Lines exist everywhere. In nature they might exist as a stem or a stripe. In architecture as an edge or a corner. In art they may be a path of a pencil or the stroke of a brush, the wires of a mobile or the carvings in a stone sculpture, or when two objects meet or overlap that event may be depicted as a line.
They can be thick or thin, continuous or interrupted, curved or straight.
Generally they connect two points and are longer than they are wide.
For this assignment, you will make three line drawings of dramatically different objects and use a variety of line types to describe them. Some of your criteria are to use charcoal for an object. That object will need to best be described by a bold messy line, right? Consider the properties of each of the objects and use the best tool and line type to draw that object. Look for variety.
They can be thick or thin, continuous or interrupted, curved or straight.
Generally they connect two points and are longer than they are wide.
For this assignment, you will make three line drawings of dramatically different objects and use a variety of line types to describe them. Some of your criteria are to use charcoal for an object. That object will need to best be described by a bold messy line, right? Consider the properties of each of the objects and use the best tool and line type to draw that object. Look for variety.