View allAll Photos Tagged constructivism
Today, I came across this collage I made a long time ago, probably in the 1980's. The image is from a 1970's broadsheet-sized flyer printed on red newsprint.
Collage, watercolour and metallic tape on cartridge paper. Approx 50cm x 60cm.
The main print in a small series of prints I did that was based on Russian Constructivist theatre costumes. This is it with an acetate overlay which adds the red bits.
Balance
by Dale Robertson
Constructivism and symbolism combine to produce a very personal piece. The concept is that of a balloon and anchor, the balloon representing good days, the anchor representing bad days, with the chaos of life represented by jostling colours in the middle.
www.contemporary-artists.co.uk/paintings/balance/
#art #painting #artists
SPB The First Residential building Lensoviet, view from the gate, architects E.Levinson, I.Fomin, Karpovki embankment, 13
Moscow. Club Factory «Burevestnik» Union of kozhevennikov, street 3rd Rybinsk (former Ogorodny Street), detail (1927-1929)
Constructivist theory
Formalization of the theory of constructivism is generally attributed to Jean Piaget, who articulated mechanisms by which knowledge is internalized by learners. He suggested that through processes of accommodation and assimilation, individuals construct new knowledge from their experiences. When individuals assimilate, they incorporate the new experience into an already existing framework without changing that framework. This may occur when individuals' experiences are aligned with their internal representations of the world, but may also occur as a failure to change a faulty understanding; for example, they may not notice events, may misunderstand input from others, or may decide that an event is a fluke and is therefore unimportant as information about the world. In contrast, when individuals' experiences contradict their internal representations, they may change their perceptions of the experiences to fit their internal representations. According to the theory, accommodation is the process of reframing one's mental representation of the external world to fit new experiences. Accommodation can be understood as the mechanism by which failure leads to learning: when we act on the expectation that the world operates in one way and it violates our expectations, we often fail, but by accommodating this new experience and reframing our model of the way the world works, we learn from the experience of failure, or others' failure.
It is important to note that constructivism itself does not suggest one particular pedagogy. In fact, constructivism describes how learning should happen, regardless of whether learners are using their experiences to understand a lecture or attempting to design a model airplane. In both cases, the theory of constructivism suggests that learners construct knowledge. Constructivism as a description of human cognition is often associated with pedagogic approaches that promote learning by doing.
From Wikipedia.
Gostorg building, Moscow
Masterpiece of Constructivist architecture
designed by Boris Velikovsky and his collaborators Arkady Langman, Mikhail Barsch, Georgy Wegman, Vladimir Vladimirov and Maria Gaken
built in 1925-1927
#Saint_Petersburg #Vasil'evskij_okrug 16th Line 21
#Санкт-Петербург #Васильевский_округ 16-я линия В.О. 21
Necklace, 2017 . The next image from the "Badge" group of my "Artibles" series. . See more images from the series in my profile or at petersealy.com/ . #artibles #artforsale #artprint #constructivism #abstractart #modernart #kineticart #opart #art #artprints #artoftheday #contemporaryart #digitalart #abstraction #abstractart #wallart #colorful #decor #aluminumprint #petersealystudio #petersealy #newyorkartist #nycart
Kelly posing with my Kiev-6S.
Camera: Lubitel 166B - FIlm: Ilford F-Pan 50, which I developed myself.
'Burevestnik' Factory Club in Sokolniki, Moscow
designed by Constantin Melnikov
built in 1927-1929
Клуб фабрики "Буревестник" в Сокольниках
арх. Константин Мельников
1927-1929
Imaginative building’s design was born in a kind of ‘dialogue’ with 1903 Art Nouveau mansion standing on the street opposite side. Architect oriented a tower with flower-shaped plan towards the mansion, creating dynamic, asymmetrical composition of the façade.
#Moscow_Oblast #Korolyov ulitsa Dzerzhinskogo 24/2
#Московская_область #Королёв улица Дзержинского 24/2
'Burevestnik' Factory Club in Sokolniki, Moscow
designed by Constantin Melnikov
built in 1927-1929
Клуб фабрики "Буревестник" в Сокольниках
арх. Константин Мельников
1927-1929
Imaginative building’s design was born in a kind of ‘dialogue’ with 1903 Art Nouveau mansion standing on the street opposite side. Architect oriented a tower with flower-shaped plan towards the mansion, creating dynamic, asymmetrical composition of the façade.
Loaded image from iPhone to Adobe Photoshop CS 6.0. Used the puppet-warp function (see lower right) to stretch "taken" part of the image into the black voids at the edges. Then I heightened it for color, contrast, vibrance. I flipped the horizontal image vertical as you can tell by the signature in the upper right instead of lower.