Grace Hartigan's Billboard
Look - Questions
(Go to Teacher's
Key)
- Look closely at the painting. What do you see? How
many objects can you identify? Where do you see them?
- Grace Hartigan said: "A line is like a lasso. You
throw it over your head and you grab something. . . .
It's like writing. You can read a line in a painting
almost the way you can read a word."
Examine the use of line in this painting. Where has the
artist used line to outline? Where do you find straight
lines? Where do you find a series of lines? Where do you
see lines that are curved? squiggly? jagged? thin?
thick?
Discuss how different lines evoke different
responses.
- Choose a color. Where is the largest shape of that
color? the smallest? What colors surround it? Does the
color appear to change? If it appears to change, discuss
why.
Discuss the use of
complementary
colors. Where do you see two complementary colors
together? What size and shape are they? Which is bigger?
Which is brighter? Is the color composed of one large
shape or many smaller shapes?
- Hartigan began Billboard by making a
collage of
flat,
overlapping
images taken from Life magazine. How is the
painting similar to a collage? How is it different?
Study the illusion of depth in this painting. Does the
painting appear flat, or does it appear to have depth?
Are there colors that appear to recede or advance?
Discuss the use of
cool colors and
warm colors.
How do the colors affect the impression of depth?
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