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Art

Point the Way: Using Directional Shapes to Guide the Eye

Overview

Students explore how arrows, lines, and shapes can be used to create a clear path for the viewer’s attention.

Learning Objective
Students understand how directional shapes and lines can guide the viewer’s eye through a composition.

Resources needed

  • Paper
  • Pencils
  • Optional: coloured pencils or markers

Lesson stages

0 / 10 done
  1. 1 Introduce direction in art: guiding the viewer’s eye.
  2. 2 Show examples using arrows or lines.
  3. 3 Students experiment with directional shapes.
  4. 4 Plan a composition with a clear path.
  5. 5 Create the drawing using directional elements.
  6. 6 Encourage strong visual pathways.
  7. 7 Midway check: can you follow the path?
  8. 8 Students refine drawings.
  9. 9 In pairs, students trace the path with a finger.
  10. 10 Discuss: how did direction guide the viewer?

Tap a step to mark it as done.

Variations

  • Use only curved paths.
  • Create circular or zigzag flow.
  • Combine with storytelling.
More information

Teach: direction, path, guide, flow, movement. Use frames: 'Your eye goes…'.

Provide guided arrows or templates. Allow tracing.

Can students guide the viewer’s eye? Can they explain the path?

Draw in sand or use objects.

Students may place elements randomly without direction.

Directional composition is important in art, design, and visual storytelling.