Project Description
You will be making a sculpture based in the platonic solids as a way to examine the
relationship between nature and geometry. This project has three main parts:
1. Build a set of the platonic solids (craftsmanship is key here)
2. Use collage to change the surface/further develop the forms.
1. Build a set of the platonic solids (craftsmanship is key here)
2. Use collage to change the surface/further develop the forms.
How will the introduction of color, texture, image and text, transform the objects?
3. Carefully choose elements found in nature to build a relationship between the geometric
3. Carefully choose elements found in nature to build a relationship between the geometric
solids you have made and the natural materials. Examples of materials include tree branches,
palm fronds, coconuts, rocks, vines, etc). Examples of ways to approach relationship include:
tension,semiotic, complimentary, contrasting, camouflage, parasite/host, opposition, etc.
Through this project you will continue to develop your craft skills (cutting, measuring, ways of
attaching).
Conceptual skills through the building of a narrative exemplified by the relationship you set up
Conceptual skills through the building of a narrative exemplified by the relationship you set up
between the elements of your sculpture. (How does material and form communicate?)
Found object and assemblage (one of the four basic means of creating sculpture)
Project Schedule
November 4th
1. Introduction to project
2. Workshop building Platonic Solids using provided nets. https://www.mathsisfun.com/platonic_solids.html
You must have three (3) of each kind. 15 objects total.
For homework, you will complete a set of fifteen total solids. Three of each kind:
3 total tetrahedrons
3 total Octahedrons
3 total Cubes (Hexahedrons)
3 total Icosahedrons
3 total Dodecahedrons
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15 total platonic solids
November 13th
3 total tetrahedrons
3 total Octahedrons
3 total Cubes (Hexahedrons)
3 total Icosahedrons
3 total Dodecahedrons
-----------------------------
15 total platonic solids
November 13th
1. Homework due: 100 points total.
A. Your 15 platonic solids along with your collage materials, and the natural materials
you will need to work on your sculpture. (up to 75 points)
B. Sketches and notes that show a clear direction of how you will move forward with
your project. (up to 15 points)
C. Title and what it means. Why you selected it. (up to 10 points)
Class time
You will have time to construct your sculpture in class.
Please bring any tools and materials (glues, strings, branches, magazine clippings, etc)
you will need to assemble your project.
November 18th- Critique
Projects must be ready to show at beginning of class.
Please come prepared to set up the room for critique.
Rubric
You will be assessed on how well you meet the following goals:
Craftsmanship
Creativity
Time-management (homework finished by due date, and sculpture ready for critique)
Elements of Desigh (particularly volume, transformation and unity).
Narrative. (Developing a relationship between different elements in a work of art.
Creating narrative through form).
Note:
You will be aloud to use any gluing techniques that you have acquired from previous
assignments, hot glue might be the best solution.
Tape is not recommended, your modular/geometric objects will be covered
with collage and attached to the natural materials you have purposefully selected.
Relationship to Ms. Samimy's class
You will have class time in Ms. Samimy's class to work on the collage aspect of your project.
When choosing collage materials, pay close attention to texture, color and image/text.
Your approach toward the color will come from what you are learning about color
Your approach toward the color will come from what you are learning about color
relationships in your 2D foundations course. You will be working with muted colors
and will choose from the following color schemes:
- Split or Double complimentary
- Analogous colors
- Monochromatic colors
- Triad
Cursory info from wikipedia, also check the NWSA 2-D blog.
Color Theory RYB (red, yellow, and blue) is a historical set of subtractive primary colors.
It is primarily used in art and art education, particularly painting.[23]
It predates modern scientific color theory.
In the visual arts, color theory is a body of practical guidance to color mixing and the
visual effects of a specific color combination.
There are also definitions (or categories) of colors based on the color wheel:
primary color, secondary color and tertiary color. Although color theory principles
first appeared in the writings of Leone Battista Alberti (c.1435) and the notebooks
of Leonardo da Vinci (c.1490), a tradition of "colory theory" began in the 18th century,
initially within a partisan controversy around Isaac Newton's theory of color (Opticks, 1704)
and the nature of so-called primary colors. From there it developed as an independent
artistic tradition with only superficial reference to colorimetry and vision science.
Fun Links
Icosahedron with compass and straight edge video
Pdf worksheet to construct platonic solids with synthetic geometry from Canton.org
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