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Art

Not Equal but Balanced: Exploring Asymmetrical Balance

Overview

Students explore how balance in art does not always mean symmetry, but can be achieved through thoughtful placement of elements.

Learning Objective
Students understand how asymmetrical balance works and can create balanced compositions without mirroring.

Resources needed

  • Paper
  • Pencils
  • Optional: coloured pencils

Lesson stages

0 / 11 done
  1. 1 Introduce balance in art: symmetry vs asymmetry.
  2. 2 Show examples where objects are different but still balanced.
  3. 3 Discuss visual weight (size, colour, position).
  4. 4 Students sketch a simple composition with unequal elements.
  5. 5 Adjust placement to create balance.
  6. 6 Students create a final drawing.
  7. 7 Encourage experimenting with size and spacing.
  8. 8 Midway check: does the image feel balanced?
  9. 9 Students refine composition.
  10. 10 In pairs, students explain how balance was achieved.
  11. 11 Discuss: what made the composition feel stable?

Tap a step to mark it as done.

Variations

  • Use only shapes.
  • Create balanced abstract designs.
  • Compare symmetrical vs asymmetrical compositions.
More information

Teach: balance, asymmetry, weight, composition, position. Use frames: 'This side feels balanced because…'.

Provide guided layouts. Allow moving objects before drawing.

Can students create a balanced composition without symmetry? Can they explain their choices?

Arrange objects physically or draw in sand.

Students may assume balance always means equal sides.

Asymmetrical balance is widely used in modern art and design.