as a tall building straight ahead of you such as a store window and below your eye level such as a sidewalk all at the same time. In this lesson you use one point perspective to render nine boxes from three different perspectives into a single drawing. K-01 INTERMEDIATE PERSPECTIVE TWO One point perspective occurs when the frontal face of an object such as a cube is closest to you and its edges recede into distant space and converge at a single vanishing point. This lesson includes the following five sections 4- INTRODUCTION Basic perspective terms and three common perspectives on above and below the horizon line are explained and illustrated. 4- LOOKING STRAIGHT AHEAD AT BOXES One point perspective is used to draw frontal views of three boxes on the horizon line. You begin by drawing a horizon line and vanishing point and then use perspective lines to transform a square and two rectangular shapes into three-dimensional boxes. 4- BOXES ABOVE THE HORIZON LINE You draw three more boxes above the horizon line and their perspective lines converge at the same vanishing point as those in the last section. 4- CREATING BOXES BELOW THE HORIZON LINE you draw three boxes below the horizon line with their perspective lines converging at the same vanishing point. Suggested drawing supplies include drawing paper pencils erasers and a ruler. 15 PAGES - 29 ILLUSTRATIONS This article is recommended for artists of all ages and abilities as well as home schooling academic and recreational fine art educators. Published by Hoddinott Fine Art Publishers Halifax NS Canada - 2005 Revised 2006 - 2 - INTRODUCTION Geometric perspective sometimes called linear perspective is a method of representing subjects in a drawing in such a way that they seem to recede into distant space and appear smaller the farther they are away from you. Many of Mother Nature s creations such as trees and flowers are very forgiving of an artist s .