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Non-Verbal Communicatio n Christina Ferrari
18

Art and communication

Jan 18, 2015

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Education

Gamper Gamper

A lesson on non-verbal communication using Art. Students will learn about non-verbal communication through Kinesics, Environment, Artifacts and Physical Appearance and apply this knowledge to recorded speeches.
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Page 1: Art and communication

Non-Verbal Communicatio

n Christina Ferrari

Page 2: Art and communication

Purpose• Identify non-verbal communication• Understand how non-verbals are used to

communicate• Apply this knowledge to communication/public

speaking.

Participate!

Answer the four questions asked and email to me for grading-- 2 pts per question.

Be creative: submit your answers using Padlet

or Voki. Com for 2 bonus points!

Page 3: Art and communication

CommunicationNon-verbal communication is powerful--It can change the way your verbal communication is received.

Imagine the President giving a major speech at the United Nations wearing torn jeans, an old stained T-shirt and a baseball cap.

No matter how good the speech is, the message would be lost!

Page 4: Art and communication

KinesicsKinesics: the study of body movements, gestures, facial expressions, etc., as a means of communication.

John Singer Sargent: Lady Agnew

Page 5: Art and communication

Eye-ContactLack of Eye-Contact Directly looking at each other

Rembrandt: Two Scholars Disputing. These men are actively involved in discussion.

No eye-contact: they may be strangers, or they just wish not to engage in conversation. Avoiding eye contact says leave me alone!

De Erderly: a soup kitchen, late 1930’s

Page 6: Art and communication

Use Eye-Contact to Engage• Look at the audience to engage and stimulate

interest.

Johannes Vermeer: The Girl with a Pearl Earring

It looks as though she is about to speak to us. With direct eye-contact she has our attention.

Focus on your audience to connect with them.

Page 7: Art and communication

Body Movements/Gestures

Holding your head and shoulders up shows that you want to communicate.

Hunched shoulders, stooping forward and holding your head down tells others to back off.

Q1. I don’t think the guyin the red shirt is in a chatty mood.

What do you think? Why?

Page 8: Art and communication

Facial Expression

John Brack: Collins Street

Q2. From his facial expression do you think this man is feeling relaxed and ready to listen to what you have to say?

Page 9: Art and communication

• Q3. The facial expression of a speaker effects how the audience receives their message. Y/N

John Singer Sargent: Lady Agnew

Page 10: Art and communication

Use Kinesics to your advantage:

• Make direct eye-contact.

• Use gestures that invite others to pay attention to what you are saying rather than shut them out.

• Use facial expressions to add interest and demonstrate your willingness to engage with the audience.

Page 11: Art and communication

Environment• Environment creates an impression and sets the

scene.

Claude Monet: Water Lilies

The painting of water lilies in calming blue can make us feel cool and relaxed as we contemplate the beautiful garden.

Page 12: Art and communication

• The dull, drab cityscape creates an impression of boredom, blandness and uniformity.

Page 13: Art and communication

Backdrop• If you film yourself giving any type of speech, consider

the background--the environment around you.

• Avoid distractions. A pile of washing behind you, a collection of knick knacks, your dogs, anything that makes the audience focus too much on the environment or creates a strong impression that does not match your words.

• Film outside, in front of a bare wall or an appropriate picture. Get the audience to focus on you not the surroundings.

Page 14: Art and communication

Artifacts/Physical appearance

Artifact: An object made by humans.

• The way we look and the objects around us such as clothes, jewelry, furniture, sporting equipment etc., convey information about to others.

Page 15: Art and communication

Q4. Which of these women do you think is wealthy?

Why?

Page 16: Art and communication

Jean Ingres: Princess de Borgile

Abraham Solomon : Old Woman Frying Eggs

Artifacts: gold necklace, jewel bracelets, expensive looking dress, hair ornaments, gold fabric on the chair, delicate fine lace netting in hair

Artifacts: drab clothing, thick heavy material, no jewelry or other fine objects, humble kitchen utensils

Page 17: Art and communication

Audiences take note of the way

you look and are dressed

• Present the image you want people to receive.

• Use props: books, glasses, clothes, accessories.

• Dress appropriately: If you are presenting a speech on business for example wear a suit rather than jeans and a T-Shirt.

Page 18: Art and communication

Summary• Non-Verbal Communication sends strong

messages to the audience. • Enhance communication skills by being aware of

how non-verbal communication works.

To send the message you want the audience to receive use: • Kinesics (body movement, facial expressions,

eye-contact)• Environment• Artifacts/Physical Appearance