1. The document discusses Realism in art from the mid-19th century, focusing on works by Courbet, Millet, Homer, and Manet that depicted everyday subjects and working classes in a realistic style.
2. It then covers Impressionism from the 1870s-1890s, examining paintings by Monet, Degas, Cassatt, and others that captured fleeting effects of light and focused on leisure activities in urban settings.
3. Post-Impressionism is discussed from the 1890s-1905, with works by Seurat, Van Gogh, Gauguin, and Toulouse-Lautrec exploring individual styles and rejecting illusionism in favor of expressive uses of
Realism in France during the XIX century Courbet and his paintings. The new subjects in art and new features in painting. The hard life of workers and the social theme
Realism in France during the XIX century Courbet and his paintings. The new subjects in art and new features in painting. The hard life of workers and the social theme
Realism in France during the XIX century , the paintings made by DAUMIER and MILLET,New subjects and new themes, Nature and life in the coutryside, the changes with industrialisation, the new working class
Impressionism & Post-Impressionism Art HistoryS Sandoval
AP ART HISTORY Crash Course - Impressionism and Post-Impressionism
Impressionism artists: United by their depiction of modern life, and rejection of established European Styles, embracing new experimental ideas "Avant-Garde".
The use of synthetic pigments and ready made paint in solid tubes. Impressionist artists were interested in "plein air" landscape painting.
Realism in France during the XIX century , the paintings made by DAUMIER and MILLET,New subjects and new themes, Nature and life in the coutryside, the changes with industrialisation, the new working class
Impressionism & Post-Impressionism Art HistoryS Sandoval
AP ART HISTORY Crash Course - Impressionism and Post-Impressionism
Impressionism artists: United by their depiction of modern life, and rejection of established European Styles, embracing new experimental ideas "Avant-Garde".
The use of synthetic pigments and ready made paint in solid tubes. Impressionist artists were interested in "plein air" landscape painting.
ART HISTORY 132SymbolismSymbolism (c. 1865-1.docxdavezstarr61655
ART HISTORY 132
Symbolism
Symbolism
(c. 1865-1915)
term: applied to both visual & literary arts (e.g., Rimbaud)
aim: not to see things, but to see through them to significance & reality far deeper
definition: subjective interpretation reject observation of optical world fantasy forms based on imaginationcolor, line, & shapes used as symbols of personal emotions, rather than to conform to optical image
function: artist as visionaryto achieve seer’s insight, artists must become derangedsystematically unhinge & confuse everyday faculties of sense and reason
themes: religion, mythology, sexual desire (vs. Baudelairian everyday life)
Odilon Redon
(1840-1916)biography: born to a prosperous family
training: failed entrance exams at École des Beaux-Artsbriefly studied under Gérôme (1864)career: interrupted by Franco-Prussian War remained relatively unknown until cult novel by Huysmans titled Against Nature (1884 )story featured decadent aristocrat who collected Redon's drawingsmedia:early work charcoal & lithographylater work oilsaim: “… [to bring] to life, in a human way, improbable beings and making them live according to the laws of probability, by putting – as far as possible – the logic of the visible at the service of the invisible”subject matter: “fantastic” influenced by writings of Edgar Allen Poe strange amoeboid creatures, insects, plants w/ human heads, etc.themes: “fantastic” creaturesmythological scenes
(Left) Redon’s Symbolist Eye Balloon (1878)
and
(right) Crying Spider (1881)
Redon’s Symbolist Eye Balloon (1878)
vs.
Daumier’s Nadar (c. 1860)
Redon
Cyclops (1898)subject: mythologicalPolyphemus & Galateanarrative loving moment vs. jealouslytheme: psychologicalconscious vs. unconsciouswaking vs. sleepingtone: hauntingbrushwork: painterly (Impressionist) composition: dynamiccolor: vibrantwhimsical harmoniousperspective: aerial
Redon’s Symbolist Cyclops (c. 1900)
vs.
Carracci’s Italian Baroque Polyphemus in the Farnese Gallery (c. 1600)
Henri Rousseau
(1844-1910)biography:served in French army bureaucrat in Paris Customs Office (1871-1893)took up painting as a hobby accepted early retirement in 1893 to devote himself to art
career: suffered ridicule & endured poverty
aesthetic: “naïve”
themes: jungle scenes
sources: claimed inspiration from his military experiences in Mexicoin fact, sources were illustrated books & visits to zoo/botanical gardens in Paris
Rousseau’s Sleeping Gypsy
(1897)
Rousseau’s The Dream
(1910)
James Ensor
(1860-1949)nationality: Belgian
personal crisis: family forbade him to marryplunged to depths of despair returned to painting religious subjects sold contents of his studio in 1890s
aesthetic: avant-garde Les XX (the Twenty)goal to promote new artistic developments throughout Europegroup’s leader/foundertreated harshly by art critics disbanded after a decade challenged rules of perspective free use of color and space and brus.
11821, 1030 AM Straight PhotographyhttpscoastdistricSantosConleyha
11/8/21, 10:30 AM Straight Photography
https://coastdistrict.instructure.com/courses/86967/assignments/1594094?module_item_id=5260973 1/3
Straight Photography
Due Sunday by 11:59pm Points 30
Submitting a text entry box, a media recording, or a file upload
Start Assignment
Straight photography emerged in the early twentieth century and was a way of thinking about
photography as independent and unique from other artistic media like painting. It attempted to capture a
scene as objectively as possible therefore it didn't rely on methods of photographic manipulation. One of
the first photographers to experiment with straight photography was Alfred Stieglitz in the late nineteenth
and early twentieth centuries. He would often employ straight photography to depict everyday scenes of
modern life as seen in his photograph The Terminal.
Alfred Stieglitz, The Terminal. 1893, printed 1911. Photogravure. Source: flickr (https://www.flickr.com/phot
os/[email protected]/3775792984/in/photolist-6KDVH3) License: CC BY-NC 2.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/
2.0/)
Watch the 10 minute video segment below from the documentary film called Alfred Stieglitz: The
Eloquent Eye (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2j2N1Bdh830) to learn more about Alfred Stieglitz
https://www.flickr.com/photos/[email protected]/3775792984/in/photolist-6KDVH3
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2j2N1Bdh830
11/8/21, 10:30 AM Straight Photography
https://coastdistrict.instructure.com/courses/86967/assignments/1594094?module_item_id=5260973 2/3
Straight Photography (1)
and his photographs.
Instructions:
1. Visit the Metropolitan Museum of Art's website
(https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/270032) and read the short description about The
Terminal by Alfred Stieglitz.
2. Take your own Stieglitz inspired photograph using the method of straight photography. Keep to his
theme of illustrating the everyday scenes of modern life--but updated to illustrate life today.
3. In a paragraph (5-6 sentences) describe how your photograph uses the method of straight
photography. Also, describe how the subject matter represents life today.
Alfred StieglitzAlfred Stieglitz
https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/270032
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8nc6hHSyxv8
Introduction to Art Chapter 29: Between World Wars 394
Chapter 29: Between World Wars
Dada
When you look at Marcel Duchamp’s Fountain, a factory-produced urinal he submitted as a
sculpture to the 1917 exhibition of the Society of Independent Artists in New York, you might
wonder just why this work of art has such a prominent place in art history books.
Marcel Duchamp, Fountain (original), photographed by Alfred Stieglitz in 1917 after its rejection by the Society of
Independent Artists
You would not be alone in asking this question. In fact, from the moment Duchamp purchased
the urinal, flipped it on its side, signed it with a ...
11821, 1030 AM Straight PhotographyhttpscoastdistricBenitoSumpter862
11/8/21, 10:30 AM Straight Photography
https://coastdistrict.instructure.com/courses/86967/assignments/1594094?module_item_id=5260973 1/3
Straight Photography
Due Sunday by 11:59pm Points 30
Submitting a text entry box, a media recording, or a file upload
Start Assignment
Straight photography emerged in the early twentieth century and was a way of thinking about
photography as independent and unique from other artistic media like painting. It attempted to capture a
scene as objectively as possible therefore it didn't rely on methods of photographic manipulation. One of
the first photographers to experiment with straight photography was Alfred Stieglitz in the late nineteenth
and early twentieth centuries. He would often employ straight photography to depict everyday scenes of
modern life as seen in his photograph The Terminal.
Alfred Stieglitz, The Terminal. 1893, printed 1911. Photogravure. Source: flickr (https://www.flickr.com/phot
os/[email protected]/3775792984/in/photolist-6KDVH3) License: CC BY-NC 2.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/
2.0/)
Watch the 10 minute video segment below from the documentary film called Alfred Stieglitz: The
Eloquent Eye (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2j2N1Bdh830) to learn more about Alfred Stieglitz
https://www.flickr.com/photos/[email protected]/3775792984/in/photolist-6KDVH3
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2j2N1Bdh830
11/8/21, 10:30 AM Straight Photography
https://coastdistrict.instructure.com/courses/86967/assignments/1594094?module_item_id=5260973 2/3
Straight Photography (1)
and his photographs.
Instructions:
1. Visit the Metropolitan Museum of Art's website
(https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/270032) and read the short description about The
Terminal by Alfred Stieglitz.
2. Take your own Stieglitz inspired photograph using the method of straight photography. Keep to his
theme of illustrating the everyday scenes of modern life--but updated to illustrate life today.
3. In a paragraph (5-6 sentences) describe how your photograph uses the method of straight
photography. Also, describe how the subject matter represents life today.
Alfred StieglitzAlfred Stieglitz
https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/270032
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8nc6hHSyxv8
Introduction to Art Chapter 29: Between World Wars 394
Chapter 29: Between World Wars
Dada
When you look at Marcel Duchamp’s Fountain, a factory-produced urinal he submitted as a
sculpture to the 1917 exhibition of the Society of Independent Artists in New York, you might
wonder just why this work of art has such a prominent place in art history books.
Marcel Duchamp, Fountain (original), photographed by Alfred Stieglitz in 1917 after its rejection by the Society of
Independent Artists
You would not be alone in asking this question. In fact, from the moment Duchamp purchased
the urinal, flipped it on its side, signed it with a ...
Unit 8 - Information and Communication Technology (Paper I).pdfThiyagu K
This slides describes the basic concepts of ICT, basics of Email, Emerging Technology and Digital Initiatives in Education. This presentations aligns with the UGC Paper I syllabus.
Delivering Micro-Credentials in Technical and Vocational Education and TrainingAG2 Design
Explore how micro-credentials are transforming Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) with this comprehensive slide deck. Discover what micro-credentials are, their importance in TVET, the advantages they offer, and the insights from industry experts. Additionally, learn about the top software applications available for creating and managing micro-credentials. This presentation also includes valuable resources and a discussion on the future of these specialised certifications.
For more detailed information on delivering micro-credentials in TVET, visit this https://tvettrainer.com/delivering-micro-credentials-in-tvet/
Normal Labour/ Stages of Labour/ Mechanism of LabourWasim Ak
Normal labor is also termed spontaneous labor, defined as the natural physiological process through which the fetus, placenta, and membranes are expelled from the uterus through the birth canal at term (37 to 42 weeks
A Strategic Approach: GenAI in EducationPeter Windle
Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies such as Generative AI, Image Generators and Large Language Models have had a dramatic impact on teaching, learning and assessment over the past 18 months. The most immediate threat AI posed was to Academic Integrity with Higher Education Institutes (HEIs) focusing their efforts on combating the use of GenAI in assessment. Guidelines were developed for staff and students, policies put in place too. Innovative educators have forged paths in the use of Generative AI for teaching, learning and assessments leading to pockets of transformation springing up across HEIs, often with little or no top-down guidance, support or direction.
This Gasta posits a strategic approach to integrating AI into HEIs to prepare staff, students and the curriculum for an evolving world and workplace. We will highlight the advantages of working with these technologies beyond the realm of teaching, learning and assessment by considering prompt engineering skills, industry impact, curriculum changes, and the need for staff upskilling. In contrast, not engaging strategically with Generative AI poses risks, including falling behind peers, missed opportunities and failing to ensure our graduates remain employable. The rapid evolution of AI technologies necessitates a proactive and strategic approach if we are to remain relevant.
it describes the bony anatomy including the femoral head , acetabulum, labrum . also discusses the capsule , ligaments . muscle that act on the hip joint and the range of motion are outlined. factors affecting hip joint stability and weight transmission through the joint are summarized.
A review of the growth of the Israel Genealogy Research Association Database Collection for the last 12 months. Our collection is now passed the 3 million mark and still growing. See which archives have contributed the most. See the different types of records we have, and which years have had records added. You can also see what we have for the future.
Introduction to AI for Nonprofits with Tapp NetworkTechSoup
Dive into the world of AI! Experts Jon Hill and Tareq Monaur will guide you through AI's role in enhancing nonprofit websites and basic marketing strategies, making it easy to understand and apply.
Macroeconomics- Movie Location
This will be used as part of your Personal Professional Portfolio once graded.
Objective:
Prepare a presentation or a paper using research, basic comparative analysis, data organization and application of economic information. You will make an informed assessment of an economic climate outside of the United States to accomplish an entertainment industry objective.
Acetabularia Information For Class 9 .docxvaibhavrinwa19
Acetabularia acetabulum is a single-celled green alga that in its vegetative state is morphologically differentiated into a basal rhizoid and an axially elongated stalk, which bears whorls of branching hairs. The single diploid nucleus resides in the rhizoid.
6. Realism & The Plight of the Laborer Dorothea Lange, Migrant Mother , 1935 Lewis Hine, Girl Worker in Carolina Cotton Mill , 1908
7.
8.
9.
10. Renaissance vs. Modern Art How does Manet modernize the traditional reclining nude? Realism & The Female Nude
11.
12. Photography – The Real “Disasters of War” TIMOTHY O’SULLIVAN, A Harvest of Death, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, July 1863. Fig. 12-27.
13.
14. Japan in the Modern Era The Edo Period and Beyond Where you would ordinarily expect a line or a mass or a balancing element, you miss it, and yet this very thing awakens in you an unexpected feeling of pleasure. In spite of shortcomings or deficiencies that no doubt are apparent, you do not feel them so; indeed, this imperfection itself becomes a form of perfection. Evidently, beauty does not necessarily spell perfection of form. This has been one of the favorite tricks of Japanese artists – to embody beauty in a form of imperfection or even of ugliness. -D.T. Suzuki, from Remarks on Japanese Art Culture (detail from Takashi Murakami’s Army of Mushrooms)
15. Modern Japan – Architecture Tadao Ando, Ando Gallery at the Art Institute of Chicago, 1992
16. Japan HASEGAWA TOHAKU, Pine Forest , Momoyama Period, late 16th c. Fig. 18-13. Kogan, tea ceremony water jar Momoyama period, late 16 th century Shino ware with underglaze, 7” Wabi = refined rusticity, austerity Sabi = value in the old and weathered
17.
18. Ogata Korin, White and Red Plum Blossoms , 1710-16, one (right) of pair of folding screens, ink, color and gold leaf on paper, each 5’ x 5.5’. Fig. 1-8
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20. SUZUKI HARUNOBU, Evening Bell at the Clock, Edo period, ca. 1765. Fig. 18-16. Japan Ukiyo-e - “ Pictures of the Floating World”
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23. Japan KATSUSHIKA HOKUSAI, The Great Wave off Kanagawa, Edo period, ca. 1826–1833. Fig. 18-17. Hokusai Self Portrait as an Old Man
In response to rejection, Courbet withdrew all of works and set up own exh, the Pavilion of Realim
Black servant in ptg was customary, but here combined with naked prostitute and then habit of sexualizing the black woman, was perceived as indecent, animalistic
Niepce—First Photograph from Nature, 1826 -the invention of photography leads us into the second half of the 19th century -called the “positivist” age (Auguste Comte, French philosopher issued these ideas during 1830s (when this photo made) -reaction against the romantic spirit, a renewed belief in objectivity, the virtues of scientific observation, looking and recording the world as it appears -a belief in progress – in part a conseq of the Enlightenment Niepce-sought less cumbersome method than lithography—copied translucent engravings by attaching them to pewter plates covered with bitumen a light-sensitive asphalt used by etchers, then tried it with a camera, using metal and glass plates covered with bitumen -here is view from a window of his estate at Gras, France
One of first uses of photog was to record the dead. Why? (long exposure times—dead would not move)
Despite being an archipelago made of 4 main islands, Japan and Japanese culture does not reveal an isolation inherent to most island cultures, but rather a responsiveness to ideas from continental eastern Asia (China, in particular) (for example the religious belief of Buddhism, which was absorbed into an indigenous Shinto belief and Chinese writing systems) and to ideas from the Western world. It is mostly this second interaction that we will discuss today. However, despite Japanese artists interest in Western art and culture, a truly distinct set of Japanese aesthetics evolved that resisted Western aesthetics and rules for depicting forms in space, even if at times Japanese artists dabbled in and even perfected Western perspectival methods in their drawings. Even during periods of isolation, the Japanese imported Western ideas and exported their own, resulting in a history of mutual intrigue and appreciation between the East and West. We will explore this interaction today by first discussing Japanese Art and then Western European art following the introduction of Japanese art into the West during the late 19 th century. We will see the enormous influence that Japanese art had on Western Impressionist and Post-Impressionist artists, in a movement known as Japonisme. And we will look at that in the context of other influences on late 19 th century art, namely realist movements, photography, film, and industrialization. But, first I’d like to consider Japanese art independent of Western art in order to discern its own unique aesthetic qualities. See quote above by 20 th century Japanese author of books on Buddhism and Zen in Japanese culture.
"If I could be remembered, I would like to be remembered as an architect who courageously pursued his own ideas and ideals without being trifled with the architectural streams of time. I want my work to be able to provoke thoughts in people when they come in contact with the buildings or with the architecture. In this case, a house in which they feel that they are connected with nature, that they're living within this place which is Chicago and that inspires them to do something for themselves. I want my architecture to embody that power. For example, [in the Japanese screen gallery] I want people to feel as if the wind is passing through these columns and creates something that reminds them of something beyond physicality. Another example, [the House in Chicago], when you are in this space and look out to this outdoor space, you feel the connection between the space, you feel the depth, you feel something beyond just physical elements that are there." (pp. 24-25)
Westerners and their beliefs banned, except Chinese and Dutch. Ruled by Shogun (general) and daimyos (feudal lords). Class hierachy: samurai, farmers, artisans, merchants.
Kano School official school of painting during Edo period, provided ptgs to the Tokugawa, etc; other alternative schools emerged, the earliest being Rinpa, which was quite different. It was not so stratified (training through father and son, master/pupil) and attracted different artistic approaches. The Rinpa style features vivid color, lots of gold and silver, and a focus on decorative patterning. Its founding practioner Ogata Korin painted the above folding screen, each of which depict red (the above) and white (not shown) plum trees next to a stream. New sense of space is achieved by painting each object from different perspectives: the tree from the ground, the stream as seen from above. The texture of trees achieved by signature Rinpa technique called tarashikomi , the dropping of ink and pigments onto surfaces still wet with other ink and pigments. This gives the tree an aged appearance, while the stream has more of a stylized precision, achieved through the use of paper stencils.
dates back to The Heian aristocratic taste valued mono no aware (the pathos inherent in fleeting beauty), it adhered to a well-defined code of visual restraint in the arts. The reactions it evoked in its viewers, and readers, were not “restrained” however: “The sensitive observer is moved to tears by the beauty of nature, or by its embodiment in art...not only because it is so impressive in itself, but because when confronted with such beauty he becomes more than ever conscious of the ephemeral nature of all that lives in this world of ours” (Ivan Morris)
Woodblock printing: ukiyo-e -a collective process: three people: artist, carver, and the printer -funded by a publisher, whose icon can gen be found on the print -drawing executed in ink on tissue paper, carver would paste it facedown on a block (usu cherrywood), the carver would cut around lines of drawing with knife, rest of block chiseled away leaving outlines in relief – this became the key block – for polychrome, multicolored prints, a separate block used for each color -printer would prepare the paper by covering it with animal glue, remoistened just prior to printing, block was inked, then paper placed on it and pressure applied with a baren to transfer design -used registration marks in margins to keep online
-working late 18th century to first half of 19th -in 70s (age of artist) when made this series -early cartooning -much like a Japanese Leonardo – make many sketches of animals, human faces, behavior -studied Western ptgs and engravings, in 1812 published Simplified Lessons in Drawing proposing how forms are made of circles and squares -went by over 30 names during his life, incl “The Old Man Mad about Art” “ From around the age of six, I had the habit of sketching from life. I became an artist, and from fifty on began producing works that won some reputation, but nothing I did before the age of seventy was worthy of attention. At seventy-three, I began to grasp the structures of birds and beasts, insects and fish, and of the way plants grow. If I go on trying, I will surely understand them still better by the time I am eighty-six, so that by ninety I will have penetrated to their essential nature. At one hundred, I may well have a positively divine understanding of them, while at one hundred and thirty, forty, or more I will have reached the stage where every dot and every stroke I paint will be alive. May Heaven, that grants long life, give me the chance to prove that this is no lie.”
- Hokusai (1849) and Hiroshige (1858) died mid-century and with them the “floating world” -Japan forced open, a conseq of American pressure, US Navy -“gunboat diplomacy” – Matthew Perry, American commander, arrived in 1853 and signed a treaty negotiated between him and the shogun to open Japan up to trade - in 1868, Meiji EMporer restored to power, Meiji Restoration (Tokugawa shogunate experiences downfall) -capital moved to Edo, renamed Tokyo *** Japan begins rapidly westernizing, absorbing western culture, artmaking (staff illustrator for London news set up school in Yokohama), education, govt – tension results, making themselves over in the West’s image - Question over what is authentically Japanese art – conflict between traditional artmaking and modern artmaking ensues -Trad Japanese painting (Kano) and temples not sold or destroyed -Western artists, particular French, will be drawn to this aesthetic, and will mimic it in paint -1856 France—Felix Bracquemond’s, designer and etcher, shop – shipment from Japan, in workshop of his printer, a little book of prints with Hokusai’s manga (?) in it, Frenchmen were stunned by the images, carried book everywhere with him showing his artist friends (Manet, Whistler, Degas, Fantin-Latour, Baudelaire)
-created a movement, Japonisme – prints, lacquers, fans, scrolls, blue and white porcelain, flood the West -- ukiyo-e prints valued as high art in west and those artists given wide acclaim – first book on Hokusai published in France; by early 20th century, 90 percent of Japanese prints sold to Western collectors -objects sold in western department stores, esp London – women wore Japanese dress -shops opened (Mme Desoye’s La Porte Chinoise -first exh of Japanese prints in West in London in 1862 at Intl Exh (collection of Rutherford Alcock) -Japan also had similar enthusiasm – exh of Western art there in 1870s 1877-Vincent buys Japanese prints from the noted art dealer Siegfried Bing and studies them intensively. He arranges an exhibition of Japanese woodcuts at a Paris café and makes a few "copies" after Japanese prints. His own work takes on the stylized contours and expressive coloration of his Japanese examples. "I envy the Japanese artists for the incredible neat clarity which all their works have. It is never boring and you never get the impression that they work in a hurry. It is as simple as breathing; they draw a figure with a couple of strokes with such an unfailing easiness as if it were as easy as buttoning one's waist-coat.“ – van Gogh
-Monet, among many others participate in the Japonisme movement -in 1874, Manet along with other artists who’ll we’ll see (Cezanne, Degas, Monet, Pissarro, Morisot and 20+ others) decided not to submit work to that yrs Salon, since they generally rejected them) and instead at Societe Anonyme (Anonymous Society) -Louis Leroy—dubbed entire 1873 exh “impressionist” derogatory term—looks unfinished, haphazard, Monet didn’t mind the label -Several more exh followed until 1886 -another big shift in artmaking – artists paint outdoors, “plein air ptg” to record light as it falls on the land, how it changes depending on time of day -in 1841, tin tubes for oil ptg exh -Monet a Parisian, but raised in port city of Le Havre, began ptg plein air while on the Normandy coast, academically trained, told American painter Lila Cabot Perry, a friend: “ When you go out to paint, try to forget what objects you have before you…Merely think, here is a little square of blue, here an oblong of pink, here a streak of yellow, and paint just as it looks to you, the exact color and shape, until it gives your own naïve impression of the scene before you.”
-affil with Imp, but didn’t work outdoors; in studio -like Monet, also academically trained, Ecole des Beaux Arts in 1850s -close with Manet, encouraged him to turn away from hist ptg and to everyday life (and the ladies clearly) toward music hall, opera, ballet, circus, racetrack, art as entertainment -in 1870s began ptg, Parisian entertainment—ballet rehearsals -ballerinas from lower classes so could exhibit their scantily clad bodies in public, often attracted sugar daddies to support them, some of his ballet pics include the dancers mothers as protectors, to safeguard their virtue
- also a studio painter -American expat, from Pittsburgh, studied at Penn Academy of Fine Arts in 1861-65, then moved to Paris to study further and stayed mostly -befriended Impressionists -Degas invited her to exhibit in Imp exh of 1879 (some think they were lovers), only American invited to exh with them “ I accepted with joy. At last, I could work with absolute independence without considering the opinion of a jury. I had already recognized who were my true masters. I admired Manet, Courbet, and Degas. I hated conventional art.” -her work focused on women, incl their relationships with their daughters -here a kind of Madonna and Child image -attended exh of Japanese prints Exh Universalle? In 1890 and was very affected by them -work reflects this –more formal structure (created after “crisis” in the Imp. Style) -japonisme: flat decrativve patterns, simple contours, sharply sloping floor
Georges Seurat -also devoted to classical aesthetics – pointillist system (“divisionist” system, in his words) What is this system?—law of simultaneous contrasts -Chevreul dev it – adjacent objects not only cast reflections of their color onto their neighbors but create in them their complementary color; e.g blue next to yellow, effect of purple created (complement of yellow) -Seurat applied this color system systematically -dots of pure color placed next to one another to create this effect when merged -dots remain, create grainy effect like a grainy photo -this ptg exh at 8th and final Imp exh of 1886
Post-Imp/Expressionism: How to paint the intensity of visual experience? The intensity of being alive? Art as an expression of the self, the individual—doesn’t need to be tied to the objective world, can be purely subjective -Van gogh: his art as a humanitarian act, ministry to the poor -Dutch, son of protestant minister (looks like the Japanese perception of a Dutchman) -an art dealer, teacher, evangelist -studied in Brussels, the Hague, Antwerp, moved in 1886 to Paris -heavy impasto, arbitrary use of color – straight from the tube -color becomes the chief element and unlike Cezanne (who despised his work) and Seurat, not systemat but FREE!!!! -absorbs Seurat’s divisionism but alters it -as many of you know, Van Goh experience psych crises, leading to his living in a mental asylum and eventual suicide -perpetuated the Expressionist tradition – the artists feelings are laid out on the canvas – the work becomes a record of the person, how he felt about things
-Toulouse-Lautrec chronicled life in montmarte, an entertainment district in Paris—a refuge for bohemians, outcasts, artists, which he was one of -he designed lithographic posters as advertisements for these clubs (process invented in 1796) -also indepted to Art Nouveau -his work often interpreted as evoking modern alienation (like that of Manet’s)
-goes to Tahiti in 1891, French colony in South Pacific -modernist synthetism – signals a crisis of identity, a crisis made visual in the arts where the ideal disintegrates into formal chaos, wild colors and shapes -artists wanted to flee the modern life in en masse and the burdens of capitalism (remember he was a failed stockbroker) -Gauguin goes native —spends 10 yrs there -desires to find himself to find something authentic in himself, Gauguin is one of the first of these modern “primitivists” in this way -to find an easier (and cheaper) way of life -Gauguin’s attachment to these native women rep a common instance of European love for the exotic woman, men will also be interested in Jap women in this way—exotic woman’s body becomes idealized, made into myth Gauguin: “I saw plenty of calm-eyed women. I wanted them to be willing to be taken without a wor, brutally. In a way it was a longing to rape” -- Gauguin as an artistic and sexual outlaw -But the reality of this interchange: pop of Tahiti in 1769, 35,000 people; by time of Gauguin’s arrival in 1891, 2/3 of pop killed by diseases brought in with colonizing forces, French -Gauguin survived off the generosity of the Tahitians – living on macaroni, tinned beef; the women he painted were also his meal tickets Death: - goes back to France briefly in 1893-95 and returns to the Pacific where he dies
-Mother died of tuberculosis when Edvard was only five years old, and Edvard's older sister, Sophie, died of the disease at the age of 15. Edvard himself was often ill. A younger sister was diagnosed with mental illness at an early age. Of the five siblings only one, Andreas, ever married, only to die a few months after the wedding.
-most imp late 19th century sculptor, biggest commission here, a competition by cits of Calais, commemorates event from one Hundred Years War, 1347, when King Edward III of England lay siege to Calais. He offered to spare city if six leading citizens would surrender themselves for execution. -rather than sculpt an idealized group portrait of neoclassical heroes, Rodin dressed them in sackcloths, put ropes around their necks, made them look haggard and beaten down; their carrying keys the city in the their enlarged hands, put on a low base, almost near street level to make them identifiable to the average man (this will gradually lead to the removal of the pedestal in modern sculpture so that object inhabits the real space of the viewer) -because the king was impressed by their courage, they lived -the officials of Calais were not pleased -however, this expressive stylization of the human form was groundbreaking