Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Art Research Get inspired!! Objectives: You Will • Broaden your knowledge of significant artists and art movements throughout history • Develop in-depth knowledge of one specific artist/art movement that inspires you • Teach the rest of the class, so that everyone has increased knowledge. Your Task • Use this PP to explore different movements in art and artists. • This is JUST an overview- use the website for in depth information! • You will begin with an exploration and then an in depth study, depending on the assignment for your class (Art I, II, or Advanced) African Art • For this study, we are focusing on the traditional tribal arts of Africa. characteristics that most traditional African Art shares: • Focus on Performance • Natural Materials • Abstraction/Distortion Native American Art • Encompasses several different cultures and regions Pre-Columbian Art: Meso-America • Refers to Art made before the arrival of Columbus and influence of Western culture Egyptian Art • Egyptian statues, paintings and architectural forms seem to obey one law. • We call such a law a 'style'. • It is very difficult to explain in words what makes a style, but it is far less difficult to see. • very strict laws, which every artist had to learn from his earliest youth. • Seated statues had to have their hands on their knees; men had to be painted with darker skin than women; the appearance of every Egyptian god was strictly laid down. Greek Art • Nearly all painted scenes in Greek Art are on Greek pottery • Tell stories, myths, and illustrate the daily lives of the Greeks Classical Greek Sculpture •Kritios Boy, 480 BCE •Contrapposto: asymetric relaxed pose more naturalistic Roman Art • observation of nature was of key importance; as in, for example, their portrait sculptures which are usually meticulously detailed and realistic. • The Romans also depicted warriors and heroic adventures, in the spirit of the Greeks who came before them. -Close observation of the natural world -Often copied Greek sculptures The Middle Ages • Early Christian art was about telling a story. • The art of this period contained subjects who lacked facial expression and followed a “formula”. • Artists, of this period, were not concerned with the subjects as much as they were the story of the people in these stories • Blue pigment was made of lapis lazuli, and was the most expensive. Therefore, it was reserved for the robe of Mary and came to represent purity. • Other symbols in colors and objects tell the viewer what is happening The halo comes from this era • Artist used symbols, like gold leaf, the halo, and color to tell us who the figures are. The Renaissance • The Renaissance was a period of great creative and intellectual activity, during which artists broke away from the restrictions of Medieval Art. • Throughout the 15th century, artists studied the natural world in order to perfect their understanding of such subjects as anatomy and perspective. Notice he difference in the treatment of the figures and the background Among the many great artists of this period were Sandro Botticelli,. Birth of Venus, Sandro Botticelli • The High Renaissance was the culmination of the artistic developments of the Early Renaissance, and one of the great explosions of creative genius in history. • It is notable for three of the greatest artists in history: Michelangelo, Raphael and Leonardo da Vinci. Leonardo da Vinci One of the most famous painters of all time, but also famous for his talent in architecture, sculpture, engineering, geology, hydraulics and the military arts, all with success, and in his spare time doodled parachutes and flying machines that resembled inventions of the 19th and 20th centuries. Michelangelo Perhaps the greatest influence on western art in the last five centuries, Michelangelo was an Italian sculptor, architect, painter and poet in the period known as the High Renaissance. Pieta David Detail of The Sistine Chapel Raphael Raphael is one of the most famous artists of Italy's High Renaissance and one of the greatest influences in the history of Western art. School of Athens Baroque Art • Baroque Art developed in Europe around 1600, as an reaction against the intricate and formulaic that dominated the Late Renaissance. Baroque art is less complex, more realistic and more emotionally affecting than Mannerist art. • One of the great periods of art history, Baroque Art was developed by Caravaggio, Bernini, Rembrandt, and Vermeer. Caravaggio • Chiaroscuro :intense contrast of light and dark, used to create drama Changed the way we view art by adding drama, personality and realism Johannes Vermeer Soft studies of light and color, with incredible realism and detail Bernini Dramatic naturalistic poses, making rock look “soft” Rococo Art • Rococo Art succeeded Baroque Art in Europe. It was most popular in France, and is generally associated with the reign of King Louis XV (1715-1774). • It is a light, elaborate and decorative style of art. Jean-Antoine Watteau • Love in the Italian Theatre • Giovanni Battista Tiepolo • Holy Trinity Jean-Honore Fragonard • The Swing, 1767 Neoclassical • Neoclassical Art is a severe and unemotional form of art that references ancient Greece and Rome. Its rigidity was a reaction to the overboard Rococo style and the emotionally charged Baroque style. • The rise of Neoclassical Art was part of a general revival of interest in classical thought, which was of some importance in the American and French revolutions. Jaques Louis-David • Oath of the Horatii Romanticism • Romanticism might best be described as anticlassicism, and reaction against Neoclassiciam. • It is a deeply-felt style which is individualistic, exotic, beautiful and emotionally wrought. • Great artists closely associated with Romanticism include Caspar David Friedrich, John Constable, and William Blake. Caspar David Friedrich Woman at Dawn Wander Above the Sea of Fog William Blake Newton The Ghost of a Flea John Constable The Hay Wain Deadham Vale Francisco de Goya Pre-Raphaelite • Looked to myth, legend, etc. • Offshoot of Romanticism • Known as the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, because the artists felt that artwork after the age of Raphael lacked something significant. John William Waterhouse • Pre-Raphaelite • Myth and legend based work The Lady of Shallot Boreas Dante Gabriel Rossetti Edward Robert Hughes, Midsummer Eve Realism • as straightforward a manner as possible, without idealizing them and without following rules of formal artistic theory. • The earliest Realist work began to appear in the 18th century, in a reaction to the excesses of Romanticism and Neoclassicism. Jean-Francois Millet, The Gleaners • The Gleaners shows three peasant workers gleaning (searching for stray grains) in a wheat frield after harvest. This painting is famous for depicting the lowest class of society as a paintable subject- something that was not done before. This painting was not well liked when it was first unveiled, especially by the upper class who thought it was ugly and pointless, but is now one of the most famous paintings of the era. Thomas Eakins surgery Alfred MacNeil Whistler Arrangement in Greay and Black, Portrait of the Painter’s Mother John Singer Sargent, Daughters of Edward Darley Boit Impressionism • Impressionism is a light, spontaneous manner of painting which began in France as a reaction against the restrictions and conventions of the dominant Academic Art. • The hallmark of the style is the attempt to capture the subjective impression of light in a scene. Edgar Degas The Ballet Lesson Miss Lala at the Circus Claude Monet Weeping Willow Rouen Cathedral Pierre Auguste Renoir Luncheon of the Boating Party Mary Cassatt Most famous American Impressionist, known for images of mothers, children, and family life. The Boating Party Post-Impressionism • Post-Impressionism is an umbrella term that encompasses a variety of artists who were influenced by Impressionism but took their art in other directions. • There is no single well-defined style of PostImpressionism, but in general it is less idyllic and more emotionally charged than Impressionist work. Paul Cezanne • Still Life with Curtain Vincent Van Gogh The Starry Night Cornfield with Cypresses Henri Rousseau The Sleeping Gypsy Woman Walking in an Exotic Forest Henri de Toulouse Lautrec La Goule At the Moulin Rouge Paul Gauguin Tahitian Women on the Beach Seccessionists/Art Nouveau • was an art association founded by Berlin artists in 1889 as an alternative to the conservative state-run Association of Berlin Artists. • Led to significant developments in German/Austrian art • Closely associated with advertising and poster art. Gustave Klimt Use of gold leaf and collage elements Classical myth, drama From the Beethoven Frieze The Kiss Alphonse Mucha • Elaborate decorative patterns • Influential advertising art Fauvism • Fauvism grew out of Pointillism and PostImpressionism, but is characterized by a more primitive and less naturalistic form of expression. Paul Gaugin’s style and his use of color were especially strong influences. • The artists most closely associated with Fauvism are Andre Derain and Henri Matisse. • Fauvism was a short-lived movement, but was a substantial influence on some of the Expressionists. Andre Derain Henri Matisse Woman in a Purple Coat The Dance Regionalism • An American term, Regionalism refers to the work of a number of rural artists, mostly from the Midwest, who became famous in the 1930s. • Not part of a coordinated movement, Regionalist artists often had unique style or point of view. What they shared was: – humble, anti-modernist style – desire to depict everyday life. However their rural conservatism tended to put them at odds with the urban and leftist Social Realists of the same era. *The three best-known regionalists were John Steuart Curry, Thomas Hart Benton and Grant Wood, the painter of the bestknown and one of the greatest works of American art, American Gothic. Thomas Hart Benton The Cotton Pickers First Crop Grant Wood The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere American Gothic John Singleton Copley Brook Watson and the Shark Cubism • Developed between about 1908 and 1912 in a collaboration between Georges Braque and Pablo Picasso. • The key concept underlying Cubism is that the essence of an object can only be captured by showing it from multiple points of view simultaneously. Pablo Picasso Guernica Three Musicians Georges Braque Woman with a Guitar Expressionism • Goal is not to reproduce a subject accurately, but to portray the inner state of the artist. • Brushstrokes, color, and symbols are characteristics of Expressionism • Instense in emotion and expression Max Beckman Edvard Munch Vivid and emotional work, exploring themes of life, love, fear, death and melancholy Ashes The Scream, from the Frieze of Life Amadeo Modigliani Portrait of Woman in Hat Head Kathe Kollwitz German, anti war imagery Hunger Wassily Kandinsky Composition VII Dada • protest by a group of European artists against World War I, bourgeois society, and the conservativism of traditional thought. • followers used absurdities and non sequiturs to create artworks and performances which defied any intellectual analysis. They also included random "found" objects in sculptures and installations. • The founders included the French artists Jean Arp and Marcel Duchamp. Jean Arp -sculptor, painter, poet, and abstract artist in media such as torn paper. Makenspeil Cloud Shepherd Marcel Duchamp Made use of “ready mades” to create controversial art that was rejected by his own rebellious group L.H.O.O.Q Fountain Surrealism • Surrealism is a style in which fantastical visual imagery from the subconscious mind is used with no intention of making the work logically comprehensible. • attracted many members of the chaotic Dada movement. • deeply influenced by the psychoanalytic work of Freud and Jung. • The Surrealist circle was made up of many of the great artists of the 20th century, including Max Ernst, Giorgio de Chirico, Jean Arp, Man Ray, Joan Miro, and Rene Magritte, and Salvador Dali. • According to the major spokesman of the movement, the poet and critic André Breton, who published "The Surrealist Manifesto" in 1924, Surrealism was a means of reuniting conscious and unconscious realms of experience so completely, that the world of dream and fantasy would be joined to the everyday rational world in "an absolute reality, a surreality." Persistance of Memory Salvador Dali • Drawing heavily on theories adapted from Sigmund Freud, Surrealists saw the unconscious as the source of the imagination. • This movement continues to flourish today. Continued thought processes and investigations into the mind have produced some of the best art ever seen. False Mirror, Rene Magritte The Hat Makes the Man, Max Ernst Salvador Dali Soft Self-Portrait The Temptation of St. Anthony The Eye of Silence, Max Ernst Rene Magritte The Lovers The Son of Man Harlem Renaissance • African-American social thought that was expressed through the visual arts, as well as through music centered in the Harlem district of New York City, The intellectual and social freedom of the era attracted many Black Americans from the rural south to the industrial centers of the north - and especially to New York City. Artists at the core of the Harlem Renaissance movement included William H. Johnson, Lois Mailou Jones and the sculptor and printmaker Sargent Claude Johnson. Other prominent artists associated with the Harlem Renaissance included Jacob Lawrence, Archibald Motley and Romare Bearden. Romare Bearden Famous for unique collages that identify the African American experience. Three Musicians The Calabash, mixed media Jacob Lawrence Referred to his work as “dynamic cubism, but said that his influence came from was the colors and shapes of Harlem, not France. Famous for depicting the social history of African Americans. Supermarket The Builders William H. Johnson, Cafe Aaron Douglas, Into Bondage Abstract Expressionism • compositions of form, texture and color. • It is non-representational, or nonobjective, art, which means that there are no actual objects represented. Willem De Kooning Famous for aggressive abstracted figures and complex layered images Excavation Woman V Jackson Pollock Abstact expressionist known for “Action Painting” and helping to launch the Abstract Expressionist movement. Influenced by emotional struggles, alcoholism, and desire to be accepted as an artist. No. 5 Mark Rothko Work is called “color field painting” and is classified as an abstract expressionist, although he rejected not only the label but even being called an abstract painter. Orange and Yellow Pop Art • explores the everyday imagery that is a part of contemporary consumer culture. • Common sources of imagery include advertisements, consumer product packaging, celebrity photographs, and comic strips. Leading Pop artists include Andy Warhol, Robert Rauschenberg, and Roy Lichtenstein. Robert Rauschenberg Famous for “combine paintings” Began an artistic revolution that redefined what art is. Monogram Bed Jasper Johns Became famous for appropriating popular imagery into his paintings Worked with Rauschenberg to redefine the art world Map, 1961 Andy Warhol -Was a successful commercial artist before becoming a famous Pop Artist, and was an avant-garde filmmaker, author, and public figure famous for belonging to bizarre social circles. - “15 minutes of fame” quote Campbell’s Soup Marilyn 20th Century/Contemporary • These artists do not fit into one specific group or style, but are listed here as 20th century Post-Modern artists. Georgia O’Keefe Edward Hopper Dramatic narrative paintings, often depicting scenes of American life. Nighthawks New York Movie Chuck Close Uses the grid process to produce HUGE works, ranging from photo-realistic to nearly abstract looking work. Phase II: Choose One Artist to Study In Depth • Prepare a presentation piece to share this artist and his/her work with the class • Create a piece of artwork in response to one of the artists. – Your own work in the artist’s style or using similar imagery – An homage to the artist, responding to his/her life or artwork. Student Response to Jean Arp: a collage series that uses Arp-style shape and color palette Student work: Amphora Van Gogh Student Work Artist Work Work by O’Keefe Student Work, inspired by Georgia O’Keefe Roy Lichtenstein Inspired Work Seurat Inspired Work Picasso Inspired Monet Inspired