Type of course: | Compulsory |
Language of instruction: | Romanian |
Erasmus Language of instruction: | English |
Name of lecturer: | Cătălin Băluț |
Seminar tutor: | Cătălin Băluț |
Form of education | Full-time |
Form of instruction: | Class / Seminary |
Number of teaching hours per semester: | 28 |
Number of teaching hours per week: | 2 |
Semester: | Summer |
Form of receiving a credit for a course: | Grade |
Number of ECTS credits allocated | 3 |
Formulation of cognitive pathways through the use of basic knowledge and recognition of concepts in the visual area.
Applying the necessary methods, techniques and creative tools in the use of the means of expression typical of the field of iconographic visual arts.
Elaboration of personal themes / projects in the field of painting, with all its valences, through the principles and methods established in the field.
N/A
Analyze from a chromatic point of view a series of practical notions: chromatic contrast, tonal chord, chromatic harmony, chromatic dominance, color rendering. Another important point of the course is the ability to observe, the ability and the decision to build chromatically following a naturalistic pictorial exercise.
Color for iconographers
Static nature study
Transparent
Overlays
Juxtapositions
Full figure study (model)
Details of the human figure
Static nature
Urban landscape
Rural landscape
The significance of color in iconography / icon palette of practical application
Color rendering of the human figure
Perspective in painting Reverse perspective
lecture, debates, exemples, practical activities
Competences in relating to the environment and culture through optimal transformation / assimilation of information and their processing / communication through iconographic language.
oral exam 50%, and implication in seminar practical activities 50%
Robin Cormack,
Byzantine Art, Oxford University Press Colecția OUP Oxford,
Oxford, United Kingdom,
2018,
-.
Antony Eastmond,
Art and Identity in Thirteenth-Century Byzantium (Birmingham Byzantine and Ottoman Studies), Routledge,
London,
2004,
-.
John Lowden,
Early Christian & Byzantine Art (Art & Ideas), Phaidon,
London,
1997,
-.