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                      Question 1 
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                        - Explain the term picture plane.
 
                        - Outline two importance of perspective.
 
                        - State the relationship  between horizon and eye-level.
 
                        - Give two principles of perspective.
 
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                      A good number of  candidates were attracted to this question. While a few of them gave accurate  responses, most of them gave irrelevant answers. This class of candidates gave  answers that were at variance with the required answers. For example, they defined  perspective and outlined its type, whereas they were expected state two  principles of perspective. Most of the candidates could not articulate convincingly,  the relationship between horizon and eye-level. All these led to loss of  obtainable marks. 
                        Some of the following  were the responses expected from the candidates: 
                      
                      
                        (a) Picture  Plane
                          - a surface on which a  composition is made.
 
                          - the actual flat surface  on which the artist executes a pictorial image. e.g. canvas, paper, board, etc.
 
                          - the area filled by the  images in a composition.
 
                          - it is also a  transparent plane of reference that establishes the illusion of forms existing  in a three-dimensional space.
 
                       
                       
                      
                        (b)  Importance  of Perspective 
                          - it creates the illusion  of distance in a composition.
 
                          - it creates the illusion  of three-dimensionality on a two-dimensional surface.
 
                          - it facilitates  realistic representation of objects in a composition.
 
                        
                             
                         
                       
                        
                        (c) The  relationship between horizon and eye-level
                          - Horizon is an imaginary  line where the earth seems to meet the sky in a landscape composition.
 
                          - Eye-level is the point  in a pictorial composition, which corresponds to the level of the viewer’s eye.
 
                          - Both eye-level and  horizon complement each other.
 
                          - In a landscape  composition, the eye-level corresponds to the line of horizon.
 
                       
                       
                         (d) Principles of Perspective
                          - the nearer the object,  the bigger, and the farther the object, the smaller it becomes to the observer.
 
                          - the closer the object,  the sharper the colour, and the farther the object, the fainter ( paler) the  colour.
 
                          - Equal distance between  objects appears closer as the objects recede from the observer.
 
                          Receding lines below the eye-level appear to  move upward while those above eye-level appear to run downward.   | 
                         
                    
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