Body art refers to modifying one's appearance through techniques like tattoos, piercings, and hair/makeup styles. It originated from counter-culture movements in the 1960s as a way to express individuality and critique society. Common body art techniques discussed in the document include tattoos, piercings of the ears/other body parts, hairstyles, makeup, and nail art. Body art is also used in some cultures to signify status, family, or important life events.
Victor Vasarely was a French painter considered one of the first Op Art artists, exploring optical illusions through precise patterns and colors that gave the illusion of movement. As a commercial artist and graphic designer, he first experimented with black and white works before incorporating color to make parts of his geometric images seem to bulge or vibrate against their backgrounds. Vasarely's paintings and graphics reached their peak popularity and influence in the 1960s and 1970s as Op Art rose in the United States and Europe.
This document provides information about op art and optical illusions. It defines op art as "optical art" that uses techniques like geometric patterns and contrasting colors to create optical illusions and trick the eye. Examples of op art illusions include works by Bridget Riley that use line and shape to create the illusion of movement. The document also discusses famous op artists like Victor Vasarely and provides examples of their works that employ optical illusions. It suggests options for a student art project to create original op art designs using geometric or organic illusions with colored pencils.
Body art includes tattoos, piercings, and face and body painting. Tattoos involve injecting permanent ink under the skin using needles, while henna tattoos are temporary designs applied to the skin using dye from the henna plant. Piercings involve puncturing or cutting holes in areas like the nose, ears, and tongue to insert jewelry. Face painting and makeup are other forms of body art that involve applying substances to the face and body to change appearance.
This document provides a history of oriental and eastern art, including Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and modern East Asian art. It summarizes the origins and evolution of art forms such as painting, calligraphy, sculpture, and pottery in each culture. Key developments include the origins of Chinese stone art 10,000 years ago, the rise of landscape painting in China 900-1100 AD, the influence of Buddhism on Japanese bronze casting in the 7th-8th centuries, and the influence of Western art in modernizing Japanese art in the 20th century. It also notes the growing international market for Chinese and East Asian art.
This document provides an overview of different visual art mediums across sculpture, painting, drawing, and prints. For sculpture, the main mediums discussed are stone, bronze, ivory, and terra cotta. For painting, the mediums covered include oil, watercolor, fresco, encaustic, pastel, mosaic, stained glass, and tapestry. Drawing mediums mentioned are pencil, silverpoint, ink, bister, charcoal, and chalk. The print mediums outlined are engraving, etching, and lithography. The document examines the materials and techniques used for each medium.
Dadaism originated in Zürich, Switzerland as an art movement that represented frustration with nationalism and conformity after World War 1. It used diverse art forms like sculpture, painting and poetry to promote anti-authoritarian and anti-art ideals. Notable Dadaist artists included Marcel Duchamp, Max Ernst, and Kurt Schwitters. While controversial, Dadaism had a significant influence on later art movements and styles like Surrealism, Pop Art, and Conceptual art.
Discover the world of Optical Illusion Art. This presentation includes work by M.C. Escher, Bridget Riley, and how-to steps for making your very own Op Art.
Credit to Mrs. Brown's Art Class (Google for more information!)
Fauvism was an early 20th century avant-garde art movement known for its use of bright, arbitrary colors and expressive brushwork. Key figures included Henri Matisse and Andre Derain. Their works were first exhibited together in 1905 and were criticized for their wild, unnatural colors, leading to the name "Fauves" meaning wild beasts. Matisse's painting Woman with a Hat was particularly attacked but also purchased by Gertrude and Leo Stein, boosting Matisse's confidence. Both Matisse and Derain were inspired by color and reimagining the visual world through color.
Victor Vasarely was a French painter considered one of the first Op Art artists, exploring optical illusions through precise patterns and colors that gave the illusion of movement. As a commercial artist and graphic designer, he first experimented with black and white works before incorporating color to make parts of his geometric images seem to bulge or vibrate against their backgrounds. Vasarely's paintings and graphics reached their peak popularity and influence in the 1960s and 1970s as Op Art rose in the United States and Europe.
This document provides information about op art and optical illusions. It defines op art as "optical art" that uses techniques like geometric patterns and contrasting colors to create optical illusions and trick the eye. Examples of op art illusions include works by Bridget Riley that use line and shape to create the illusion of movement. The document also discusses famous op artists like Victor Vasarely and provides examples of their works that employ optical illusions. It suggests options for a student art project to create original op art designs using geometric or organic illusions with colored pencils.
Body art includes tattoos, piercings, and face and body painting. Tattoos involve injecting permanent ink under the skin using needles, while henna tattoos are temporary designs applied to the skin using dye from the henna plant. Piercings involve puncturing or cutting holes in areas like the nose, ears, and tongue to insert jewelry. Face painting and makeup are other forms of body art that involve applying substances to the face and body to change appearance.
This document provides a history of oriental and eastern art, including Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and modern East Asian art. It summarizes the origins and evolution of art forms such as painting, calligraphy, sculpture, and pottery in each culture. Key developments include the origins of Chinese stone art 10,000 years ago, the rise of landscape painting in China 900-1100 AD, the influence of Buddhism on Japanese bronze casting in the 7th-8th centuries, and the influence of Western art in modernizing Japanese art in the 20th century. It also notes the growing international market for Chinese and East Asian art.
This document provides an overview of different visual art mediums across sculpture, painting, drawing, and prints. For sculpture, the main mediums discussed are stone, bronze, ivory, and terra cotta. For painting, the mediums covered include oil, watercolor, fresco, encaustic, pastel, mosaic, stained glass, and tapestry. Drawing mediums mentioned are pencil, silverpoint, ink, bister, charcoal, and chalk. The print mediums outlined are engraving, etching, and lithography. The document examines the materials and techniques used for each medium.
Dadaism originated in Zürich, Switzerland as an art movement that represented frustration with nationalism and conformity after World War 1. It used diverse art forms like sculpture, painting and poetry to promote anti-authoritarian and anti-art ideals. Notable Dadaist artists included Marcel Duchamp, Max Ernst, and Kurt Schwitters. While controversial, Dadaism had a significant influence on later art movements and styles like Surrealism, Pop Art, and Conceptual art.
Discover the world of Optical Illusion Art. This presentation includes work by M.C. Escher, Bridget Riley, and how-to steps for making your very own Op Art.
Credit to Mrs. Brown's Art Class (Google for more information!)
Fauvism was an early 20th century avant-garde art movement known for its use of bright, arbitrary colors and expressive brushwork. Key figures included Henri Matisse and Andre Derain. Their works were first exhibited together in 1905 and were criticized for their wild, unnatural colors, leading to the name "Fauves" meaning wild beasts. Matisse's painting Woman with a Hat was particularly attacked but also purchased by Gertrude and Leo Stein, boosting Matisse's confidence. Both Matisse and Derain were inspired by color and reimagining the visual world through color.
This document summarizes several art movements presented by students in a 6th grade art class. It includes brief overviews of the Fauvism, Kinetic Art, Symbolism, Hard-Edge Painting, Pop Art, Op Art, Abstract Expressionism, Conceptual Art, Abstract Impressionism, and Prehistoric art movements. For each movement, it provides 1-2 sentences on the origins and key characteristics, and includes 1 example image. The document serves to concisely introduce multiple art styles and periods covered in the student presentations.
Installation art transforms spaces using sculptural and other materials. It is not confined to galleries and can incorporate any media to create experiences in particular environments. Some installations are site-specific, designed specifically for the space. Land art or Earth art emerged in the 1960s-70s, using the landscape as the medium by sculpting directly in nature and allowing works to change over time.
The document provides guidance on how to critically analyze and evaluate a work of art using a three-stage process of description, analysis, and interpretation. It emphasizes developing an objective understanding of the formal elements and composition, examining how these relate to design principles, and interpreting the work's meaning and value within historical, social and personal contexts. Critiquing art involves more than just personal opinions - it opens discussion about human experiences and cultural values that can shift over time.
Realism in art attempts to represent subjects truthfully without artistic conventions or supernatural elements. In the mid-19th century, artists felt they should portray everyday political and social issues realistically rather than romanticized views. This included depicting familiar scenes as they actually appeared. Realist works often celebrated the working class through realistic situations and paintings done plein air. Gustave Courbet is credited with leading the Realism movement in France by depicting life as it was, not ideally. Other notable realist artists included Jean-Francois Millet, Honore Daumier, and Edward Hopper who sought to objectively capture ordinary scenes and subjects.
An introduction to artists, tools, and techniques in drawing and painting. Based on chapters 2.1 and 2.2 in the textbook "Gateways to Art" (2012) by DeWitte, Larman, and Shields.
Dadaism was an early 20th century avant-garde art movement that was founded in Zurich in 1916 in reaction to World War I. It rejected reason and logic and emphasized chaos and irrationality through anti-art styles and shock value. Some of the most famous Dadaists included Marcel Duchamp, whose "Fountain" was a urinal signed and submitted as a sculpture, Max Ernst, known for his surreal collage paintings, and Francis Picabia, who formed a Dada group in Barcelona and created the painting "Amorous Parade."
Performance art is a genre of art that uses the artist's own body as a medium. It emerged in the early 20th century from movements like Dada, Constructivism, and Futurism. Notable early performance artists included Yves Klein and Allan Kaprow, who created Happenings in the 1960s that involved audience participation. Pioneers in the 1970s like Vito Acconci, Chris Burden, and Marina Abramovic tested the boundaries between artist and viewer. Abramovic's 1974 piece Rhythm 0 had dangerous elements. Performance art gained more mainstream acceptance in the 1980s and 1990s, with works by Linda Montano and Tehching Hsieh and Karen Finley.
Land Art is an outdoor art movement that began in the 1960s using natural and synthetic materials like rocks, wood, and leaves to create sculptures in open, public spaces. These sculptures were left to erode naturally over time and could only be experienced through photographs. British artist Richard Shilling creates ephemeral sculptures entirely from natural materials found on-site that often only last a few minutes before weathering away. He was inspired by Andy Goldsworthy, another British artist known for his sculptures incorporating natural elements like snow, ice, leaves, and rocks that are documented photographically before disappearing.
Cubism was an early 20th century avant-garde art movement pioneered by Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque that revolutionized painting. It emphasized depicting objects from multiple perspectives and using geometric forms rather than realistic detail. There were three periods of Cubism: Early Cubism depicted the whole structure of objects combining viewpoints; Analytic Cubism broke down subjects into facets showing different viewpoints; and Synthetic Cubism introduced collage with painting fragments.
The document discusses several art movements that emerged in the post-World War 1 years between 1919 and 1939, including Dadaism, Bauhaus, Art Deco, and early Surrealism. It provides background information on the founding principles and key figures of each movement, and highlights representative artworks produced during these periods that helped define the stylistic innovations of modernism. The art movements reflected a rejection of tradition in favor of individual expression and incorporated new techniques like collage that emerged as responses to the turmoil of the war and changing social values.
Abstract Expressionism emerged in New York City in the 1940s as artists rapidly applied paint to large canvases in an expressive style, drawing from Surrealist ideas of tapping the unconscious mind. There were two main types: action painting, which emphasized the artist's hand movements and texture, and color field painting, which used broad areas of color. Famous artists like Jackson Pollock, Willem de Kooning, Arshile Gorky, Mark Rothko, and Clyfford Still developed techniques like dripping and splattering paint to create emotional, non-representational works focused on the creative process over any subject matter.
Abstract Expressionism was a mid-20th century art movement centered in New York City. Artists applied paint forcefully and non-geometrically to large canvases to express inner emotions and feelings. There were two main techniques - action painting involving dripped and splattered paint, and color field painting using solid fields of color. Pioneering artists included Jackson Pollock, famous for his drip paintings, Willem de Kooning, and Mark Rothko known for his blocks of color. Abstract Expressionism emphasized individual expression and made New York a new center for art.
Expressionism was an early 20th century art style characterized by intense emotions and distortions. It focused on conveying feelings over realistic representations. Vincent van Gogh and Edvard Munch were early expressionist artists known for expressive, emotionally charged works. Later expressionist groups included Die Brücke and Der Blaue Reiter in Germany. Dadaism emerged during WWI as a rejection of reason and logic through absurd, nonsensical works by artists like Marcel Duchamp and Francis Picabia. Surrealism aimed to access the unconscious through automatism and dreamlike juxtapositions in the works of artists such as Salvador Dali, Joan Miró, and René Magritte. Social real
This painting by Ahmad Fuad Osman titled "Recollections of Long Lost Memories #1" depicts the late Tunku Abdul Rahman and a modern teenager standing in front of a river landscape. It uses monochromatic colors for Tunku Abdul Rahman from the past and brighter colors for the teenager representing the present. The painting comments on how today's youth don't fully understand or appreciate the meaning of independence due to a lack of direct experience with the struggle, as they are more influenced by Western culture. It integrates images from the past and present to convey a message about historical perception versus modern reality.
The document provides an overview of major art movements from the late 20th century into the 21st century. It discusses Post-Modern architecture in the 1970s that embraced eclectic styles and references to the past. It also summarizes key works like the Pompidou Center and the Louvre Pyramid. Contemporary art is described as pluralistic with a variety of styles from past and present. Conceptual art emphasized ideas over finished objects. Land art and environmental art incorporated nature. Post-Modern, Neo-Expressionist, and Post-Pop art referenced previous movements. Technology and performance art expanded artistic mediums. Artists addressed social and political issues through their work.
The document discusses the art form of assemblage art. It defines assemblage art as a compilation of objects that may seem unrelated but are presented together in an aesthetically intriguing way. The origins of assemblage art can be traced back to the 1950s and artists like Picasso, but it grew in popularity. Key artists discussed include Robert Rauschenberg, Christo and Jeanne-Claude, Jean Dubuffet, and their works that combined everyday objects in creative ways. The document also explores how assemblage art has influenced other forms of art and sculpture over time through its use of found objects and randomness.
The document discusses the Dada art movement that emerged in the early 20th century in reaction to World War I. Dadaists used absurd and nonsensical performances, artworks, and writings to ridicule contemporary culture and traditional artistic norms. Notable Dada artists included Marcel Duchamp, who created "readymades" by exhibiting everyday objects as art, Francis Picabia, whose works featured mechanical forms and sexual themes, and Kurt Schwitters, who assembled art from debris in his "Merz" works. Dada began in Zurich in 1916 and spread to other cities, before declining by the late 1920s.
The document provides an introduction to visual art, defining it as the use of skill and imagination to create aesthetic objects or experiences that can be shared. It examines how art is perceived and classified, exploring elements like style, composition, and seeing. Key terms related to art are defined, and the purposes and importance of art are discussed, including how it can create beauty, enhance environments, influence society, and express beliefs, fantasy, protest, and more. Art is analyzed using components, elements, principles of design, and underlying concepts.
Rizal was forced to leave the Philippines in 1888 at age 27. He first traveled to Hong Kong, where he stayed at the Victoria Hotel and was welcomed by Filipino residents. He also visited the nearby Portuguese colony of Macao, staying with a Filipino man married to a Portuguese woman. Rizal observed Catholic processions during his short trip. He later left Hong Kong on an American steamer bound for Japan on February 22nd.
The document provides an overview of the Surrealist and Dada art movements. It discusses key concepts such as automatism, juxtaposition of images, and expression of the subconscious mind. Some of the major figures mentioned include Tristan Tzara, Andre Breton, Max Ernst, Joan Miro, Rene Magritte, Salvador Dali, Frida Kahlo, and Remedios Varo. The Surrealist movement grew out of Dada and aimed to express the workings of the subconscious through incongruous imagery and concepts. Women played an important role in Surrealism by exploring feminism and challenging social norms.
A Body Art está associada à arte conceitual e minimalismo, onde o corpo do artista é usado como suporte ou meio de expressão. Suas origens remontam a Marcel Duchamp e artistas como Yves Klein que usavam o corpo humano em suas obras. A Body Art questiona os limites sociais e artísticos da arte, tomando o corpo como suporte para intervenções associadas à dor e esforço físico.
This document summarizes several art movements presented by students in a 6th grade art class. It includes brief overviews of the Fauvism, Kinetic Art, Symbolism, Hard-Edge Painting, Pop Art, Op Art, Abstract Expressionism, Conceptual Art, Abstract Impressionism, and Prehistoric art movements. For each movement, it provides 1-2 sentences on the origins and key characteristics, and includes 1 example image. The document serves to concisely introduce multiple art styles and periods covered in the student presentations.
Installation art transforms spaces using sculptural and other materials. It is not confined to galleries and can incorporate any media to create experiences in particular environments. Some installations are site-specific, designed specifically for the space. Land art or Earth art emerged in the 1960s-70s, using the landscape as the medium by sculpting directly in nature and allowing works to change over time.
The document provides guidance on how to critically analyze and evaluate a work of art using a three-stage process of description, analysis, and interpretation. It emphasizes developing an objective understanding of the formal elements and composition, examining how these relate to design principles, and interpreting the work's meaning and value within historical, social and personal contexts. Critiquing art involves more than just personal opinions - it opens discussion about human experiences and cultural values that can shift over time.
Realism in art attempts to represent subjects truthfully without artistic conventions or supernatural elements. In the mid-19th century, artists felt they should portray everyday political and social issues realistically rather than romanticized views. This included depicting familiar scenes as they actually appeared. Realist works often celebrated the working class through realistic situations and paintings done plein air. Gustave Courbet is credited with leading the Realism movement in France by depicting life as it was, not ideally. Other notable realist artists included Jean-Francois Millet, Honore Daumier, and Edward Hopper who sought to objectively capture ordinary scenes and subjects.
An introduction to artists, tools, and techniques in drawing and painting. Based on chapters 2.1 and 2.2 in the textbook "Gateways to Art" (2012) by DeWitte, Larman, and Shields.
Dadaism was an early 20th century avant-garde art movement that was founded in Zurich in 1916 in reaction to World War I. It rejected reason and logic and emphasized chaos and irrationality through anti-art styles and shock value. Some of the most famous Dadaists included Marcel Duchamp, whose "Fountain" was a urinal signed and submitted as a sculpture, Max Ernst, known for his surreal collage paintings, and Francis Picabia, who formed a Dada group in Barcelona and created the painting "Amorous Parade."
Performance art is a genre of art that uses the artist's own body as a medium. It emerged in the early 20th century from movements like Dada, Constructivism, and Futurism. Notable early performance artists included Yves Klein and Allan Kaprow, who created Happenings in the 1960s that involved audience participation. Pioneers in the 1970s like Vito Acconci, Chris Burden, and Marina Abramovic tested the boundaries between artist and viewer. Abramovic's 1974 piece Rhythm 0 had dangerous elements. Performance art gained more mainstream acceptance in the 1980s and 1990s, with works by Linda Montano and Tehching Hsieh and Karen Finley.
Land Art is an outdoor art movement that began in the 1960s using natural and synthetic materials like rocks, wood, and leaves to create sculptures in open, public spaces. These sculptures were left to erode naturally over time and could only be experienced through photographs. British artist Richard Shilling creates ephemeral sculptures entirely from natural materials found on-site that often only last a few minutes before weathering away. He was inspired by Andy Goldsworthy, another British artist known for his sculptures incorporating natural elements like snow, ice, leaves, and rocks that are documented photographically before disappearing.
Cubism was an early 20th century avant-garde art movement pioneered by Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque that revolutionized painting. It emphasized depicting objects from multiple perspectives and using geometric forms rather than realistic detail. There were three periods of Cubism: Early Cubism depicted the whole structure of objects combining viewpoints; Analytic Cubism broke down subjects into facets showing different viewpoints; and Synthetic Cubism introduced collage with painting fragments.
The document discusses several art movements that emerged in the post-World War 1 years between 1919 and 1939, including Dadaism, Bauhaus, Art Deco, and early Surrealism. It provides background information on the founding principles and key figures of each movement, and highlights representative artworks produced during these periods that helped define the stylistic innovations of modernism. The art movements reflected a rejection of tradition in favor of individual expression and incorporated new techniques like collage that emerged as responses to the turmoil of the war and changing social values.
Abstract Expressionism emerged in New York City in the 1940s as artists rapidly applied paint to large canvases in an expressive style, drawing from Surrealist ideas of tapping the unconscious mind. There were two main types: action painting, which emphasized the artist's hand movements and texture, and color field painting, which used broad areas of color. Famous artists like Jackson Pollock, Willem de Kooning, Arshile Gorky, Mark Rothko, and Clyfford Still developed techniques like dripping and splattering paint to create emotional, non-representational works focused on the creative process over any subject matter.
Abstract Expressionism was a mid-20th century art movement centered in New York City. Artists applied paint forcefully and non-geometrically to large canvases to express inner emotions and feelings. There were two main techniques - action painting involving dripped and splattered paint, and color field painting using solid fields of color. Pioneering artists included Jackson Pollock, famous for his drip paintings, Willem de Kooning, and Mark Rothko known for his blocks of color. Abstract Expressionism emphasized individual expression and made New York a new center for art.
Expressionism was an early 20th century art style characterized by intense emotions and distortions. It focused on conveying feelings over realistic representations. Vincent van Gogh and Edvard Munch were early expressionist artists known for expressive, emotionally charged works. Later expressionist groups included Die Brücke and Der Blaue Reiter in Germany. Dadaism emerged during WWI as a rejection of reason and logic through absurd, nonsensical works by artists like Marcel Duchamp and Francis Picabia. Surrealism aimed to access the unconscious through automatism and dreamlike juxtapositions in the works of artists such as Salvador Dali, Joan Miró, and René Magritte. Social real
This painting by Ahmad Fuad Osman titled "Recollections of Long Lost Memories #1" depicts the late Tunku Abdul Rahman and a modern teenager standing in front of a river landscape. It uses monochromatic colors for Tunku Abdul Rahman from the past and brighter colors for the teenager representing the present. The painting comments on how today's youth don't fully understand or appreciate the meaning of independence due to a lack of direct experience with the struggle, as they are more influenced by Western culture. It integrates images from the past and present to convey a message about historical perception versus modern reality.
The document provides an overview of major art movements from the late 20th century into the 21st century. It discusses Post-Modern architecture in the 1970s that embraced eclectic styles and references to the past. It also summarizes key works like the Pompidou Center and the Louvre Pyramid. Contemporary art is described as pluralistic with a variety of styles from past and present. Conceptual art emphasized ideas over finished objects. Land art and environmental art incorporated nature. Post-Modern, Neo-Expressionist, and Post-Pop art referenced previous movements. Technology and performance art expanded artistic mediums. Artists addressed social and political issues through their work.
The document discusses the art form of assemblage art. It defines assemblage art as a compilation of objects that may seem unrelated but are presented together in an aesthetically intriguing way. The origins of assemblage art can be traced back to the 1950s and artists like Picasso, but it grew in popularity. Key artists discussed include Robert Rauschenberg, Christo and Jeanne-Claude, Jean Dubuffet, and their works that combined everyday objects in creative ways. The document also explores how assemblage art has influenced other forms of art and sculpture over time through its use of found objects and randomness.
The document discusses the Dada art movement that emerged in the early 20th century in reaction to World War I. Dadaists used absurd and nonsensical performances, artworks, and writings to ridicule contemporary culture and traditional artistic norms. Notable Dada artists included Marcel Duchamp, who created "readymades" by exhibiting everyday objects as art, Francis Picabia, whose works featured mechanical forms and sexual themes, and Kurt Schwitters, who assembled art from debris in his "Merz" works. Dada began in Zurich in 1916 and spread to other cities, before declining by the late 1920s.
The document provides an introduction to visual art, defining it as the use of skill and imagination to create aesthetic objects or experiences that can be shared. It examines how art is perceived and classified, exploring elements like style, composition, and seeing. Key terms related to art are defined, and the purposes and importance of art are discussed, including how it can create beauty, enhance environments, influence society, and express beliefs, fantasy, protest, and more. Art is analyzed using components, elements, principles of design, and underlying concepts.
Rizal was forced to leave the Philippines in 1888 at age 27. He first traveled to Hong Kong, where he stayed at the Victoria Hotel and was welcomed by Filipino residents. He also visited the nearby Portuguese colony of Macao, staying with a Filipino man married to a Portuguese woman. Rizal observed Catholic processions during his short trip. He later left Hong Kong on an American steamer bound for Japan on February 22nd.
The document provides an overview of the Surrealist and Dada art movements. It discusses key concepts such as automatism, juxtaposition of images, and expression of the subconscious mind. Some of the major figures mentioned include Tristan Tzara, Andre Breton, Max Ernst, Joan Miro, Rene Magritte, Salvador Dali, Frida Kahlo, and Remedios Varo. The Surrealist movement grew out of Dada and aimed to express the workings of the subconscious through incongruous imagery and concepts. Women played an important role in Surrealism by exploring feminism and challenging social norms.
A Body Art está associada à arte conceitual e minimalismo, onde o corpo do artista é usado como suporte ou meio de expressão. Suas origens remontam a Marcel Duchamp e artistas como Yves Klein que usavam o corpo humano em suas obras. A Body Art questiona os limites sociais e artísticos da arte, tomando o corpo como suporte para intervenções associadas à dor e esforço físico.
O documento discute a arte corporal (body art) no século XX, desde sua origem questionando as artes tradicionais até seu uso atual de novas tecnologias. Apresenta exemplos de artistas pioneiros como Yves Klein e Marina Abramović e estilos como tatuagens, piercings e implantes. Por fim, diferencia body art de modificação corporal e discute o uso do corpo em experiências artísticas digitais.
The document discusses beauty. In a few short sentences, it introduces the topic of beauty but does not provide any additional details, context, or analysis. The brevity of the document makes it difficult to generate a multi-sentence summary while capturing the essential information.
Body art refers to tattoos, piercings, and other forms of artistic or symbolic alteration of the body. It has grown significantly in popularity and social acceptance in recent decades. While body art was once seen as taboo or rebellious, many view it today as a form of creative self-expression or personal style.
El arte corporal surgió a finales de los 1960 como una forma de expresión que usaba el cuerpo humano de manera diferente a lo que se había visto antes. El tatuaje es una de las formas más antiguas de arte corporal, ya que se encontró una momia de hace 5300 años con 57 tatuajes. Aunque las culturas usaron el tatuaje de diferentes maneras, como arte ritual en el antiguo Egipto o para marcar criminales en la antigua Grecia y Roma, los tatuajes japoneses tienen una historia milenaria vinculada a las
Estudo sobre a Body Art - História da arteRoger Machado
O documento descreve a origem e evolução da body art ao longo da história, desde as pinturas corporais na Pré-História até as modificações estéticas modernas. Apresenta exemplos de tatuagens e modificações corporais em diferentes culturas e épocas, assim como o surgimento da body art como forma de arte e protesto na década de 1960.
The document provides an overview of body art and tattoo traditions from around the world. It discusses tattoos in North America and their changing meanings over time. It also summarizes tattoo traditions and meanings in cultures such as Hawaii, Russia, the Middle East, India, Asia, Mexico and various African cultures. Prison tattoos and their meanings are also covered. The document concludes with some discussion questions.
El documento describe tres artistas de body painting: Craig Tracy, Living Brush y Fiorella Scatena. Craig Tracy es un artista estadounidense conocido por sus obras de body painting hiperrealistas que fusionan la ilusión óptica. Living Brush es una pareja estadounidense que ha ganado cinco títulos mundiales en body painting y busca exhibir su trabajo en galerías. Fiorella Scatena es una maquilladora y artista de body painting italiana que ha sido campeona nacional e internacional.
El documento describe el body art y el body painting. El body art surgió a finales de los 1960 como parte del arte conceptual, usando el cuerpo como material de arte y medio de expresión. El body painting involucra pintar el cuerpo de manera artística y se remonta a las pinturas corporales de las sociedades prehistóricas. Hoy en día, el body painting se usa con fines lúdicos y decorativos y permite exhibir el cuerpo desnudo de una manera que no va en contra del pudor de las sociedades occidentales.
A Body Art é uma manifestação artística onde o corpo do artista é usado como suporte para intervenções associadas à dor e esforço físico, inspirada na ideia de Duchamp de que "tudo pode ser arte". Alguns dos principais artistas da Body Art são Bruce Nauman, Marina Abramovic, Vito Acconci e Piero Manzoni.
O documento define bodyart como uma forma de arte contemporânea que usa o corpo como meio de expressão ou material, frequentemente associada a performances envolvendo violência, dor ou esforço físico. Ele lista alguns artistas pioneiros como Vito Acconci e Bruce Nauman, e fornece exemplos de técnicas como tatuagens e ferimentos.
O documento discute como o corpo é representado nas artes e como a tecnologia está transformando a noção do corpo. Ele aborda tópicos como o corpo biocibernético, a visão de Freud do corpo como local de ocultamento, a exposição do corpo nas mídias e como isso influencia comportamentos, e como as manifestações artísticas usam a tecnologia para transmutar o corpo.
O documento discute um artista brasileiro chamado Ale Romeu que cria arte corporal. O documento também menciona que outro artista brasileiro chamado W. Veríssimo apresenta seu trabalho semelhante no programa Tudo é Possível na Rede Record.
The document discusses visual art created using the human body. It references body art flowers, with human forms arranged in floral patterns. Links are provided to online groups and slideshows related to using the human body for artistic expression. The document is in Chinese.
Tattooing and piercing have been practiced for centuries and have become more mainstream. Tattooing involves inserting ink under the skin to change pigment using an electric tattoo machine. Piercing is puncturing or cutting parts of the body for religious, self-expression, or cultural reasons. Other body modifications include scarification, branding, tongue splitting, subdermal and transdermal implants, and ocular implants. Views on body modification vary from acceptance to controversy depending on cultural norms and extremes.
How Not to Get Eaten: More than 75 Incredible Animal Defenses (Wonders of Wil...Lucky Gods
Don't Be Dinner! How Not to Get Eaten: Incredible Animal Defenses (Wonders of Wildlife)
Ever wondered how creatures in the wild avoid becoming someone else's lunch? This amazing book dives into the wacky, weird, and truly incredible strategies animals use to stay off the menu!
Explore over 75 fascinating examples of animal defenses, like:
Chameleons that vanish before your eyes
Skunks who unleash a smelly surprise
Puffy fish that inflate into spiky balloons
Mimic octopuses that transform into other creatures
And so much more!
Packed with stunning photos, fun facts, and engaging activities, this book is your passport to the secret world of animal survival. Discover:
How camouflage, mimicry, and chemical warfare protect animals ️
The amazing adaptations that help creatures blend in or fight back
The science behind these incredible defenses
How these strategies inspire human inventions and technology
Whether you're a curious kid, an animal lover, or just fascinated by the natural world, this book will amaze and entertain you! ✨
Recent issues in social psychology. body modificationJoshua Batalla
This document provides background information on body modification trends among Generation Z. It discusses how body modification has taken many forms throughout history for various cultural, social, and aesthetic reasons. Common body modification practices discussed include piercing, tattooing, scarification, branding, and implanting. Piercing has been practiced for over 4,000 years in places like the Middle East, India, Africa, and indigenous communities worldwide. Tattooing has even deeper historical roots dating back over 10,000 years. While body modification was once used to denote status or mark rites of passage, it is now commonly practiced for fashion and personal expression.
This document discusses the physical self and how it is impacted by different forces and cultures. It explores how beauty standards vary widely across cultures, with some valuing traits like facial tattoos, stretched earlobes, or lip plates. The media is highlighted as having a strong influence on adolescents' understanding of beauty by promoting thin ideals. Different parts of the world are presented as examples of diverse beauty standards, showing that beauty is subjective and defined differently in every culture.
Scarification involves deliberately cutting or burning the skin to produce scars. It is practiced for both aesthetic and religious reasons. Aesthetically, scars from scarification tend to be more visible than tattoos, especially on darker skin. Religiously, some African tribes believe scarifying newborns can prevent vision problems. The outcome of scarification is unpredictable since factors like skin type and wound healing can affect the resulting scar. Designs are usually simple since details may not be preserved as scars spread during healing.
This document provides instructions for completing an assignment on understanding child and young person development from birth to age 19 through five tasks. The tasks include completing tables on physical, cognitive, and social development at different ages, writing reports drawing on knowledge from the tables, and completing another table analyzing development. Completing all tasks will provide evidence that learning outcomes on understanding development are met.
David Moore argues in his work "A Defense of Common Sense" that there are certain beliefs we can know to be absolutely true based on common sense. He discusses these beliefs across five sections, defending claims about truisms, the distinction between mental and physical facts, the existence of God and the afterlife, how common sense propositions relate to sense data, and how philosophers analyze interactions between the external world and our minds. Moore asserts that common sense provides an adequate justification for these fundamental beliefs about reality.
This document discusses the author's reasons for getting body modifications like piercings and tattoos. The author feels that body modifications help them feel like their true self and fit in with a group that appreciates such modifications. They acknowledge that some people make negative assumptions about those with body modifications, seeing them as unintelligent or having low self-esteem, but the author views modifications as a form of self-expression and art. Body modification has deep historical roots and is increasingly being seen as a mainstream form of expression according to the author.
2. inTRODucTiOn
Our personality goes far beyond the way how we
act and think, the human being needs to
express through body language
That way, we feel a constant need to modify our
body and leave small or big marks that we are
unique (many times because of society).
3. BODY ART, WhAT
is ThAT?
Body Art appears from influence of the hippie
movement (sexual freedom and pacifism), from the
counter-culture movement and from the youth
explosion.
Body Art consists in using your body as a critic to
the everyday life and/or critic to art itself
Many times, some bizarre techniques are used, and
they are inspired in pain, mutilation and thoughts.
4. hAiRsTYle?
Hairstyle is a way of
showing and
creating art, where
we don’t just
criticize fashion, but
also the style of the
person itself.
Nicki Minaj, a singer worldwide
known for ger hairstyles.
5. Nail art?
Nail Art is a way of
prolonging Body Art,
because these also show
aspects of influence and
thoughts, by decorating
our body.
It is many times related
with hairstyle.
6. make up?
Make-up has two
edges: the one of
enhancing our own
beauty, or the one
where we transform
into “something”
Johnny Depp, known by being able to play
the role of every character with the use of
make up.
7. tattoos?
Tattoos are one of the most
famous ways of body art. It
consists on a permanent
drawing made on our skin Scar from a removed tatoo
that for many centuries was
irreversible. In the actual
days it can be partially
removes, but it is extremely
painful and it leaves scars in
the place. A tear tattoed by the eye, means the
loss of a loved one.
8. pierciNgs
It is a way to modify our
body, piercing it, with
the objective of Teenager with a piercing
introducing pieces of
sterilized metal.
In some cultures, piercings
are a mark of a warrior,
or the passage from a
child to a man. An indian child
9. Piercings
Piercings in the ear lobe are called
earrings. Earrings
There are various edges of piercing:
An ear spreader consists in
augmenting the perforation of the ear
lobes.
Ear spreader
Transversal Earring
10. The vampire woman, with different
surgeries, made 6 horns, blue eyes, pointy surgical
ears, vampire teeth and among other oPerations
things.
When the ear
spreaders of big
With the laser technology, we can dimensions are
turn brown eyes into blue eyes. removed, the only
Just the color exchange is possible, way of making the
the technique extracts melanin from ear return to normal
the iris of the eyes, leaving it albino. is to use surgery.
11. culture
Body art is used in several
cultures, having distinct
meanings, for example, to
the men of the Maori tribe,
there are tattoos that mean
which family they belong,
if they’re married, or if
they have kids. A Member of the Maori tribe
12. the giraffe women
There are various explanations:
culture
The rings served to move way supernatural forces;
The rings have served to punish the women who had
committed adultery;
The men have forced they’re women to become ugly,
avoiding that they were kidnaped or to show their
wealth and have themselves respected
They served as protection to the peasants against tigers
that attacked (while they worked) on the throat
To the Padaungs (main tribe of giraffe women) the
center of the soul is the neck.
13. What do you thing that man
uses?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9mIBKifOO
The zombie man participate in a video of Lady Gaga (born this way)
14.
Web grafia
http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=the+tattooed+zombie&oq=+The+Tattooed+Zombie&aq=0&aqi=g4&aql=&gs_l=youtube-reduced.1.0.0l4.121393.121393.0.122810.1.1.0.0.0.0.144.144.0j1.1.0...0.0.rjpqA4ID0Xo
http://9gag.com/gag/3808615
http://www.tattoofashion.com/acatalog/Tattoo_Shop_Tribal_and_celtic_tattoos_16.html
https://www.google.com/search?hl=pt-PT&q=hairstyle%20crazy&psj=1&bav=on.2,or.r_gc.r_pw.r_qf.,cf.osb&biw=1024&bih=677&um=1&ie=UTF-8&tbm=isch&source=og&sa=N&tab=wi&ei=Jpu3T6zMB8il8gPi5dCzCg
http://shoaibandbilal.wordpress.com/category/hair-styles/
http://www.mynailsart.com/200912/tokyo-nail-art.html
https://www.google.com/search?tbm=isch&hl=pt-PT&source=hp&biw=1024&bih=677&gbv=2&oq=+mulher+vampiro&aq=f&aqi=&gs_l=img.3...1086.6118.0.6574.14.3.0.11.11.0.77.229.3.3.0...0.0.npVgFBa9Xzg&q=mulher%20vampiro&orq=+mulher+vampiro
https://www.google.com/search?tbm=isch&hl=pt-PT&source=hp&biw=1024&bih=677&q=piercings&gbv=2&oq=pie&aq=1&aqi=g10&aql=&gs_l=img.1.1.0l10.3354.3943.0.5922.3.3.0.0.0.0.83.237.3.3.0...0.0.dckgTH2Z_l0
http://expresso.sapo.pt/reportagem-body-art-o-corpo-e-uma-tela-em-branco=f585317
http://www.google.com/imgres?um=1&hl=pt-PT&biw=1024&bih=677&tbm=isch&tbnid=OufQaIlkZ9IFOM:&imgrefurl=http://www.refletireamar.com.br/johnny-depp-o-homem-das-mil-faces/&docid=NLDFZi9U8BEvkM&imgurl=http://www.refletireamar.com.br/w
http://www.google.com/imgres?start=81&num=10&um=1&hl=pt-PT&biw=1024&bih=677&tbm=isch&tbnid=cqN4Xj0yHoYoSM:&imgrefurl=http://freehandnailart.org/&docid=IOQWTRx92aTycM&imgurl=http://freehandnailart.org/wp-content/uploads/3D-Nail-A
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hairstyle
https://www.google.com/search?tbm=isch&hl=pt-PT&source=hp&biw=1024&bih=677&q=the+zombie+man&gbv=2&oq=the+zombie+man&aq=f&aqi=g-L1&aql=&gs_l=img.3..0i19.5337.10574.0.11184.14.8.0.6.6.0.119.758.6j2.8.0...0.0.OypEI2QG-bI#hl=pt-PT&
http://www.nst.com.my/channels/niexter/body-piercing-1.60565
http://www.nst.com.my/polopoly_fs/1.60566.1331738260!/image/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/landscape_454/image.jpg
http://estudos.gospelmais.com.br/files/2010/05/1227135630803_f.jpg
estudos.gospelmais.com.br
http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_mAxqK37ajSY/TFCD0_ehrnI/AAAAAAAAAJs/uuEKbc14yiY/s1600/p1.jpg
http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_ea0NybXJngg/SWiHogLaynI/AAAAAAAAAoo/1uiUmflC9mI/s400/brinco_aaron.jpg
http://www.motivacao.org/blog/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/mapaauricularpb.jpg
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-tRQyNTAebJU/TqRovNkTvmI/AAAAAAAAAjM/fu0GAsyzJCM/s1600/Algumas%2Bideias%2Bpara%2Btatuagens%2Bde%2BGangsters5.jpg
http://sp7.fotolog.com/photo/7/19/67/alvarotattoo/1248884940130_f.jpg
COMO REMOVER TATUAGENS
http://www.google.pt/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=9&ved=0CKEBEBYwCA&url=http%3A%2F%2Fen.wikipedia.org%2Fwiki%2FTattoo&ei=W7--T9L_IK-U0QXC29yjCg&usg=AFQjCNGouZbj0WDcyeSQ717mH-6W9gnMdg
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_-V6jmiCZ6KY/TS5grXt63kI/AAAAAAAAAMA/BkbyxRuuBQo/s1600/girafa_18.jpg http://callhim.virtbox.ru/schild.swf?namee=Tua+m%26%23227%3Be
Mulheres-Girafa - Metamorfose Digital
http://www.google.pt/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=
the zombie man - Pesquisa do Google
http://www.humorface.com/images/posted_images/3-tubarao.jpg no Google
tatuagens de bisturi –
tatuagens de sangue
body art - Pesquisa do Google
Hairstyle - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=1&ved=0CF0QFjAA&url=http%3A%2F%2Fen.wikipedia.org%2Fwiki%2FHairstyle&ei=-rW6T_qsMqnA0QWBiOnlBw&usg=AFQjCNHuhUlKjUMqoX1RUPdvmIqEfm5cYA
http://freehandnailart.org/wp-content/uploads/3D-Nail-Art.jpg
crazy hairstyle Resultados da pesquisa de http://www.refletireamar.com.br/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/johnny.jpg johnny depp homem das mil caras - Reportagem Body Art O corpo é uma tela em branco - Expresso.pt
http://www.google.pt/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=7&ved=0CGoQFjAG&url=http%3A%2F%2Fexpresso.sapo.pt%2Freportagem-body-art-o-corpo-e-uma-tela-em-branco%3Df585317&ei=HbS6T_C3NMyV0QXRvNCpCA&usg=AFQjCNFHYZjU
•
https://www.google.com/search?q=alargadores&hl=pt-PT&prmd=imvns&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&ei=6uzAT9elFoTA8QPA6JTkCg&ved=0CG8QsAQ&biw=1024&bih=677 http://www.tintanapele.com/2010/10/guia-completo-do-
alargador-de-orelha.html
• http://zerohora.clicrbs.com.br/rs/vida-e-estilo/donna/noticia/2011/11/cirurgia-promete-trocar-a-cor-dos-olhos-de-castanhos-para-azuis-3551033.html