critical thinking and the visual arts

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critical thinking and the visual arts

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critical thinking and the visual arts. “Don’t brush your hair in the kitchen”. “smile, even if you don’t mean it”. “you’re wearing that?”. “Always sit with your knees together”. “close the door”. “close the door”. “Sit up straight”. “Don’t talk with you mouth full”. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: critical thinking and the visual arts

critical thinking and the visual arts

Page 2: critical thinking and the visual arts

“close the door”

“close the door”

“you’re wearing that?”

“Always sit with your knees together”

“smile, even if you don’t mean it”

“Don’t talk with you mouth full”

“Sit up straight”

“Don’t brush your hair in the kitchen”

previous understanding of critical thinking

Page 3: critical thinking and the visual arts

old definition critical thinking = criticism

modern definition critical thinking = a comprehensive intellectual process

Page 4: critical thinking and the visual arts

It is important to understand

Art is not something that just happens!

Page 5: critical thinking and the visual arts

Artist = Andrea Nechita

Age =10Lithograph = selling for $11,020.00

Critical thinking skills = unknown

OK . . . . Sometimes it does “just happen”

Page 6: critical thinking and the visual arts

The making of art or design provides an excellent Usually. . .

The making of art or design requires the opportunity to witness,

identify, and demonstrate engagement in critical thinking.

Page 7: critical thinking and the visual arts

Artists and designers are seldom recognized for having 1600 on SAT scores.

Page 8: critical thinking and the visual arts

Those scores reflect verbal and math skills.

And the ability to think in L O G I C A L terms

Page 9: critical thinking and the visual arts

verbal and math skills are necessary thinking skills for making art

but RIGHT brain thinking skills are not reflected in SAT scores

The more invisible thinking skills . .

Page 10: critical thinking and the visual arts

Such as the ability to question questions,

Page 11: critical thinking and the visual arts

Such as the ability to question broadly, to think on

multiple simultaneous levels with little predictability or

testability,

Page 12: critical thinking and the visual arts

Such as the ability to question broadly, to think on

multiple simultaneous levels with less predictability and

testability, to see unexpected relationships, to

recognize an innovative methodology, to make

something work better, to be inventive, to take risks, to

make conscious that which is often unconscious, to be

able to create and assess that which is created, and to

respond physically to evolving human desires for

change, revolution, color, form, expression, structure,

etc, etc, etc.

Page 13: critical thinking and the visual arts

Such as the ability to question broadly, to think on

multiple simultaneous levels with less predictability and

testability, to see unexpected relationships, to

to make something work better, to be inventive, to take risks, to

make conscious that which is often unconscious, to be

able to create and assess that which is created, and to

respond physically to evolving human desires for

change, revolution, color, form, expression, structure,

etc, etc, etc.

Page 14: critical thinking and the visual arts

Such as the ability to question broadly, to think on

multiple simultaneous levels with less predictability and

testability, to see unexpected relationships, to

recognize an innovative methodology, to make

something to visualize, to be inventive, to take risks, to

make conscious that which is often unconscious, to be

able to create and assess that which is created, and to

respond physically to evolving human desires for

change, revolution, color, form, expression, structure,

etc, etc, etc.

Page 15: critical thinking and the visual arts

Such as the ability to question broadly, to think on

multiple simultaneous levels with less predictability and

testability, to see unexpected relationships, to

recognize an innovative methodology, to make

something work better, to be inventive, to take risks,

to make conscious that which is often unconscious,

to be able to create and assess that which is created, and

to respond physically to evolving human desires for

change, revolution, color, form, expression, structure,

etc, etc, etc.

Page 16: critical thinking and the visual arts

Such as the ability to question broadly, to think on

multiple simultaneous levels with less predictability and

testability, to see unexpected relationships, to

recognize an innovative methodology, to make

something work better, to be inventive, to take risks,

to make conscious that which is often unconscious,

to be able to create and assess at the same time and

to respond physically to evolving human desires for

change, revolution, color, form, expression, structure,

etc, etc, etc.

Page 17: critical thinking and the visual arts

Such as the ability to question broadly, to think on

multiple simultaneous levels with less predictability and

testability, to see unexpected relationships, to

recognize an innovative methodology, to make

something work better, to be inventive, to take risks, to

make conscious that which is often unconscious, to be

able to create and assess that which is

and to respond physically to desire for

change, revolution, color, form, expression, structure,

Page 18: critical thinking and the visual arts

Such as the ability to question broadly, to think on

multiple simultaneous levels with less predictability and

testability, to see unexpected relationships, to

recognize an innovative methodology, to make

something work better, to be inventive, to take risks, to

make conscious that which is often unconscious, to be

able to create and assess that which is

etc, etc, etc.

Page 19: critical thinking and the visual arts

Artists and Designers must be willing to take a

position, or defend a position,, conduct appropriate research, and

“live with” the ramifications, and consequences of

their visible expression on very complex issues.

Page 20: critical thinking and the visual arts

They must be willing and able to take a position, or

defend a position, to conduct appropriate research, and

“live with” the ramifications, and consequences of

their visible expression

Page 21: critical thinking and the visual arts

They must be willing and able to take a position, or

defend a position, conduct appropriate research, and

“live with” the ramifications, and consequences of

their visible expression.

Page 22: critical thinking and the visual arts

art and design require intellectual courage

as well as intellectual autonomy.

“it’s ugly. . . .“Ick . . . “Yuck . .why did

you do that?” .k “looks dumb!”“I don’t like it . .

.

It's

Offensive!

Page 23: critical thinking and the visual arts

Rudyard Kipling wrote:

What?

Why?

When?

How?

Where? Who?

I keep six honest serving-men

(They teach me all I need to know)

Their names are:

Page 24: critical thinking and the visual arts

Those are critical thinking questions designers

must solve in order to develop a creative (successful)

solution to a problem.

Page 25: critical thinking and the visual arts

Artists have both public and critical ownership of their ideas,

and the critical ability to recognize and

analyze the intellectual success of their failures.

Artists must: P R O B L E M S O L V E !

Page 26: critical thinking and the visual arts

Artists or designers uses critical thinking skills

to communicate with your sub-conscious thoughts.

Page 27: critical thinking and the visual arts

They must anticipate the audience,

Page 28: critical thinking and the visual arts

They must know their frustrations, fears, politics etc.

Page 29: critical thinking and the visual arts

And communicate with (through) them visually.

Page 30: critical thinking and the visual arts

Artists and Designers use their medium to express a point of view

Page 31: critical thinking and the visual arts

The general public thinks creative ideas float around in talented heads.

Page 32: critical thinking and the visual arts

And pop out whenever needed

E=MC2

Page 33: critical thinking and the visual arts

This is what we call an ah ha moment

Page 34: critical thinking and the visual arts

But ha ha,

it only happens after the following . . .

Page 35: critical thinking and the visual arts

1. Thinking to define the problem

2. Thinking to understand the parameters

3. Thinking to grasp the budget

4. Thinking to understand the time frame

5. Thinking to recognize the load limit (if applicable)

6. Thinking to conceptualize the destination

7. Thinking to understand and imagine the use 8. Thinking to define the audience

9. Thinking to visualize the final location/ application

• Thinking to recognize the proportion / size / scale

• Thinking to understand the politics of the environment

12. Thinking to know the historical context

Page 36: critical thinking and the visual arts

Questions must be asked such as:

What was used in the past? What is the audience familiar with?

Why was that form used?

What impacted historical expression / design in the past?

What rules can be broken?

What would a new solution look like?

Is that solution new for the sake of being new

or new for the sake of improvement?

etc, etc, etc

Page 37: critical thinking and the visual arts

Questions must be asked such as:

What was used in the past? What is the audience familiar with?

Why was that form used?

What impacted historical expression / design in the past?

What rules can be broken?

What would a new solution look like?

Is that solution new for the sake of being new

or new for the sake of improvement?

etc, etc, etc

Page 38: critical thinking and the visual arts

Questions must be asked such as:

What was used in the past? What is the audience familiar with?

Why was that form used?

What impacted historical expression / design in the past?

What rules can be broken?

What would a new solution look like?

Is that solution new for the sake of being new

or new for the sake of improvement?

etc, etc, etc

Page 39: critical thinking and the visual arts

Questions must be asked such as:

What was used in the past? What is the audience familiar with?

Why was that form used?

What impacted historical expression / design in the past?

What rules can be broken?

What would a new solution look like?

Is that solution new for the sake of being new

or new for the sake of improvement?

etc, etc, etc

Page 40: critical thinking and the visual arts

Questions must be asked such as:

What was used in the past? What is the audience familiar with?

Why was that form used?

What impacted historical expression / design in the past?

What rules can be broken?

What would a new solution look like?

Is that solution new for the sake of being new

or new for the sake of improvement?

etc, etc, etc

Page 41: critical thinking and the visual arts

Questions must be asked such as:

What was used in the past? What is the audience familiar with?

Why was that form used?

What impacted historical expression / design in the past?

What rules can be broken?

What would a new solution look like?

Is that solution new for the sake of being new

or new for the sake of improvement?

etc, etc, etc

Page 42: critical thinking and the visual arts

Questions must be asked such as:

What was used in the past? What is the audience familiar with?

Why was that form used?

What impacted historical expression / design in the past?

What rules can be broken?

What would a new solution look like?

Is that solution new for the sake of being new

or new for the sake of improvement?

etc, etc, etc

Page 43: critical thinking and the visual arts

Questions must be asked such as:

What was used in the past? What is the audience familiar with?

Why was that form used?

What impacted historical expression / design in the past?

What rules can be broken?

What would a new solution look like?

Is that solution new for the sake of being new

or new for the sake of improvement?

etc, etc, etc

Page 44: critical thinking and the visual arts

What does a Designer do?

He/She orchestrates

the conceptual process of

combining graphic materials:

words

pictures

other graphic materials

To construct a visible communication gestalt

Page 45: critical thinking and the visual arts

Gestalt =

The whole is greater than the sum of its parts

Page 46: critical thinking and the visual arts

for example:

Page 47: critical thinking and the visual arts

These dots have no meaning or content beyond the phenomenon of twelve dots randomly placed

Page 48: critical thinking and the visual arts

By contrast, these dots have been consciously structured into a visual configuration which has meaning

Page 49: critical thinking and the visual arts

In a sense, the letter H is not really present

but the human eye perceives the dots

and the human mind connects them into a recognizable pattern

- the structure of a letterform -

Page 50: critical thinking and the visual arts

Understanding that takes some critical thinking skills!

Page 51: critical thinking and the visual arts

illustrate inform

enlighten direct exciteinvite

explainentertain

simplify

identify

clarify

facilitate

educate

communicatedemonstrate

inspire

organizemotivate

instruct

report

promote

SELL

WARN

what can design do?

Page 52: critical thinking and the visual arts

1. A designer must organize information

it is the art of critically thinking and communication problem–solving!

2. A designer creates a visual structure

3. Which conveys a messageUsually on behalf of a sponsor or client

4. A designer tries to aesthetically and uniquely solve a problem

How far does the designer let self expression override

or influence organization, clarity or intended message?Answer: It dependson the client or the situation

Page 53: critical thinking and the visual arts

Design Process

Define – collect information, research Analyze – form hierarchies, categorize, importance, develop

message, IDENTIFY CONSTRAINTS Ideate – brainstorming, thumbnails, CREATIVITY Incubate – let problem/solution cook for a proscribed period Select – make a decision and take a course of action to: Implement – produce solution, if it meets with design approval Evaluate – receiver’s perception/critique

The above process is and should be continuous

Page 54: critical thinking and the visual arts

Design Process

Define – collect information, research Analyze – form hierarchies, categorize, importance, develop

message, IDENTIFY CONSTRAINTS Ideate – brainstorming, thumbnails, CREATIVITY Incubate – let problem/solution cook for a proscribed period Select – make a decision and take a course of action to: Implement – produce solution, if it meets with design approval Evaluate – receiver’s perception/critique

The above process is and should be continuous

Page 55: critical thinking and the visual arts

Design Process

Define – collect information, research Analyze – form hierarchies, categorize, importance, develop

message, IDENTIFY CONSTRAINTS Ideate – brainstorming, thumbnails, CREATIVITY Incubate – let problem/solution cook for a proscribed period Select – make a decision and take a course of action to: Implement – produce solution, if it meets with design approval Evaluate – receiver’s perception/critique

The above process is and should be continuous

Page 56: critical thinking and the visual arts

Design Process

Define – collect information, research Analyze – form hierarchies, categorize, importance, develop

message, IDENTIFY CONSTRAINTS Ideate – brainstorming, thumbnails, CREATIVITY Incubate – let problem/solution cook for a proscribed period Select – make a decision and take a course of action to: Implement – produce solution, if it meets with design approval Evaluate – receiver’s perception/critique

The above process is and should be continuous

Page 57: critical thinking and the visual arts

Design Process

Define – collect information, research Analyze – form hierarchies, categorize, importance, develop

message, IDENTIFY CONSTRAINTS Ideate – brainstorming, thumbnails, CREATIVITY Incubate – let problem/solution cook for a proscribed period Select – make a decision and take a course of action to: Implement – produce solution, if it meets with design approval Evaluate – receiver’s perception/critique

The above process is and should be continuous

Page 58: critical thinking and the visual arts

Design Process

Define – collect information, research Analyze – form hierarchies, categorize, importance, develop

message, IDENTIFY CONSTRAINTS Ideate – brainstorming, thumbnails, CREATIVITY Incubate – let problem/solution cook for a proscribed period Select – make a decision and take a course of action to: Implement – produce solution, if it meets with design approval Evaluate – receiver’s perception/critique

The above process is and should be continuous

Page 59: critical thinking and the visual arts

Design Process

Define – collect information, research Analyze – form hierarchies, categorize, importance, develop

message, IDENTIFY CONSTRAINTS Ideate – brainstorming, thumbnails, CREATIVITY Incubate – let problem/solution cook for a proscribed period Select – make a decision and take a course of action to: Implement – produce solution, if it meets with design approval Evaluate – receiver’s perception/critique

The above process is and should be continuous

Page 60: critical thinking and the visual arts

Design Process

Define – collect information, research Analyze – form hierarchies, categorize, importance, develop

message, IDENTIFY CONSTRAINTS Ideate – brainstorming, thumbnails, CREATIVITY Incubate – let problem/solution cook for a proscribed period Select – make a decision and take a course of action to: Implement – produce solution, if it meets with design approval Evaluate – receiver’s perception/critique

The above process is and should be continuous

The above process is and should be continuous

Page 61: critical thinking and the visual arts

?critical thinking and creativity

Creative solutions to “the problem” incorporate

an element of unexpected surprise

Page 62: critical thinking and the visual arts

Unexpected = generated by exaggeration

Page 63: critical thinking and the visual arts

Unexpected = generated by juxtaposition / contradiction / substitution

Page 64: critical thinking and the visual arts

Unexpected = generated by unusual personification

Page 65: critical thinking and the visual arts

unexpected = generated by substitution

Page 66: critical thinking and the visual arts

surprise innovation of elements / materials

Page 67: critical thinking and the visual arts

Unexpected innovation resulting in entirely new concept

Page 68: critical thinking and the visual arts

surprise = simplification and repetition of elements

Page 69: critical thinking and the visual arts

surprise = contradiction of elements

Page 70: critical thinking and the visual arts

unexpected = successful contradiction of forms

Page 71: critical thinking and the visual arts

unexpected = substitution and contradiction

Page 72: critical thinking and the visual arts

unexpected contradiction between form and material

Page 73: critical thinking and the visual arts

ART fully engages the intellect

Page 74: critical thinking and the visual arts

ART is neither frivolous nor easy.

Page 75: critical thinking and the visual arts

The making of ART has significant academic rigor involved.

Page 76: critical thinking and the visual arts

ART is vital for developing critical thinking skills in the well educated person

of the 21st century.

Page 77: critical thinking and the visual arts

Creativity is a critical skill which can

NOT be outsourced!

Page 78: critical thinking and the visual arts

T H A N K Y O U