Visual Analysis Guidelines
Visual Analysis Guidelines
Visual Analysis Guidelines
Develop a Thesis
A thesis hypothesizes an argument that will need to be proved. It is not a self-evident
statement about the artwork. Developing a good thesis takes critical thought and is an
essential step in your assignment. The type of thesis that you will develop for this
assignment is very specific, and you must first complete the inventory of art elements
and principles. The more time spent observing and writing about the artworks visual
qualities, the easier it will be to formulate a thesis.
What concepts can you associate with the artwork? What is the artworks tone? What
can you glean from the artwork by reflecting on its visual qualities? Work with
adjectives, which describe tone, or abstract nouns, which express concepts.
Do not try to undertake this step without first having described in detail the elements
and principles! A poorly crafted thesis demonstrates inadequate critical thought and
effort on the students part, and your grade will reflect this.
Choose three qualities of the artworks tone [i.e. angry] or three concepts [i.e. liberty]
you would like to work with from the list above.
1) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
2) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
3) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Craft your one-sentence thesis statement using the formula below. Remember to use
parallel structure (a list of adjectives or a list of nouns) when writing your thesis.
The artwork conveys (1), (2), and (3).
The painting conveys feelings of loneliness, solitude, and joy.
Do NOT mention elements/principles in your thesis! For example, The painting has line,
color, and symmetrical balance, is not a thesis! Its a simple observation or statement
of fact. Your thesis deals with the tones and concepts of the artwork only. For this
assignment, keep the thesis simple and direct. It will be up to the writer to demonstrate
the thesis through the visual analysis.
INCORRECT: Through the use of color, line, and focal point, the painting deals
with loss, hope, and community.
CORRECT: The painting deals with loss, hope, and community.
Next, choose the three elements of art and/or principles of design that will best support
your argument. You will discuss one per paragraph in the body of your paper.
1) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
2) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
3) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
This paper is completely your original thought. You may not include any information other than
the artworks identification (artist, title, date, medium) from the museum label. You may not
include any information, descriptions, analysis, explanations or help from the museum website,
catalogs, museum personnel, textbook, and/or other sources.
If you were allowed to use outside source material, your instructor would include detailed
instructions on how to cite sources, write endnotes or footnotes, include a bibliography, and
similar research instructions. But this is not that type assignment.
It you ignore these instructions about outside sources, your instructor may assume that: you can
not do the assignment; you have chosen to ignore the assignment; you have not spent the
required time on the assignment; or, you are committing academic fraud by turning in a paper
written by someone else or for someone elses class.
The body of your paper (the visual analysis argument) should not exceed, nor fall short of, three
typed pages, double-spaced.
Do the Following
1. Write in academic voice. This means that you will use third person, singular point of
view and that you will not address the reader directly nor include I-statements. Do
not use contractions or slang expressions or clichs.
2. Do not include the exact dimensions of the artwork; rather, describe it in general terms.
Spell out all numbers except for dates.
3. Guard against rookie mistakes: its vs. its; there vs. their; verb-subject agreement;
possessives; capitalization.
Format Your Paper: These guidelines conform to the Chicago Manual of Style, aka Turabian
Styles, preferred by many in the art history field.
Two inches down from the top margin (or, three inches down from the top of
the page) center your title in ALL CAPS.
If the title of the paper is longer that one line use single spaces.
At the bottom of the paper and so that the last lines conforms to the one inch
margin rule, type the course information in caps and lowercase, single spaced,
centered in the page. Include all of the following:
Your Name
Title of the Class
Section ####, Semester YEAR
Instructors Name
Southwestern College
Example:
Sponge Bob Square Pants
Art 100, Intro to Drawing
Section 09, Summer 2016
Instructor: Jennifer Donovan
Southwestern College