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Art, Literature, Music on the AP Exam • • • • Well known pieces Well known artists Notable eras, movements Need to recognize names of artists and the movements with which they are associated • Need to be able to place works of art in proper historical and/or artistic context • Need to understand the progressive nature and related aspects of major movements MC Q’s: Art, Music, Literature • • • • • Will NOT ask you to simply identify Will ask you to identify and place in context Will ask you to identify by period or movement Will ask you to relate to event, trend, era Will ask you to analyze content and apply across and/or through time • May also be cartoons, photographs, illustrations The painting below, the “Gare Saint-Lazare” (1877) by Claude Monet is an example of which of the following schools of painting? • • • • • A. Abstract B. Surrealism C. Cubist D. Impressionist E. Baroque The sculpture by Bernini shown below celebrates… • A. a new interest in secular themes • B. Lutheran veneration of saints • C. the Calvinist cult of beauty • D. the reconciliation of the papacy after The Council of Trent • E. Catholic Reformation mysticism ESSAYS: Art, Music, Literature • For DBQ: A series of paintings, illustrations, excerpts that you will have to analyze the subject, content, context and apply to larger question in history. • Ex: Test 1 AP Review guide • For Free Response Essay, more than likely a comparative analysis question The two pictures below suggest technological and urban transformations characteristic of modern Europe. Using the pictures as a starting point, discuss the extent the changes and their effects on working middle class Europeans in the second half of the 19th century. Compare and contrast the ways in which the two works of art express the artistic styles and political issues of their times Compare the ways in which the two works of art below express the artistic, philosophical, and cultural values of their time. David, Michelangelo, 1504 MAN POINTING, GIACOMETTI 1947 Major European Art movements • Gothic • Renaissance -- Italian -- Northern • Baroque • Rococo • Neo-classicism and Romanticism • Realism • Impressionism • Cubism • Expressionism / Surrealism / Abstract Expressionism / Pop Art Gothic • 5th – 16th century Europe • Religious themes dominate • Fades in 15th & 16th century with rise of Renaissance themes • 18th century revival is short lived The Renaissance – 14th -17th centuries throughout Europe • Techniques developed, adopted, refined: -- Realism and expressionism -- Perspective -- Light and Shadowing - Classicism - Application of Mathematical principles • Painting, Architecture, Sculpture, et al are revolutionized • All modern artistic styles are a by-product • Not revolutionized in such a way again until the Impressionists - Realism & Expression Expulsion from the Garden Masaccio, 1427 First nudes since classical times. Perspective First use of linear perspective! The Trinity Masaccio 1427 vertical The Last Supper - da Vinci, 1498 horizontal Perspective! Light & Shadowing/Softening Edges Sfumato Chiaroscuro Classicism Greco-Roman influence. Secularism & Humanism. Individualism free standing figures. Symmetry/Balance Geometrical Arrangement of Figures The Dreyfus Madonna with the Pomegranate Leonardo da Vinci, 1469 The figure as architecture! Italian Renaissance major figures • • • • • • • • Giotto (1267-1337) A “Bridge” figure Lorenzo Ghiberti (1378-1455) Sandro Botticelli (1445-1510) Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519) Piero della Francesca(1452-1519) Michelangelo (1475-1564) Raphael (1483-1520) Titian (1485-1576) Madonna and Child Giotto c. 1320 Ghiberti – Gates of Paradise Baptistry Door, Florence – 1425 - 1452 Birth of Venus – Botticelli, 1485 Madonna with the Yarnwinder Leonardo da Vinci c.1500 The School of Athens – Raphael Venus of Urbino – Titian, 1558 Northern Renaissance major figures • • • • • • Hieronymus Bosch (1450-1510) Pieter Bruegel (1525-1569) Albrecht Durer (1471-1528) Hans Holbein (1497-1543) Jan van Eyck (1400?- 1441) El Greco (Spanish) (1541-1614) Hieronymus Bosch The Temptation of St. Anthony 1506-1507 Bruegel’s, Parable of the Blind Leading the Blind, 1568 Albrecht Dürer • The greatest of German artists. • A scholar as well as an artist. • His patron was the Emperor Maximilian I. • Also a scientist – Wrote books on geometry, fortifications, and human proportions. • Self-conscious individualism of the Renaissance is seen in his portraits. • Self-Portrait at 26, 1498. Hans Holbein, the Younger • One of the great German artists who did most of his work in England. • While in Basel, he befriended Erasmus. – Erasmus Writing, 1523 • Henry VIII was his patron from 1536. • Great portraitist noted for: – Objectivity & detachment. – Doesn’t conceal the weaknesses of his subjects. Artist to the Tudors Henry VIII (left), 1540 and the future Edward VI (above), 1543. Jan van Eyck • The Virgin and Chancellor Rolin, 1435. • More courtly and aristocratic work. – Court painter to the Duke of Burgundy, Philip the Good. Giovanni Arnolfini and His Wife (Wedding Portrait) Jan Van Eyck,1434 Jan van Eyck Giovanni Arnolfini & His Wife (details) El Greco • The most important Spanish artist of this period was Greek. • 1541 – 1614. • He deliberately distorts & elongates his figures, and seats them in a lurid, unearthly atmosphere. • He uses an agitated, flickering light. • He ignores the rules of perspective, and heightens the effect by areas of brilliant color. • His works were a fitting expression of the Spanish Counter-Reformation. El Greco’s, The Burial of Count Orgaz, 1586 El Greco The View of Toledo 1597-1599 Art of the Baroque • • • • • • 17th and 18th century Supersedes Mannerism of the Renaissance Origins in Catholic Rome Religious themes still dominate Largely rejected in protestant areas of Europe Strongly advocated pictorial clarity Baroque ► 1600 – 1750. ►From a Portuguese word “barocca”, meaning “a pearl of irregular shape.” ►Implies strangeness, irregularity, and extravagance. ►The more dramatic, the better! Baroque Style of Art & Architecture ► Dramatic, emotional. ► Colors were brighter than bright; darks were darker than dark. ► Counter-Reformation art. ► Paintings & sculptures in church contexts should speak to the illiterate rather than to the well-informed. ► Ecclesiastical art --> appeal to emotions. ► Holland --> Real people portrayed as the primary subjects. Major figures of the Baroque • Caravaggio – Italian 1572-1610, painter • Gianlorenzo Bernini – Italian 1598-1680, painter, sculptor, architect, extremely pious, papal knight at age 23 serves church and popes for rest of life • Rembrandt van Rijn – Dutch, 1606-1669 painter (The Dutch School) “The Flagellation of Christ” Caravaggio Gianlorenzo Bernini Baldachin over the High Altar of St. Peter's, 1624-33 Bronze and gold (95 feet high) Vatican, Rome Gianlorenzo Bernini Tomb of Alexander VII 1672-78 Doctor Nicolaes Tulp's Demonstration of the Anatomy of the Arm, Rembrandt, 1632 AP FRQ Masters of the Cloth Guild Rembrandt, 1662 Baroque Furniture A Baroque Room