Expressive Mark-Making
| English | Chinese | Pinyin |
|---|---|---|
| expressive lines | 表现性线条 | biǎo xiàn xìng xiàn tiáo |
| distortion | 变形 | biàn xíng |
| voice | 个人风格 | gè rén fēng gé |
Marks carry feeling
- The same subject drawn with angry, calm, or nervous marks tells three different stories.
- Expressive lines 表现性线条 exaggerate speed, pressure, and direction to communicate feeling.
- The mark is not just how — it becomes part of what the drawing says.
Match the mark to the mood
Which mark strategy fits each intention?
Two masters of the expressive mark
- Käthe Kollwitz's heavy charcoal carries grief and protest in the stroke itself.
- Egon Schiele's tense, wiry contours make even a resting figure feel electric.
- Study them to see marks as meaning — then find your own.
Exaggerating speed, pressure, and direction to carry feeling makes a line ____.
Expressive lines communicate feeling, not just form.
Distortion in a drawing is always an error.
Distortion is legitimate when it serves intent.
Select all artists famous for expressive mark-making.
Kollwitz's charcoal, Schiele's wiry line, van Gogh's swirling strokes.
Choosing marks on purpose
- Choose the mark to match the idea: soft graphite for quiet subjects, aggressive ink for conflict.
- Distortion 变形 and exaggeration are legitimate decisions when they serve intent.
- A personal mark vocabulary is part of your artistic voice 个人风格 — scorers look for it across the portfolio.
A consistent personal mark vocabulary is part of an artist's ____.
Examiners look for a personal voice across the portfolio.
Match the subject to a fitting mark strategy.
The mark should echo the idea.
"Accurate" is not the only goal — but expressive is not an excuse for careless. An expressive drawing still controls value, composition, and craft; the wildness is chosen, not accidental.
Draw your street twice: once in soft, slow graphite on a quiet morning; once in jagged ink after an argument. Pin them side by side — same street, different heartbeat. That difference is your material.
Expressive marks exaggerate speed, pressure, and direction to carry feeling; distortion may serve intent; and a consistent personal mark vocabulary — your voice — is what examiners hope to find.