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VISUAL LITERACY Another medium for constructi ng meaning and the terminolog y that goes with it
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VISUAL LITERACY

Feb 25, 2016

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VISUAL LITERACY. Another medium for constructing meaning and the terminology that goes with it. *What are different forms (genres) of visual communication ? -posters/bumper stickers -commercials -buttons, bobbleheads , other paraphernalia -billboards/signs -fliers/pamphlets/brochures - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: VISUAL LITERACY

VISUAL LITERACY

Another medium for constructing meaning and the terminology that goes with it

Page 2: VISUAL LITERACY

What is visual literacy? One of the literacies needed to function in a

multi-media world, especially since the ratio of image to text is increasing

Refers to ability to interpret images from the past and present AND produce images appropriate for a particular intended audience

Page 3: VISUAL LITERACY

What can be analyzed through any visual image Subject matter Cultural context Structure (how it’s organized) Techniques used to produce it Aesthetic merit Purpose and audience Ideology Bias/traces of manipulative intent Merit in terms of communicating purpose and reaching

intended audience Emotional impact

Page 4: VISUAL LITERACY

Visual literacy can be analyzed in terms of:

Syntax: organization/arrangement/structure/style

Semantics: its various meanings and connotations

The syntax of the visual impacts its semantics (the way it is interpreted).

Page 5: VISUAL LITERACY

Visual syntax terms (aka structural/stylistic techniques that produce effects that influence the semantics of the visual)

Font (bold, italics, style, size, sans)

Scale and dimension Relative size of items

within images Motion Ratio of text to image

and where they are located

Framing/zooming/ cropping Labeling

Captioning Harmony, contrast,

emphasis Juxtaposition of images Depth, color,

light/illumination, shadow

Filled space (vs. purposeful white space)

Resemblance (to well-known things)

Symbolism

Page 6: VISUAL LITERACY

Key Questions to answer in order to understand the semantics of a visual

1. Who created this message and why?2. What syntactical techniques are used to attract my attention? Are any techniques misused or distracting?3. Who is the intended audience? Does the message reach the intended audience?4. How might different audiences understand the message differently?5. What lifestyles, values, and points of view are represented in, and/or omitted from, this message?

Page 7: VISUAL LITERACY

Visual Literacy Activity1. Study the visual on the next slide.2. Answer the key questions about this visual

using the terminology of visual syntax to support, especially for Question 2 where it is most relevant.

Page 8: VISUAL LITERACY
Page 9: VISUAL LITERACY

Visual literacy practice and some context for an allusion made in one of the speeches you read for HW…

The Four Freedoms!

Page 10: VISUAL LITERACY

Four Freedoms Paintings The Four Freedoms is a series of four oil paintings produced

in 1943 by the American artist Norman Rockwell. The Four Freedoms theme was derived from the FDR’s 1941 State of

the Union Address.During the speech, he identified four essential human rights

(Freedom of Speech, Freedom of Worship, Freedom From Want, and Freedom From Fear) that should be universally protected.

This theme was eventually incorporated into the charter of the United Nations.

The series, now in the Norman Rockwell Museum, was made for reproduction in The Saturday Evening Post over the course of four consecutive weeks in 1943 alongside essays by prominent thinkers of the day.

The Freedom from Want painting in particular is now dubbed “The Norman Rockwell Thanksgiving.”

Page 11: VISUAL LITERACY

• Focus question for each slide: How is the stated freedom being expressed through visual aspects in each painting? Use the terminology you just learned to describe, where appropriate.(Alternatively, if you feel the value is not well expressed by the painting, we can discuss that).

Page 12: VISUAL LITERACY

Freedom of Speech

Page 13: VISUAL LITERACY

Freedom of Worship

Page 14: VISUAL LITERACY

Freedom from Fear

Page 15: VISUAL LITERACY

Freedom from Want

Page 16: VISUAL LITERACY

Freedom from Want parody: What is the parody attempting to express about modern America?

Page 17: VISUAL LITERACY

Updated versions of “Freedom from Want”

http://www.tylenol.com/for-what-matters-most