Create Imagine Play Quiz 2
The pseudo- naturalistic stage (Lowenfeld)- age of reasoning
Age 12-14 Critically aware of own shortcoming in art; closer to correct proportions
The period of decision (Lowenfeld)
Age 14-17
The Gang Stage- Dawning Realism (Lowenfeld)
Age 9-12 Disappearance of a baseline; objects overlap for depth; less exaggerated disportion of the human form; greater awareness of clothing details, self-conscious of own drawing
Scribbling (Lowenfeld)
Ages 2-4, random, controlled, named scribbling
Preschematic stage (Lowenfeld)
Ages 4-7, Stereotypical images Emerging of human form; Head and torso with arms attached; images placed hapardizly in space; colors of choice (not realistic); one symbol may represent many ideas.
The schematic stage (Lowenfeld)
Ages 7-9 Stereotypical images Form of the concept/person is repeated; establishment of baseline, very little or no overlapping of depth; X-ray drawings.
Based on the work of Anna Mary Robertson Moses (Grandma Moses) art development stops by the time that an individual is in their early 20's (T/F)
False
Lowenfeld's stages of art development are absolutes and cannot be skipped or reversed (T/F)
False
Element
Line, Shape, Color, Form, Space, Value, Texture
Principle
Movement, rhythm, pattern, balance, contrast, emphasis, and unity.
At what stage has a child's thinking changes from pure kinesthetic thinking in terms of motion to an imaginative thinking in terms of pictures?
Named Scribbling
Lowenfeld Scribbling Stage is most closely aligned with Piaget's
Sensorimotor Stage
The definition of the term "schema" is
Stereotypical images that sometimes inhibit original thinking, organized pattern of thought or behavior, and Latin for universal shape, figure, form, or outlines
Why study art? Eisner's top ten
Teach children good judgment, small differences can have large effects, Arts teach complex forms of problem solving,
According to Lowenfeld, the Gang or Dawning Realism Stage is also known as
The Golden Age Child Act
Synesthesia is about connection between
Two or more sense
The Bouba Kiki Effect is a study that investigated
Visual Language
According to Piaget in Chapter 14 of "Cognitive and Psychological Factors in Children's Learning and Creative Development," his theory of constructivism refers to
the self-constructed nature of knowledge.