My one point perspective hall drawing was made by using a vanishing point, a ruler and my pencil. I shaded and bended elements of my artwork with my finger. I based this piece off of a picture I took of this exact hallway. Value plays a huge role in this particular project because it helps depict relative distance as well as light and shadow. Another skill used was ensuring that all lockers, lights, doors, etc. were illustrated as accurately as possible. The lines in this drawing lead your eye from one area in the composition to another. This shows dimension in the picture as well as creating the illusion of three dimensions. This composition in particular also represents eternal time time because a building will always stay the same no matter what time of day because the inside doesn't fluctuate.
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My individual drawing is different from the triptych drawing because my personal piece focuses more on proportion and scale. While the main design elements in the triptych include unit of harmony and balance. These are both essential so that the triptych is viewed as one whole drawing, rather than focusing on just one angle at a time.
This is my one point perspective room drawing in which I used a pencil and a ruler to create movement in my drawing. Out of desire to create something unique I decided to draw a chandelier in the room and my funiture was then inspired based off of the chandelier. Through this process of drawing my room, I learned how to correctly use a vanishing point in order to make everything proportional. I also showed relative space by using increasing and decreasing size and overlap. The main art elements in my piece are line and value because value gives my drawing dimension and the angle of the lines are essential. This is important because it displays how distinct and precise rooms can be. My drawing was very simple, but even looked complex on paper due ti the details I added for decoration.
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