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L'étude de la composition musicale basée sur des oeuvres picturalesGroulx, Benoit 09 1900 (has links)
La musique a le pouvoir d’exprimer ce qui est latent dans d’autres formes d’art, comme elle peut aussi transcender et ajouter d’autres niveaux de signification au texte d’une chanson. Mais seules les illustrations peuvent encapsuler une scène au cœur de la musique.
Dans ce mémoire, j’explore différents moyens musicaux dont dispose le compositeur pour mettre en musique son interprétation d’une œuvre picturale. Cette œuvre est, par définition, privée de la dimension temporelle. Si, pour le peintre Eugène Delacroix, « Le véritable but du peintre est de nous faire prendre part à l’intensité de l’instant », la musique, elle, ne peut être appréciée et laisser sa trace sur nous qu’en fonction du temps qu’elle prend pour se déployer. Conséquemment, une question a nourri ma réflexion : sous quels angles et selon quels critères d’analyse puis-je aborder une œuvre picturale afin d’en tirer des constats qui pourront, par la suite, servir de support à la création de ma musique? Je tente de répondre à mon questionnement en approchant l’interprétation d’une illustration par quatre avenues possibles : réaliste ou descriptive, impressionniste, narrative et, finalement, par association stylistique entre le medium illustratif et le medium musical. Pour le besoin de mon étude, j’ai composé trois œuvres basées sur sept illustrations :
1) Tableaux Montmartre. Suite symphonique inspirée de Tableaux d’une exposition de Modeste Moussorgski et dont le support illustratif consiste en cinq toiles représentant le Montmartre par cinq peintres différents : Charles Malle, Armand Lourenço, Kees Van Dongen, Eugène Paul (Gen-Paul) et Georges Braque.
2) Lumière fossile. Poème symphonique ayant comme source d’inspiration une photographie du cosmos prise par le télescope spatial Planck.
3) Tennis Duet. Pièce à forme variable pour piano seul ayant comme source d’inspiration extra-musicale une photographie d’Arnold Schoenberg jouant au tennis. / Music has the power to express what may be latent in other art-forms, just as it may transcend and add new layers of meaning to the text set in a song. But only the illustrations themselves can actually encapsulate the scene, character or item at the heart of the music.
In this thesis, I explore the different musical means available to the composer to set his interpretation of a pictorial work to music. This work is, by definition, deprived of the temporal dimension. If, for the painter Eugène Delacroix, « The true goal of the painter is to make us take part in the intensity of the moment », music can be appreciated and leave its mark on us only according to the time it takes to deploy. Consequently, a question nurtured my reflection: From what angles and according to what criteria of analysis can I approach a pictorial work in order to draw observations that could subsequently serve as a support for the creation of my music? I try to answer these questions by approaching the interpretation of an illustration through four possible avenues: Realist or descriptive, impressionist, narrative and, finally, by a stylistic transfer from the illustrative medium to the musical medium. For the purposes of my study, I composed three works based on seven illustrations :
1) Tableaux Montmartre. Symphonic piece inspiered by Pictures at an exhibition by Modest Moussorgsky and whose illustrative support consists of five canvases representing Montmartre by five different painters: Charles Malle, Armand Lourenço, Kees Van Dongen, Eugène Paul (Gen-Paul) and Georges Braque.
2) Lumière fossile. Symphonic poem inspired by a photograph of the cosmic radiation taken by the Planck space telescope
3) Tennis Duet. Piece, whose structural form may vary, for solo piano inspired by a photograph of Arnold Schoenberg playing tennis.
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”…då kan jag bara ta mobilen” : En studie om hur lärare och elever i årskurs 1 resonerar kring ljudböcker och högläsning / ” ...then I can just take the phone” : A study on how teachers and pupils in first grade reason about audiobooks and reading aloudSvärd, Katarina, Jonasson, Elin January 2022 (has links)
Denna studie handlar om elevers upplevelse och förståelse av högläsning. Syftet är att undersöka huruvida formatet på högläsningen, ljudbok eller fysiskt högläst text, påverkar elevernas förståelse för innehållet och intresset för att lyssna. Detta har studerats genom gruppintervjuer och gemensamma diskussioner med elever i årskurs 1. Även lärare har fått delge sina tankar om de olika formaten utifrån ett frågeformulär. Resultatet i denna studie visar att förståelsen inte påverkas av vilket format som används. Däremot framkommer det att bilder och möjligheten att kunna avbryta läsningen har en positiv effekt på elevernas förståelse. Eleverna påpekar dock att det kan vara problematiskt att få någon, främst utanför skoltid, att vilja läsa för dem. De upplever att vuxna tycker att det är jobbigt och att de inte vill. Trots att forskning och lärarna i studien uttrycker samstämmighet om att högläsning skapar nyfikenhet och är språkutvecklande på flera plan upplever eleverna att dialogisk högläsning sällan finns tillgänglig.
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The Efficacy of Small Multiples in the Visual Language of Instructional DesignsStringham, Douglas B. 16 March 2012 (has links) (PDF)
The visualization strategy of small multiples (Tufte, 1983, 1990, 1997) is not merely the clever or ordered arrangement of similar and personable images; small multiples—purposeful compositions of similarly sized, repeated illustrations—contain a great deal more than the sum of their respective parts. The purpose of this study is to define a set of objectives and guiding tactics for using small multiples in the visual language of instructional designs. This study aims to (1) compile a targeted literature review cataloging the historical treatment of small multiples and their pedagogical and cognitive virtues and (2) analyze examples of small multiples usage in visual design artifacts to determine efficacious and expansive applications of this technique.
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Constantin Guys and the Modern NewspaperBlair, Susannah E. January 2022 (has links)
My dissertation looks at a pivotal point in the history of the news image (c.1840 to 1860), when wood engraving and steam-powered printing presses transformed the genre into a mass medium that reached hundreds of thousands of readers. Using the format of the monograph and the work of French artist Constantin Guys, I argue that despite the advent of photography and other reproductive visual techniques, drawing formed the backbone of the new authority of the mass-produced news image.
To make this case, I locate Guys’s drawings within a wide range of other tactics of transcription that made the printing of text and image possible––including stenography and printing telegraphy––to contextualize the strange persistence of this manual medium within the increasingly mechanized armature of the illustrated newspaper. As a study of the formation of trust in the news image at a moment of momentous technological change, my project identifies a vital origin point for pressing questions related to the truth and objectivity of the news in our contemporary moment, and places mid-nineteenth-century drawing at its center.
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Using Visual Aids in the Secondary Language Classroom: An Action Research Study on the Use of Illustrations during TPRS InstructionJakubowski, Andrea M. January 2013 (has links)
No description available.
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Entre chien et loup : travail sur l'image singulièreLeBlanc, Nathalie 23 April 2018 (has links)
Mon travail de création à la maîtrise a principalement été de réaliser des vidéos contemplatives et des collages en modifiant des images. À l’aide de différents logiciels ou techniques de montage, j’ai modifié des photographies, des séquences de films, des images tirées de webcam, des reproductions de même que mes propres captations. Ce texte présente mon travail artistique en venant établir des liens entre mes projets de création, des œuvres et des notions théoriques qui touchent à différentes idées de l’image singulière. Ce texte divisé sous cinq thèmes qui se sont dégagés de mes recherches — dévier, appropriation, montage, singularité et temps — permet de rendre compte de mes réflexions sur mon travail de l’image. Plus précisément, je spécifierai en quoi remanier une image est pour moi la manière de la rendre singulière.
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'n Esteties-kreatiewe herinterpretasie van Pieter en die Wolf deur Sergey Prokofiëf / Elma de KockDe Kock, Elma January 2015 (has links)
Peter and the Wolf (1936) is a transmedial work based on a Russian fairy tale composed and
written by Sergey Prokofiev . Prokofiev’s purpose with the work was amongst others to
introduce children to the instruments of the symphony orchestra. This study examines the
possibility of creating a new Afrikaans versification of the text in order to introduce this work
to Afrikaans-speaking children. The creative product of the research consists of a picture book
and a corresponding soundtrack together with the original music and a recitation of the text.
The researcher cooperated with other artists in order to achieve the final product.
Since the realisation of a creative product forms an integral part of this study, practice-based
research has been utilised. The framework for practice-based research by Scrivener and
Chapman (2004) has been used for the design of the study, the implementation thereof (theory
and practice), as well as for the structure of the dissertation.
The first step of the framework of Scrivener and Chapman (2004) entails the pre-project
reflection, i.e. the identification of issues, as well as the concerns and interests of the
researcher. It is important to the researcher that children are exposed to the instruments of the
symphony orchestra, and she is also interested in picture books and fairy tales. Research
revealed that there is no recent Afrikaans version of Peter and the Wolf. She consequently
decided to do a versification of the text.
The identification of the source domains relevant to the research theme and the creative project
forms the second step of the framework. The initial source domains that were identified and
studied were the theoretical concepts of intertextuality, intermediality and creative adaptation
(Chapter 2). Peter and the Wolf originated as an intermedial work and thus the intermedial
creative product is also a creative adaptation of the original work. As the study progressed,
additional domains for research have been identified and examined. These are music, narrative
poetry, children’s book illustrations, developmental psychology, cognitive narratology and
information regarding the listener or reader (Chapter 3). Insight into the art forms and media
can positively influence the progress of the creative product and can aid in creating an
improved understanding of the intermedial effect of the total creative product. Because the
target audience of the picture book is children between the ages of six and eight years, research
was done on the developmental psychology of the child in the middle childhood years. In
combination with this, cognitive narratology was studied to determine the reception of the
creative product, and to assist with the analysis of the existing texts of Peter and the Wolf. Thereafter three existing editions of Peter and the Wolf were studied, based on the theoretical
framework, and the intermedial interplay and creative possibilities for different medial
combinations were examined (Chapter 4). These texts are: 1) a picture book, translated by
Lydia Pienaar (1975); it is an equivalent translation of the original Russian text and has
become a classical edition of the work in Afrikaans; 2) a poetic version by Philip de Vos of a
performance text with the original music (2003); and 3) an alternative modern edition with
musical arrangement, text and illustrations by Gavin Friday and Bono (2003). The latter
combination of text, music, illustrations and recitation, was also used for the creative work in
this study.
Cycles of production and work reflection form part of the creative phase of practice-based
research. In Chapter 5, the different phases of the versification process are discussed by
analysing different versions of the manuscript. There is also a report on the co-operation with
the other artists, and the development of the different media (the illustrations, the music
realisation, the recitation and the sound mixing).
In the post-project reflection the interplay between the theoretical research and the creative
work was examined, as well as the contribution of the different research fields to the final
creative project and the intermedial interplay between the different media that were used in the
creative work.
It was found that practice-based research is a very successful research method for a postgraduate
study in which a creative project forms part of the study. The research method is not
only advantageous for the development of the creative project, but also for thorough theoretical
research. Furthermore, the researcher came to the conclusion that an improved understanding
of the complex theoretical approaches develops when they are practically applied. This
understanding is not necessarily based on theoretical research, but on the experience that was
gained throughout this study.
The creative product of this study can expand the horizon of the child in an intermedial way
that will benefit the listener. Insight has been obtained on the way in which such a project can
be undertaken. Furthermore, other intermedial projects can flow from this project. A
translation of the poetic text can make this book and CD accessible to a large number of South African children. / MA (Afrikaans and Dutch), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2015
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'n Esteties-kreatiewe herinterpretasie van Pieter en die Wolf deur Sergey Prokofiëf / Elma de KockDe Kock, Elma January 2015 (has links)
Peter and the Wolf (1936) is a transmedial work based on a Russian fairy tale composed and
written by Sergey Prokofiev . Prokofiev’s purpose with the work was amongst others to
introduce children to the instruments of the symphony orchestra. This study examines the
possibility of creating a new Afrikaans versification of the text in order to introduce this work
to Afrikaans-speaking children. The creative product of the research consists of a picture book
and a corresponding soundtrack together with the original music and a recitation of the text.
The researcher cooperated with other artists in order to achieve the final product.
Since the realisation of a creative product forms an integral part of this study, practice-based
research has been utilised. The framework for practice-based research by Scrivener and
Chapman (2004) has been used for the design of the study, the implementation thereof (theory
and practice), as well as for the structure of the dissertation.
The first step of the framework of Scrivener and Chapman (2004) entails the pre-project
reflection, i.e. the identification of issues, as well as the concerns and interests of the
researcher. It is important to the researcher that children are exposed to the instruments of the
symphony orchestra, and she is also interested in picture books and fairy tales. Research
revealed that there is no recent Afrikaans version of Peter and the Wolf. She consequently
decided to do a versification of the text.
The identification of the source domains relevant to the research theme and the creative project
forms the second step of the framework. The initial source domains that were identified and
studied were the theoretical concepts of intertextuality, intermediality and creative adaptation
(Chapter 2). Peter and the Wolf originated as an intermedial work and thus the intermedial
creative product is also a creative adaptation of the original work. As the study progressed,
additional domains for research have been identified and examined. These are music, narrative
poetry, children’s book illustrations, developmental psychology, cognitive narratology and
information regarding the listener or reader (Chapter 3). Insight into the art forms and media
can positively influence the progress of the creative product and can aid in creating an
improved understanding of the intermedial effect of the total creative product. Because the
target audience of the picture book is children between the ages of six and eight years, research
was done on the developmental psychology of the child in the middle childhood years. In
combination with this, cognitive narratology was studied to determine the reception of the
creative product, and to assist with the analysis of the existing texts of Peter and the Wolf. Thereafter three existing editions of Peter and the Wolf were studied, based on the theoretical
framework, and the intermedial interplay and creative possibilities for different medial
combinations were examined (Chapter 4). These texts are: 1) a picture book, translated by
Lydia Pienaar (1975); it is an equivalent translation of the original Russian text and has
become a classical edition of the work in Afrikaans; 2) a poetic version by Philip de Vos of a
performance text with the original music (2003); and 3) an alternative modern edition with
musical arrangement, text and illustrations by Gavin Friday and Bono (2003). The latter
combination of text, music, illustrations and recitation, was also used for the creative work in
this study.
Cycles of production and work reflection form part of the creative phase of practice-based
research. In Chapter 5, the different phases of the versification process are discussed by
analysing different versions of the manuscript. There is also a report on the co-operation with
the other artists, and the development of the different media (the illustrations, the music
realisation, the recitation and the sound mixing).
In the post-project reflection the interplay between the theoretical research and the creative
work was examined, as well as the contribution of the different research fields to the final
creative project and the intermedial interplay between the different media that were used in the
creative work.
It was found that practice-based research is a very successful research method for a postgraduate
study in which a creative project forms part of the study. The research method is not
only advantageous for the development of the creative project, but also for thorough theoretical
research. Furthermore, the researcher came to the conclusion that an improved understanding
of the complex theoretical approaches develops when they are practically applied. This
understanding is not necessarily based on theoretical research, but on the experience that was
gained throughout this study.
The creative product of this study can expand the horizon of the child in an intermedial way
that will benefit the listener. Insight has been obtained on the way in which such a project can
be undertaken. Furthermore, other intermedial projects can flow from this project. A
translation of the poetic text can make this book and CD accessible to a large number of South African children. / MA (Afrikaans and Dutch), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2015
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From oral performance to picture books: a perspective on Zulu children’s literatureNtuli, Cynthia Daphne 02 1900 (has links)
While over the years stakeholders such as publishers and academics have taken a keen interest in research into writing and publishing, they have been less concerned about research into indigenous children‟s literature. In this thesis a comprehensive examination of children‟s literature in the indigenous African languages of South Africa and in Zulu in particular, is presented. Qualitative research methods have been applied, using questionnaires and interviews to gain first-hand knowledge of problems and possible solutions to the dearth of original children‟s literature in the indigenous languages. The data obtained in this regard has proved invaluable to the researcher and, hopefully, will be so to others in the future.
Oral folktales narrated before the influence of the missionaries qualify as children‟s literature. The transition from the oral performance of these folktales to the reading of written children‟s texts is discussed in detail. This is achieved by considering the milieu, themes, content, functions and values of this children‟s literature. The discussion of imilolozelo (lullabies) and izilandelo/izidlaliso (game songs) presents the genre of children‟s traditional oral poetry as a form of performance based not only on narrative but also on songs and/or chants interspersed with rhythmical movements to relay their message.
Zulu school readers as modern literature for children are also examined by tracing their background and the development of original Zulu children‟s written literature since it was first recorded by the missionaries. Contents and themes of these early readers, dating from the 1800s, are examined and compared with a series of graded readers published in 1962 by C.L.S. Nyembezi.
The sixth chapter of the thesis investigates Zulu children‟s picture books as contemporary literature. Various types of picture books and their functions are discussed.
Research findings point to an urgent need for the training of African authors in the writing of age-appropriate books in indigenous African languages. Lastly, the study proves that it is feasible to regard traditional oral and modern indigenous texts as children‟s literature. / D. Litt. et Phil. (African Languages)
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Die wye wêreld in : ’n ondersoek na landskap en identiteitskonstruksie in Suid-Afrikaanse en Nederlandse prenteboekeVan Zyl, Janienke Dorothea 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA (VA))--Stellenbosch University, 2011. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: The hypothesis of this study is that literary theory and theories concerning space,
landscape and the construction of identity, are not only applicable to written texts,
but also to visual texts. To prove this, the relevant theories were applied in the
analyses of four selected Afrikaans and Dutch picture books, as well as to my own
picture book, the practical component of this MA study.
Space, which is transformed into landscape when observation becomes perception,
interacts with the construction of identity in texts in different ways, inter alia because
changes regarding space lead to changes regarding identity. Although social identity
(how others see us) is important, it can lead to stereotyping, while a focus on selfidentity
(how we see ourselves) is conducive in treating children as individuals – as
is done regarding adults – with a wide variety of interests and inclinations. Space,
landscape and the construction of identity are important vehicles to convey meaning
in narratives – not only in literature for adults, but also in picture books, where it can
play a role in both written text and illustrations to bring extra depth and dimension.
Illustrations are most frequently in a complementary relationship with words because
they activate additional meaning, but it can also convey messages in a contrapuntal
or even contradictory manner. The utilization of these aspects links with the fact that
many South African and Dutch writers and illustrators are of the opinion that both
children and adults enjoy really successful children’s books.
This study indicates that the use of theories on landscape and identity in the
analyses of picture books can lead to the discovery of deeper meanings, which show
the literary merit of the texts. In this regard, illustrations should not be regarded as
having only an aesthetic, supplementary function, but should be appreciated as an
equal partner in conveying meaning, which gives an extra dimension to picture
books. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Die hipotese in hierdie studie is dat literêre teorie en ander teorieë rakende ruimte en
landskap, asook identiteitskonstruksie, nie net van toepassing is op geskrewe tekste
nie, maar ook op visuele tekste. Om dit te bewys, is die relevante teorieë toegepas in
die analise van vier gekose Afrikaanse en Nederlandse prenteboeke, asook van my
eie prenteboek as praktiese komponent van dié Magisterstudie.
Ruimte, wat getransformeer word tot landskap wanneer waarneming oorgaan in
gewaarwording, hang op verskillende maniere saam met identiteitskonstruksie in
tekste, onder andere deurdat ’n verandering in ruimte ook ʼn verandering in identiteit
tot gevolg het. Hoewel sosiale identiteit (hoe ander ’n individu of groep sien)
belangrik is, kan dit lei tot stereotipering. Daarteenoor lig ’n fokus op self-identiteit
(hoe individue hulself sien) uit dat kinders, net soos volwassenes, as individue
gesien moet word met ʼn wye verskeidenheid belangstellings en smake. Ruimte,
landskap en identiteitskonstruksie is belangrike betekenisdraers in narratiewe – nie
alleen in literatuur vir volwassenes nie, maar ook in prenteboeke, waar dit in beide
die geskrewe teks én in die illustrasies ’n rol kan speel om ekstra diepte en dimensie
te verleen. Die illustrasies staan meestal in ’n komplementêre verhouding tot die
woorde deurdat dit bydra tot betekenisverruiming, maar dit kan ook kontrapuntale of
selfs teenstrydige boodskappe oordra. Die ontginning van hierdie tipe aspekte sluit
aan by die feit dat heelwat Suid-Afrikaanse én Nederlandse skrywers en
illustreerders meen dat ʼn werklik suksesvolle kinderboek deur beide kinders en
volwassenes geniet kan word.
Uit die ondersoek blyk dat die analise van prenteboeke aan die hand van teorieë oor
landskap en identiteit kan lei tot die uitlig van dieper betekenisse, wat die
letterkundige waarde van prenteboeke bevestig. Illustrasies het hierby nie bloot ’n
estetiese funksie as aanvulling tot die geskrewe teks nie, maar kan beskou word as
volwaardige draers van betekenis wat ’n waardevolle ekstra dimensie aan prenteboeke verleen.
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