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Plate Composition using the Elements and Principles of Art
31

Plate Composition using the Elements and Principles of Art.

Dec 27, 2015

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Rhoda White
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Page 1: Plate Composition using the Elements and Principles of Art.

Plate Composition using the Elements and Principles of

Art

Page 2: Plate Composition using the Elements and Principles of Art.

ElementsThe basic building blocks

• Line

• Shape/Form

• Space

• Texture

• Color

Page 3: Plate Composition using the Elements and Principles of Art.

Lines

• A mark made by a moving point.• Has greater length than width.• Directs the eye – horizontal, vertical,

diagonal, curvy, zig-zag, etc.• Can be actual obvious lines or the borders

or edges of shapes.• Strongest Line in plate design is a diagonal

followed by the “C” design

Page 4: Plate Composition using the Elements and Principles of Art.

Diagonal Line

Page 5: Plate Composition using the Elements and Principles of Art.

“C” Plate Line

Page 6: Plate Composition using the Elements and Principles of Art.

Shape/Form

• A contained area.• Can be GEOMETRIC (man-made) ex.

Square, triangle, circle, etc.• Can be ORGANIC (natural) • Shapes are 2-Dimensional and flat. (circle)• Forms are 3-Dimensional with height, width

and depth. (sphere)• Used to create a sense of space and

substance.

Page 7: Plate Composition using the Elements and Principles of Art.

Shape/Form

Page 8: Plate Composition using the Elements and Principles of Art.

Space

• The area used or unused in a composition.• Positive space – the area the objects/subject

takes up.• Negative space – the area around, under,

through and between.• Frame the food• Use negative space to make food the star

Page 9: Plate Composition using the Elements and Principles of Art.

Space

Page 10: Plate Composition using the Elements and Principles of Art.

Texture

• The surface quality.

• How an object feels, or how it looks like it feels.

• Rough, smooth, bumpy, gooey, sharp, etc.

• Adds interest! Sense of sight and sense of touch involved.

Page 11: Plate Composition using the Elements and Principles of Art.

Texture

Page 12: Plate Composition using the Elements and Principles of Art.

Color

• Artistic term is HUE

• Need light to see color.

• Primary, Secondary, Intermediates.

• Use color schemes to enhance appeal or make impact.

Page 13: Plate Composition using the Elements and Principles of Art.

Color

Page 14: Plate Composition using the Elements and Principles of Art.

Principles

• The different arrangements – or compositions - of the ELEMENTS of design to create artistic, interesting, more visually powerful plates.

• Principles

Page 15: Plate Composition using the Elements and Principles of Art.

What are the Principles of Art Utilized in Food Plating?

• Emphasis • Balance

• Unity-Harmony• Contrast

• Movement/ Rhythm• Seqencing and Facing

• Pattern/Repetition

Page 16: Plate Composition using the Elements and Principles of Art.

Pattern/Repetition

• An element that occurs over and over again in a composition.

• Can repeat the element in a consistent pattern.

• Can repeat the element in a variation of the pattern.

Page 17: Plate Composition using the Elements and Principles of Art.

Repetition Examples

Page 18: Plate Composition using the Elements and Principles of Art.

EMPHASIS or Focal Point

Emphasis in a composition refers to developing points of interest to pull the viewer's eye to important

parts of the plate.

Page 19: Plate Composition using the Elements and Principles of Art.

EMPHASIS EXAMPLES

Page 20: Plate Composition using the Elements and Principles of Art.

Balance

Balance is a sense of stability in the body of work. Balance can be

created by repeating same shapes and by creating a feeling

of equal weight.

Page 21: Plate Composition using the Elements and Principles of Art.

Balance Examples

• Asymmetric– Balance is distributed

but not equal on each side of the plate

Page 22: Plate Composition using the Elements and Principles of Art.

Balance Examples

• Symmetric Balance– Plate is uniform and

food is mirror images on all sides of plate

Page 23: Plate Composition using the Elements and Principles of Art.

Unity

Unity is when all the parts harmonize and seem to fit

together.

Page 24: Plate Composition using the Elements and Principles of Art.

Unity Examples

Page 25: Plate Composition using the Elements and Principles of Art.

CONTRAST

Contrast refers to the opposites and differences in the work. You

can achieve variety by using different shapes, textures, colors

and height in your work.  

Page 26: Plate Composition using the Elements and Principles of Art.

CONTRAST Examples

Page 27: Plate Composition using the Elements and Principles of Art.

Movement

Movement  adds excitement to your work by showing action and directing the

viewers eye throughout the picture plane. Rhythm is a type of movement in plating

that you can achieve through sequencing, facing and garnish

Page 28: Plate Composition using the Elements and Principles of Art.

Movement/Sequencing/Facing

Page 29: Plate Composition using the Elements and Principles of Art.

Elements and Principles in Plating Composition

• The Elements and Principles are used in making plate “POP”. Why care?– Increase customer satisfaction– Cost effective– Help with portion control– Increase your profits$$$

Page 30: Plate Composition using the Elements and Principles of Art.

Advice from Gordon Ramsey

• Keep your presentation clean and simple

• Use an odd number of ingredients on the plate to avoid symmetry “eyeballs"

• Never go for looks rather than flavor.

This includes the use of herbs as a garnish, unless they go with the meal

Page 31: Plate Composition using the Elements and Principles of Art.

Advice from Gordon Ramsey

• Avoid moving things around once they’re on the plate, as this will simply make a mess

• Visualize what your dish will look like before you start arranging it on the plate

• Don’t clutter the plate