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.
The presentation is about installation art history, some famous examples and how it is made.
If you want a copy and some details on how to present this please message me.
I've adapted this from an original presentation that wasn't mine; adding a few more slides. Serves as an excellent introduction to Art History and its methodology.
History of western art (Giotto, Masaccio)Annie Najib
Early Renaissance is the era which heralded the age of exploration. Digging into the Golden ages of Greek past civilization, this period added its own interpretation to art as well all other fields that went parallel to it. Early Renaissance provided the first steps towards the high mountain peak of the Renaissance period. Bridging the past values and rich culture of Greece to the neo classical period.
Giotto is propably the first artist to have embraced the change which was needed in art. That's why he is considered to be a "father of Western pictorial art".
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.
The presentation is about installation art history, some famous examples and how it is made.
If you want a copy and some details on how to present this please message me.
I've adapted this from an original presentation that wasn't mine; adding a few more slides. Serves as an excellent introduction to Art History and its methodology.
History of western art (Giotto, Masaccio)Annie Najib
Early Renaissance is the era which heralded the age of exploration. Digging into the Golden ages of Greek past civilization, this period added its own interpretation to art as well all other fields that went parallel to it. Early Renaissance provided the first steps towards the high mountain peak of the Renaissance period. Bridging the past values and rich culture of Greece to the neo classical period.
Giotto is propably the first artist to have embraced the change which was needed in art. That's why he is considered to be a "father of Western pictorial art".
GUIDE10Unit 3The Renaissance in Italy.docxaidaclewer
GUIDE
10
Unit 3
The Renaissance in Italy
Piero della Francesca, Madonna del Parto (1455 – 1465).
Monterchi
, Italy
.
Fresco.
260 x 203 cm.
Photo credit: flickr.com/photos/ginieland/
We are now in the last section of our course devoted to the Italian Renaissance.
For many this period exemplifies the highest pick in the evolution of European art.
I hope you will enjoy this part.
The historians divide this period of Italian Renaissance into three phases:
Early Renaissance
High Renaissance
Late Renaissance
The Early Renaissance in Italy
Late 13
th
- 14
th
centuries
Where
did the Italian Renaissance
take root
and flourish most successfully?
-
*
This is important! You will notice later that almost all artists and architects of the Early Renaissance are from this city.
_________________________________________________________________________________
Giotto
and
Cimabue
stand at the beginning
[JYOT-toh]
You see two paintings rendered on the same subject - “
Madonna Enthroned
”.
Both artists also used the same technique - tempera on wood panel (by now you know all these terms).
Which Madonna is more Medieval/ Gothic?
-
*
Which one is more Classical?
-
*
When reading Compare and Contrast pages, try to emphasize for yourself why and what exactly differs them.
Still both of them are rather ‘Medieval’ looking compared to what you are going to see in a few pages.
I want you to remember that
Giotto
is considered to be a ‘
father
’ of European painting.
Observe Giotto’s fresco “Lamentation” – we have here the early work that expresses the Renaissance features:
it depicts real space, real people and real emotions.
Read an excerpt from the poem of famed Dante Alighieri’.
It is a good one, and it mentions a new phenomenon introduced in the Renaissance era– competition!
Competition
played an important role in the Renaissance artistic life.
Read about the legendary competition for casting the bronze doors for the
Baptistery of Florence in 1401
.
frit.lss.wisc.edu
www.mega.it
www.dl.ket.org
What scene from the Old Testament was proposed for rendering?
*
Name two young talented sculptors (both were 22 years old) who were bidding for the
Doors
project?
*
*
Which got the bid for the Doors?
-
*
[gee-BAIR-tee]
What was the name of the “looser”? -
*
[BROO-neh-LESK-ee]
The story about this notorious competition in the history of art is great.
“Oh, yes – Ghiberti won the competition and Brunelleschi went home with his chisel.”
We can only imagine how disappointed he was. He would never touch his chisel again.
Well… I can’t help; I have to tell you the end of this story.
Pilippo Brunelleschi
(
1337-1446);
www.cmima.csic.es/.../brunelleschi.html
For many years Brunelleschi did not produce any artwork.
He spent years in Rome studying the ancient ruins. Twenty years had passed. he became the most famous architect in Italy and founder of the new architecture. In the meanwhile Ghiberti’s impact w ...
Modernism in Art: An Introduction: Salon des refusesJames Clegg
Modernism in Art An Introduction, 1. This lecture highlights the main context for modernity, highlighting key movements and events such as the Enlightenment and French Revolution. Emphasis is then placed upon the academic model and the subsequent break with it, represented by the Salon De Refuses of 1863. Lecture by James Clegg
Ism's as an expression of built form and planning.
◦ Mannerism (mid 1500s)
◦ Neo classism (mid 1700s)
◦ Romanticism (late 1700s- early 1800s)
◦ Realism (France, mid 1800s)
◦ Impressionism (late 1800s)
◦ Post Impressionism (very late 1800s and into the turn of the 20th century)
◦ Symbolism (Turn of the twentieth century)
◦ Cubism (first two decades of 1900s)
◦ Surrealism (birth in 1924)
◦ Abstract Expressionism (birth in 1940s)
In this class, we discuss the fame, reputation and prestige of certain artists and the relative obscurity of others. What factors other than quality or talent contribute to an artist's reputation?
I made this as a resource for the BSA art merit badge requirement #1 b. This could potentially be used in an art literacy program in upper elementary, middle school, junior high or high school. My hope is that it gets people thinking about how much art is in their lives and the benefits of art to society.
Teaching something that never runs out of style despite changes in software and hardware trends. Using computers in language teaching especially in second language teaching.
8. >> 0 >> 1 >> 2 >> 3 >> 4 >>
How does
Modern Art differ
from Classical
Art?
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What is
Classicism?
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A traditional style of art, literature, music,
architecture, etc., that is usually graceful
and simple with parts that are organized in a
pleasing way.
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/classicism
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Adherence to the aesthetic values
embodied in ancient Greek and Roman art
and literature.
A style based on the study of Greek and
Roman models, characterized by emotional
restraint and regularity of form.
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/classicism
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What is
Modern Art?
13. >> 0 >> 1 >> 2 >> 3 >> 4 >>
Any creative group active in the innovation
and application of new concepts and
techniques in a given field (especially in the
arts).
wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
Traditions of the past have been thrown aside
because of the spirit of experimentation.
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* Modern art includes artistic works
produced during the period extending
roughly from the 1860s to the 1970s.
* Modern art can be traced back to the
INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION, a period that
lasted from the 18th to the 19th century
* Characteristic of the 20th and 21st
centuries and of the later part of the 19th
century.
15. >> 0 >> 1 >> 2 >> 3 >> 4 >>
- Invention of photography.
- Many artists started to make art about
people, places, or ideas that interested them, and
of which they had direct experience.
DURING THE MODERN ART:
- Sigmund Freud’s publication triggered
many artists.
- Artists challenged the notion that art
must realistically depict the world.
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• Artists living in the rapidly modernizing
world of late 19th-century Europe wished
not only to depict modern (for them,
contemporary) everyday life, but also to
reveal the emotional and psychological
effects of living in a world in rapid flux.
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LANDSCAPE AT COLLIOURE
Color
speaks for
itself with a
directness
previously
unknown in
Western
painting
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THE BATHER
capture a sense of
ambiguity or uncertainty
that is typical of
the modern experience.
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STILL LIFE WITH APPLES
“Painting from
nature is not
copying the
object,” he
wrote, “it is
realizing
one’s
sensations.”
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help make this new mode of transportation
appealing to Parisians.
Entrance
Gate to
Paris
Subway
(Métropolitai
n) Station,
Paris,
France
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THE
TOWER
Eiffel Tower
was for
Delaunay
a symbol of
both modern
ityand
masculinity
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PORT-EN-BESSIN, ENTRANCE TO THE HARBOR
- Seurat’s technique is known as pointillism
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- more about imagination than reality
THE STARRY NIGHT
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MELANCHOLY III(MELANKOLI III)
working in an expressive mode and capturing emotion was
more important than making realistic images of the world.
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Rather than
just seeking to
capture the
sitter’s
physical
appearance,
artists like
Édouard
Vuillard and
Vincent van
Gogh sought
to represent
his or her
character,
disposition,
and even inner
psyche.Portrait of Joseph Roulin