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Reflection Of A Glass Window

Decent Essays

The object I chose to draw was a stained glass window depicting the thirteenth station of the cross, where the crucified Jesus is laid into the arms of His mother, Mary. This object is colorful and vivid, with the people in the window image portrayed in bright colors in contrast to the background. In addition, the people portrayed have precise naturalistic details and proportions regarding their clothing, bodies, and facial expressions. Through the exercise of drawing this stained glass window of the thirteenth station, I learned about proportionality, black space, and unification. I also learned how the Catholic faith can relate to these different aspects of drawing. I started drawing the border and outlines of the image; not the entire …show more content…

Otherwise, the entire image would not look right. I did not finish drawing the window because I wanted to place the parts proportionately so as to accurately portray the window as a whole. The window’s detail did not serve as a priority in the drawing exercise because I believed the unity of its parts was central to making it look as accurate as possible. Additionally, I learned that the unification of the drawing’s parts were necessary in drawing the window. It can be said in the spiritual life that Jesus makes our brokenness whole and creates beauty out of it, much like how the beauty of stained glass window only makes sense as a unified whole. I took some time in the beginning of the drawing exercise to examine the window for a second time, which allowed me to see that these pieces only made sense together. Yes, the pieces of stained glass are pretty by themselves, but they only form the image of the thirteenth station when together. Examining the stained glass window for a second time also allowed me to notice black spaces in between the pieces of stained glass. I learned that these areas of black space not only separate each part, but are also essential to the beauty of the window, and that drawing images is as much about using space well as it is about detail. In an art history class I took last year, I learned that there was a period of time where artists would use all available space on a surface out of fear of

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