2. SHO JO-JI (The Hungry Racoon)
Sho sho sho âjo-ji,
Sho-jo-ji is a racoon.
He is always hungry
So he sings of koi koi koi (2x)
Always a-hungry very hungry
Thatâs why he sings of koi
8. Important aspects in East
Asian Painting
âą Landscape painting was regarded
as the highest form of Chinese
painting. They also consider
the three concepts of their arts:
Nature, Heaven and Humankind
(YinYang)
9.
10. 1. LINE
is the use of various marks,
outlines, and implied lines
during artwork and design. A
line has a width, direction,
curve, and length
11. 2. SHAPE
refers to a 2-dimensional,
enclosed area, that is
limited to being flat or
limited to width and
height. Shapes could be
geometric, such as
squares, circles, triangles
etc. or organic and
12. 3. FORM
The form of a work
is its shape,
including its volume
or perceived
volume
13. 4. COLOR
*is the element of art
that is produced
when light, striking
an object, is
reflected back to the
eye.
14. 5. SPACE
is any conducive area that an
artist provides for a
particular purpose. Space
includes the background,
foreground and middle
ground, and refers to the
distances or area(s) around,
between, and within things.
25. How did you find the activity?
What helped/hindered you in
doing the expected tasks?
Which of the basic elements of
art is hard for you to describe?
Why
26. Presentation of Output
Give title and write a simple description
of your artwork through following:
Group 1 -Poem- at least four lines
Group 2- Song- at least four phrases with
hands/ feet movement
Group 3- A news paper article with a
27. category
5 4 3 2 1
Neatness
Creativity and Workmanship
Presentation of output
Your artwork will be evaluated using
these criteria
28. *Reflection Questions:
What did you feel as you were making
your masterpiece?
Does your artwork visibly convey the
characteristics of Chinese painting?
Why most of their subjects are about
landscape?
29. *Bring the following materials
for your art activity tomorrow:
Styro foam tray, paint brush,
paint, art paper, scissors
30. âA sincere artist is not one who
makes a faithful attempt to put
on to canvas what is in front of
him, but one who tries to create
something which is, in itself, a
living thing.â -William Dobell