FINA 120 Resource Link Page

 

WebCT Support Pages

 

Unit Links

 

Capturing and Processing Digital Imagery

 

Museums and Galleries

 

General Writing Resources

 

Grammar, Style and Usage

 

Dictionaries and Thesauruses

 

 

WebCT Support Pages

 

Whiteboard Overview

http://courseware.utoronto.ca/webct/help/whiteboard/whiteboard.html

The Whiteboard allows groups of users to share a common, dynamic graphical palette in real-time. The current toolkit includes many of the functions found in standalone drawing tools, including the ability to insert text and graphics, choose fonts and colours, fill and un-fill objects, move objects, and modify them. This is a useful tool for online group discussions where diagrams are needed.

 

Browser Zone

Browsers come and browsers go, visit the Browser Zone frequently to find out what browsers have been tested by WebCT and are supported.

This page includes Browser Links, Browser Plugins and a few others

http://www.webct.com/drc_vista/viewpage?name=ask_drc_browser_zone

 

Ask Dr. C for Students

Ask Dr. C is a user forum, moderated by a group of experienced WebCT users. Ask Dr. C is here to provide students with help using WebCT, not for answering homework questions.

http://www.webct.com/ask_drc/viewpage?name=ask_drc_student

 

WebCT Browser Tune-up

The browser tune-up will ensure that you are using a supported browser. It includes step-by-step instructions to make sure your browser settings are optimized for the best possible WebCT experience.

http://www.webct.com/quickstart/viewpage?name=exchange_browser_tuneup

 

 

Unit Links
 
Unit 1


Alphabet of Art. This site explains, in simple terms, the elements of
visual design.
http://www.guidancecom.com/alphabet/


Unit 2
Language: Point and Line      

Pictorial Language article by Avigdor Arikha
http://www.interdisciplines.org/artcog/papers/1/7


Unit 3 Language: Plane and Shape


Escher
http://www.dartmouth.edu/~matc/math5.pattern/lesson7art.html 


Unit 4 The World of Objects

Drawings of objects
http://www.museomorandi.it/english/sec_pag.htm 


Unit 5 Forms in Nature


Drawings of objects
http://www.museomorandi.it/english/sec_pag.htm

Unit 6 World of Information

Maps of different areas
http://images.google.ca/images?hl=en&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&q=maps&sa=N&tab=wi&meta=   

International traffic signs
http://www.intlsigns.com/world/traffic/

Earth from space - NASA photos
http://earth.jsc.nasa.gov/sseop/efs/ 

More views from space

http://mlso.hao.ucar.edu/cgi-bin/mlso_homepage.cgi 

 

Large site with lots of space links for  weather and earth views

http://mlso.hao.ucar.edu/cgi-bin/mlso_homepage.cgi

 

Internal  Images of organs

http://images.google.ca/images?hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&q=photolib+organs&btnG=Google+Search

 

Weather maps

http://cirrus.sprl.umich.edu/wxnet/maps.html

 

Unit 7 The Human Image: The Figure

Muybridge main page
http://www.figuredrawings.com/Animation.html

The Visible Human Project
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/research/visible/vhpconf98/MAIN.HTM#TOP 

Arshile Gorky
http://www.artnet.com/ag/fineartthumbnails.asp?G=9&aid=7220 

Paula Rego
http://www.artnet.com/ag/fineartthumbnails.asp?G=9&aid=14080

Unit 8 The Human Image: The Context

Paula Rego
http://www.artnet.com/ag/fineartthumbnails.asp?G=9&aid=14080

Unit 9 The Human Image: The Concept

Jackson Pollock
http://www.artnet.com/ag/fineartthumbnails.asp?G=9&aid=13629 

Origins in Shadow
http://www.newcastle.edu.au/discipline/fine-art/theory/analysis/anal-2.htm  --FINA 120 Background information

World Myths and Legends in Art
http://www.artsmia.org/world-myths/artbytheme/index.html 

Paula Rego
http://www.artnet.com/ag/fineartthumbnails.asp?G=9&aid=14080

 

General Resources

Computer Generated Art
Is Computer Art Really Art? (small article)
http://helium.vancouver.wsu.edu/~fouch/really.htm 

Whip is a 3D paint program that Pitaru developed and later practiced for
over a year. It is a painterly environment that discourages the artist
from using learned techniques. It does so by breaking many of the
rules that apply to the physical painting process. Instead, it forces
the artist to relearn how to draw, thus providing a fresh creative
experience.  Pitaru has practiced Whip for over a year, recording the entire
process in a library of over 500 animations.
http://www.pitaru.com/whip/

 

Printmaking links
http://www.flemings.u-net.com/

 

Capturing and Processing Digital Imagery

 

Top Ten Digital Photography Tips http://www.macdevcenter.com/pub/a/mac/2002/10/22/digi_photo_tips.html

           

Digital Imaging Resources

http://idea.uwosh.edu/nick/digitalimaging.htm

 

MUSEUMS and GALLERIES

 

The Getty Museum

http://webapps.getty.edu/art/

The Art Gallery of Ontario

Canadian Centre for Architecture

Canadian Museum of Civilization

List of Museums in the United States on the Web

The Museum Guide

A good starting point for finding Museums and Cultural Resources on the Web, by country.

Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, Ontario

The Virtual Library Another Museum Directory

World Wide Virtual Galleries online

http://vlmp.museophile.com/galleries.html

 

More Links  

 

 Archivesic

 An online archive of papers in social sciences and new technologies.

 

 Art with Brain in Mind

 Discussion group on art and the brain, based at Boston University.

 

 ArtBrain

 Artbrain.org has been created to provide a structure through and upon which artists, art historians, writers, architects who are tethering their practices to issues which are also of interest to neuroscientists can publish their work. 

 

 Association ArtCognition

 Members of the ArtCognition association are interested in exploring the relations between artistic theory and practice and cognitive science. They organize meetings, write texts and take part in events that involve issues of art and cognition.

 

 CIRET

 The International Center for Transdisciplinary Research (CIRET) is a non-profit organization, located in Paris and founded in 1987. The aim of our organization is to develop research in a new scientific and cultural approach - the transdisciplinarity - whose aim is to lay bare the nature and characteristics of the flow of information circulating between the various branches of knowledge.

 

Cyberatlas

 Multi-authored digital extravaganza, curated by the Guggenheim. A must. 

 

Project Zero

 Project Zero is a Harvard University program whose mission is to understand and enhance learning, thinking, and creativity in the arts, as well as humanistic and scientific disciplines, at the individual and institutional levels. 

 

Vision and Art 

A tutorial site to demonstrate how visual information is used in art, devised by John H. Krantz.



 

 

The following Web resources may be useful to you as you work through your Course. (Note that links that are external to OLA open in a new window.)

 

 General Writing Resources

 

UBC Writers' Workshop (http://www.writingcentre.ubc.ca/workshop/index.html)  offers you guidance on essay writing. In the Writer's Toolbox, you can learn about different parts of the essay and topics related to the essay. In many cases, student writing samples along with instructor comments are included. The Writers' Workbench allows you to submit short samples of your work for feedback from online writing tutors.

 

 Paradigm Online Writing Assistant (http://www.powa.org/) provides you with guided exercises in the following areas: discovering what to write; organizing, revising, and editing your writing; as well as writing different types of essays.

 

 The University of Illinois Writers Workshop (http://www.english.uiuc.edu/cws/wworkshop/index.htm) offers you tips and techniques to improve your writing. The grammar handbook explains and provides examples for each part of speech. You can also find writers' resources for business and technical communication as well as resources for English as a second language.

 

Online Writing Lab at Purdue (http://owl.english.purdue.edu/) provides over 130 printer-friendly instructional handouts organized into the areas of general writing concerns, English as a second language, grammar, spelling and punctuation, research/documenting sources, and professional writing.

 

Grammar, Style and Usage

 

A Writer's Reference: Interactive Exercises (http://bedfordstmartins.com/hacker/exercises/) is developed by the publishers of your course textbook. These additional exercises correspond to the sections in your handbook exercises and use the same categories (eg. grammatical sentences) and codes (eg. G1-1). While some of the questions are repeats of those in your book, there are a number of new questions as well. Work through these exercises if you think you need some extra practice. This site uses Macromedia Shockwave. If you don't have it installed, you can dowload it for free at the Macromedia Download Center.

 

Punctuation  from the University of Ottawa (http://www.uottawa.ca/academic/arts/writcent/hypergrammar/punct.html) offers a comprehensive overview of punctuation rules. Examples of correct and incorrect usage for each type of punctuation are provided along with additional exercises.

 

 Guide to Grammar & Writing (http://ccc.commnet.edu/grammar/) covers common problems in writing. You also have an option to submit a grammar or usage question. Take a look at the interactive quizzes if you require more help with grammar.

 

Cliché Finder (http://www.westegg.com/cliche/) will help you avoid using too many cliché’s in your writing. This site indexes over 3,300 cliché’s and explains what a cliché’s.

 

The Elements of Style  (http://www.bartleby.com/141/ ) written by William Strunk, Jr., in 1918 and later revised by E.B. White (author of the ever-popular children's classic, Charlotte's Web), is provided online, with concise rules of usage and composition and lists of many commonly misused and misspelled words. The writing is elegant; splendid examples are provided in this original and still relevant book.

 

Common Errors in English (http://www.wsu.edu/~brians/errors/) is a fairly comprehensive list of common English errors along with descriptions as to the reason for the error. If you get confused between the difference between words such as your and you're, dying and dyeing or compliment and complement, then take a look at this site to find out the answer.

 

 

 

Dictionaries and Thesauruses

 

Wordsmyth Thesaurus Dictionary (http://www.wordsmyth.net/searches.html ) is a user-friendly resource that provides you with a list of definitions for your selected word, organized by usage. You are provided with a list of definitions, an example of how the word can be used in a sentence for each type of usage, as well as hyperlinked synonyms and similar words and phrases for each definition.

 

Roget's II: The New Thesaurus (1995 edition) (http://www.bartleby.com/62/) lists hyperlinked synonyms for each word you choose divided into the parts of speech.

 

Plumb Design Visual Thesaurus (http://www.plumbdesign.com/thesaurus/index.html) is an unusual thesaurus that allows you to visualize the relationship between words in an interactive and graphical way by presenting the relationships between words in the form of a map. The site uses Java, and you may find it slow to load.

 

yourdictionary.com (http://www.yourdictionary.com/ ) is a portal for language products with more than 1800 dictionaries in 250 languages. The featured English dictionary is the Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary. You can read your chosen word's definition, function, date of origin, and hyperlinked synonyms. You can also search through the specialty dictionaries on topics ranging from accounting to publishing.