12-24 - Modernism and the work of Paul Strand.pdfRossMatthews19
This document provides an overview of modernist photography and focuses on the work of Paul Strand and Edward Weston. It discusses how modernist photography embraced a straight aesthetic using sharp focus and geometric forms. It introduces Paul Strand and Edward Weston as pioneering modernist photographers who rejected pictorialism in favor of documenting reality. It analyzes key works by each photographer and notes how they were both influenced by Alfred Stieglitz in developing their signature modernist styles.
Keith Haring was an American artist known for his street art in New York City subway stations in the 1980s. His art featured bold, simplified figures of people and animals surrounded by rhythmic lines that appeared to vibrate or move. Common symbols in his work included the radiating baby, dancing people, dogs, and flying saucers. Haring created a visual language of pictographs like ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics that could change meaning depending on the context. His goal was to make art accessible to the public, so in addition to his street art he opened an affordable shop and produced many public sculptures.
Henri Matisse was a famous French artist born in 1869 who worked in painting, drawing, sculpture, and book illustration. Some of his most notable periods included Fauvism in the early 1900s where he used bold colors and brushwork, and his time in Nice from 1917-1930 where he focused on the female figure. Later in life after an operation, Matisse created collages by cutting out shapes from painted paper which he moved around until satisfying compositions emerged. He is now recognized as one of the foremost modern artists alongside Picasso.
Alexander Calder was an American sculptor and artist born in 1898 in Philadelphia to a family of artists. He studied mechanical engineering and art, and created kinetic sculptures and mobiles that incorporated movement. In 1926 he moved to Paris where he created toys, circus performances, and wire portraits of his artist friends. He is known for inventing mobiles, sculptures that moved suspended from the ceiling, as well as stabiles, static sculptures made of metal. His mobiles and stabiles can be found in public spaces around the world.
Paul Cezanne was a French post-impressionist painter born in 1839. He studied law but preferred painting. He developed a new style of painting known as cubism which used simple shapes and flat colors to create form. Cezanne painted over 200 still lifes and 900 oil paintings over his 40-year career, taking months to finish each painting through careful observation. Though his style was criticized and misunderstood during his life, Cezanne is now recognized as pioneering modern art and highly influential to later artists.
Mary Cassatt was an American painter who lived from 1844 to 1926. She was one of the leading artists in the Impressionist movement in the late 1800s. After studying art in Pennsylvania and Europe, Cassatt moved to Paris in the 1860s where she met Edgar Degas and began exhibiting her work with the Impressionists in the late 1870s. Cassatt is known for her paintings focusing on the intimate relationships between mothers and children. She had a successful career as an Impressionist painter until vision problems forced her to stop painting in the 1910s.
This document provides an overview of artworks from the 19th century depicting different types of labor. It is divided into three sections: rural labor, urban labor, and artist's labor. The rural labor section features works by Courbet, Millet, Menzel, Breton, and others showing farm and field work. The urban labor section highlights pieces by Redgrave, Brown, Dore, Degas, Caillebotte, and others portraying industrial and service jobs in cities. The final section focuses on self-portraits and scenes of artistic work by artists like Leyster, Labille-Guiard, Courbet, Morris, Monet, and Whistler.
12-24 - Modernism and the work of Paul Strand.pdfRossMatthews19
This document provides an overview of modernist photography and focuses on the work of Paul Strand and Edward Weston. It discusses how modernist photography embraced a straight aesthetic using sharp focus and geometric forms. It introduces Paul Strand and Edward Weston as pioneering modernist photographers who rejected pictorialism in favor of documenting reality. It analyzes key works by each photographer and notes how they were both influenced by Alfred Stieglitz in developing their signature modernist styles.
Keith Haring was an American artist known for his street art in New York City subway stations in the 1980s. His art featured bold, simplified figures of people and animals surrounded by rhythmic lines that appeared to vibrate or move. Common symbols in his work included the radiating baby, dancing people, dogs, and flying saucers. Haring created a visual language of pictographs like ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics that could change meaning depending on the context. His goal was to make art accessible to the public, so in addition to his street art he opened an affordable shop and produced many public sculptures.
Henri Matisse was a famous French artist born in 1869 who worked in painting, drawing, sculpture, and book illustration. Some of his most notable periods included Fauvism in the early 1900s where he used bold colors and brushwork, and his time in Nice from 1917-1930 where he focused on the female figure. Later in life after an operation, Matisse created collages by cutting out shapes from painted paper which he moved around until satisfying compositions emerged. He is now recognized as one of the foremost modern artists alongside Picasso.
Alexander Calder was an American sculptor and artist born in 1898 in Philadelphia to a family of artists. He studied mechanical engineering and art, and created kinetic sculptures and mobiles that incorporated movement. In 1926 he moved to Paris where he created toys, circus performances, and wire portraits of his artist friends. He is known for inventing mobiles, sculptures that moved suspended from the ceiling, as well as stabiles, static sculptures made of metal. His mobiles and stabiles can be found in public spaces around the world.
Paul Cezanne was a French post-impressionist painter born in 1839. He studied law but preferred painting. He developed a new style of painting known as cubism which used simple shapes and flat colors to create form. Cezanne painted over 200 still lifes and 900 oil paintings over his 40-year career, taking months to finish each painting through careful observation. Though his style was criticized and misunderstood during his life, Cezanne is now recognized as pioneering modern art and highly influential to later artists.
Mary Cassatt was an American painter who lived from 1844 to 1926. She was one of the leading artists in the Impressionist movement in the late 1800s. After studying art in Pennsylvania and Europe, Cassatt moved to Paris in the 1860s where she met Edgar Degas and began exhibiting her work with the Impressionists in the late 1870s. Cassatt is known for her paintings focusing on the intimate relationships between mothers and children. She had a successful career as an Impressionist painter until vision problems forced her to stop painting in the 1910s.
This document provides an overview of artworks from the 19th century depicting different types of labor. It is divided into three sections: rural labor, urban labor, and artist's labor. The rural labor section features works by Courbet, Millet, Menzel, Breton, and others showing farm and field work. The urban labor section highlights pieces by Redgrave, Brown, Dore, Degas, Caillebotte, and others portraying industrial and service jobs in cities. The final section focuses on self-portraits and scenes of artistic work by artists like Leyster, Labille-Guiard, Courbet, Morris, Monet, and Whistler.
Alfred Stieglitz was a pioneering American photographer and modern art promoter. He was born in 1864 to a wealthy family in New Jersey and studied engineering in Germany. Stieglitz helped establish photography as a fine art through his galleries and publications. He championed modernist artists like Georgia O'Keeffe, who he married in 1924. Stieglitz took many photographs of O'Keeffe and landscapes that made him renowned as an early modern artist in photography.
Historia de la serigrafia en Colombia - Enrique Hernandez r. Descargar libro ...Andersson Causayá
El documento describe la historia del desarrollo de la serigrafía como técnica artística en Colombia durante la década de 1970. Explica cómo eventos como exposiciones y talleres contribuyeron a popularizar esta técnica entre los artistas colombianos. También describe los trabajos pioneros de algunos artistas colombianos como Cecilia Coronel, Evelia Medina y Nirma Zarate que usaron la serigrafía y ayudaron a establecerla como una forma de arte valida en el país.
Alphonse Mucha was a Czech painter and decorative artist who is considered a master of the Art Nouveau style. He is known for his paintings and designs featuring beautiful young women surrounded by flowers, and for applying his sensuous, nature-inspired style to commercial posters, jewelry, interior decoration, and stage designs. Mucha presented his new artistic approach in Paris and it was well-received by the citizens.
Pablo Picasso was a pioneering Spanish artist born in 1881 in Malaga, Spain. He revolutionized multiple artistic mediums including painting, drawing, sculpture, and ceramics. During his career, Picasso experimented with many styles including realism, cubism which he helped develop with Georges Braque using geometric shapes, surrealism, abstraction, and collage. He spent significant time working in Paris and Barcelona in addition to his hometown of Madrid.
Artists create self-portraits for several reasons: [1] Traditionally, artists create self-portraits over the course of their careers to represent their physical attributes. [2] Self-portraiture can also announce an artist's place in society or style. [3] Frida Kahlo produced many self-portraits because she was often alone and herself was the subject she knew best.
The document provides instructions for tools used in Arabic calligraphy. It discusses various types of paper that can be used, including glossy magazine pages and calligraphy paper. For calligraphy pens, it recommends preparing nibs by cutting them at a 35-40 degree angle to allow proper shaping of letters. Bamboo pens can be made by cutting bamboo strips, hollowing them out, adding a slit, and shaping the tip at an angle. Nib pens involve inserting a steel nib and sanding it to the proper angle before testing letters. Proper preparation of tools is essential for smooth writing in Arabic calligraphy.
El surrealismo fue un movimiento artístico que buscó expresar el funcionamiento del pensamiento a través del automatismo psíquico puro y la libre expresión del subconsciente, según definía André Breton en el Primer Manifiesto Surrealista de 1924. Algunas de sus técnicas incluían el collage, el fotomontaje y el cadáver exquisito. Artistas clave fueron Salvador Dalí, René Magritte, Max Ernst y Joan Miró. Más tarde, el surrealismo también influenció a artistas argentinos como
Piet Mondrian was a Dutch artist known for developing an abstract style using primary colors and black lines to divide rectangles and squares on the canvas. Born in 1872 in the Netherlands, he spent his later years in Manhattan where he refined his abstract geometric style until his death in 1944 at age 71. The document provides instructions for recreating one of Mondrian's colorful, grid-based abstract compositions using primary colored paper, a ruler, scissors, and black pen on a white background.
2005 Yılında Halkalı İmkb Meslek Lisesinde "Sanat Tarihi" dersi için hazırlamış olduğum sunum.
Kaynak olarak gösterilmek koşuluyla herkes kullanabilir. Geniş kaynaklar içerisinde sınıflandırılıp hazırlanmıştır.
George Segal (1924-2000) was an American figurative sculptor and painter known for his plaster life-size casts of people in everyday poses and environments. He studied under abstract expressionist Hans Hoffman but felt abstraction did not suit his style. Segal is considered a Pop Artist for his depictions of popular culture, though he is also seen as influencing Photo-Realism. His plaster sculptures, often with real objects added, were his greatest contribution and had a major influence on other sculptors like Hanson and de Andrea.
Mark Rothko was a Russian-born American painter and a founding member of the abstract expressionist movement. He is known for his large-scale paintings consisting of colored rectangles or squares arranged in horizontal tiers on a solid colored background. In the 1940s, Rothko began experimenting with mythological themes and different techniques that led to his signature format of floating color fields. By the 1950s, his paintings typically featured only a few large rectangles of color to achieve a meditative, transcendent experience for the viewer. Rothko sought to express emotional and spiritual themes through his abstract works and did not want to explain his paintings, believing interpretations should come from the viewer's own experience.
This document provides information about the pointillism technique of painting using small dots of primary colors that blend together when viewed from a distance. It discusses Georges Seurat, the French painter who developed this technique in the late 1800s. His most famous work, Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte, took him two years to complete using small dots of paint. The document then instructs students on how to create their own pointillism painting of a bridge using felt tip pens to apply dots of the three primary colors.
Pablo Picasso was the most famous artist of the 20th century. He was born in Málaga, Spain in 1881 and showed artistic talent from a young age. Picasso experimented with many styles over his long career, including his iconic Cubist works from 1907 onward. He is renowned for pioneering modern art and for producing over 1,500 works housed in museums worldwide today. Picasso continued developing as an artist throughout his life, striving to maintain the creative spirit of childhood in his work.
The document provides details on several famous self-portraits by notable artists: Gustave Courbet's 1845 self-portrait depicting despair; Egon Schiele's 1912 self-portrait showing him as self-confident and fragile; M.C. Escher's 1935 lithograph reflecting his interest in unusual perspectives; Frida Kahlo's 1939 painting symbolizing her cultural duality and divorce pain; David Hockney's 1954 teenage self-portrait against a newspaper backdrop; Lucian Freud's 1965 unsettling portrait with his tiny children; and Pablo Picasso's 1972 last self-portrait facing his mortality.
Abstract Sculpture - Wire and Panty Hose SculpturesLindsay Lougheed
Art AQ Submission, July 7, 2014
Lindsay Lougheed
**If you download this you will be able to see reference information for the sculptures in the notes part.
This PowerPoint provides examples of Wire and Panty Hose Sculptures.This PowerPoint includes a pre-lesson to for some analysis and reflection of other artist’s abstract work. After showing my students the PowerPoint and having a discussion about Abstract Art, I would demonstrate how to actually create the sculpture (the instructions are in the PowerPoint). The students would then spend the next few days creating and painting their sculptures.
Alfred Stieglitz was a pioneering American photographer and modern art promoter. He was born in 1864 to a wealthy family in New Jersey and studied engineering in Germany. Stieglitz helped establish photography as a fine art through his galleries and publications. He championed modernist artists like Georgia O'Keeffe, who he married in 1924. Stieglitz took many photographs of O'Keeffe and landscapes that made him renowned as an early modern artist in photography.
Historia de la serigrafia en Colombia - Enrique Hernandez r. Descargar libro ...Andersson Causayá
El documento describe la historia del desarrollo de la serigrafía como técnica artística en Colombia durante la década de 1970. Explica cómo eventos como exposiciones y talleres contribuyeron a popularizar esta técnica entre los artistas colombianos. También describe los trabajos pioneros de algunos artistas colombianos como Cecilia Coronel, Evelia Medina y Nirma Zarate que usaron la serigrafía y ayudaron a establecerla como una forma de arte valida en el país.
Alphonse Mucha was a Czech painter and decorative artist who is considered a master of the Art Nouveau style. He is known for his paintings and designs featuring beautiful young women surrounded by flowers, and for applying his sensuous, nature-inspired style to commercial posters, jewelry, interior decoration, and stage designs. Mucha presented his new artistic approach in Paris and it was well-received by the citizens.
Pablo Picasso was a pioneering Spanish artist born in 1881 in Malaga, Spain. He revolutionized multiple artistic mediums including painting, drawing, sculpture, and ceramics. During his career, Picasso experimented with many styles including realism, cubism which he helped develop with Georges Braque using geometric shapes, surrealism, abstraction, and collage. He spent significant time working in Paris and Barcelona in addition to his hometown of Madrid.
Artists create self-portraits for several reasons: [1] Traditionally, artists create self-portraits over the course of their careers to represent their physical attributes. [2] Self-portraiture can also announce an artist's place in society or style. [3] Frida Kahlo produced many self-portraits because she was often alone and herself was the subject she knew best.
The document provides instructions for tools used in Arabic calligraphy. It discusses various types of paper that can be used, including glossy magazine pages and calligraphy paper. For calligraphy pens, it recommends preparing nibs by cutting them at a 35-40 degree angle to allow proper shaping of letters. Bamboo pens can be made by cutting bamboo strips, hollowing them out, adding a slit, and shaping the tip at an angle. Nib pens involve inserting a steel nib and sanding it to the proper angle before testing letters. Proper preparation of tools is essential for smooth writing in Arabic calligraphy.
El surrealismo fue un movimiento artístico que buscó expresar el funcionamiento del pensamiento a través del automatismo psíquico puro y la libre expresión del subconsciente, según definía André Breton en el Primer Manifiesto Surrealista de 1924. Algunas de sus técnicas incluían el collage, el fotomontaje y el cadáver exquisito. Artistas clave fueron Salvador Dalí, René Magritte, Max Ernst y Joan Miró. Más tarde, el surrealismo también influenció a artistas argentinos como
Piet Mondrian was a Dutch artist known for developing an abstract style using primary colors and black lines to divide rectangles and squares on the canvas. Born in 1872 in the Netherlands, he spent his later years in Manhattan where he refined his abstract geometric style until his death in 1944 at age 71. The document provides instructions for recreating one of Mondrian's colorful, grid-based abstract compositions using primary colored paper, a ruler, scissors, and black pen on a white background.
2005 Yılında Halkalı İmkb Meslek Lisesinde "Sanat Tarihi" dersi için hazırlamış olduğum sunum.
Kaynak olarak gösterilmek koşuluyla herkes kullanabilir. Geniş kaynaklar içerisinde sınıflandırılıp hazırlanmıştır.
George Segal (1924-2000) was an American figurative sculptor and painter known for his plaster life-size casts of people in everyday poses and environments. He studied under abstract expressionist Hans Hoffman but felt abstraction did not suit his style. Segal is considered a Pop Artist for his depictions of popular culture, though he is also seen as influencing Photo-Realism. His plaster sculptures, often with real objects added, were his greatest contribution and had a major influence on other sculptors like Hanson and de Andrea.
Mark Rothko was a Russian-born American painter and a founding member of the abstract expressionist movement. He is known for his large-scale paintings consisting of colored rectangles or squares arranged in horizontal tiers on a solid colored background. In the 1940s, Rothko began experimenting with mythological themes and different techniques that led to his signature format of floating color fields. By the 1950s, his paintings typically featured only a few large rectangles of color to achieve a meditative, transcendent experience for the viewer. Rothko sought to express emotional and spiritual themes through his abstract works and did not want to explain his paintings, believing interpretations should come from the viewer's own experience.
This document provides information about the pointillism technique of painting using small dots of primary colors that blend together when viewed from a distance. It discusses Georges Seurat, the French painter who developed this technique in the late 1800s. His most famous work, Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte, took him two years to complete using small dots of paint. The document then instructs students on how to create their own pointillism painting of a bridge using felt tip pens to apply dots of the three primary colors.
Pablo Picasso was the most famous artist of the 20th century. He was born in Málaga, Spain in 1881 and showed artistic talent from a young age. Picasso experimented with many styles over his long career, including his iconic Cubist works from 1907 onward. He is renowned for pioneering modern art and for producing over 1,500 works housed in museums worldwide today. Picasso continued developing as an artist throughout his life, striving to maintain the creative spirit of childhood in his work.
The document provides details on several famous self-portraits by notable artists: Gustave Courbet's 1845 self-portrait depicting despair; Egon Schiele's 1912 self-portrait showing him as self-confident and fragile; M.C. Escher's 1935 lithograph reflecting his interest in unusual perspectives; Frida Kahlo's 1939 painting symbolizing her cultural duality and divorce pain; David Hockney's 1954 teenage self-portrait against a newspaper backdrop; Lucian Freud's 1965 unsettling portrait with his tiny children; and Pablo Picasso's 1972 last self-portrait facing his mortality.
Abstract Sculpture - Wire and Panty Hose SculpturesLindsay Lougheed
Art AQ Submission, July 7, 2014
Lindsay Lougheed
**If you download this you will be able to see reference information for the sculptures in the notes part.
This PowerPoint provides examples of Wire and Panty Hose Sculptures.This PowerPoint includes a pre-lesson to for some analysis and reflection of other artist’s abstract work. After showing my students the PowerPoint and having a discussion about Abstract Art, I would demonstrate how to actually create the sculpture (the instructions are in the PowerPoint). The students would then spend the next few days creating and painting their sculptures.
1. Արվեստը Սուտ է, որ
մարդկանց ունակ է դարձնում
գիտակցել Ճշմարտությունը:
2. Պաբլո Դիեգո Խոսե Ֆրանսիսկո դե Պաուլա Խուան
Նեպոմուսենո Մարիա դե Լոս Ռեմեդիոս Սիպրիանո
դե լա Սանտիսիմիա Տրինիդադ Մարտիր Պատրիսիո
Ռուիս Պիկասոն, իսկ ավելի կարճ` Պաբլո Պիկասոն
ծնվել է 1881 թվականի հոկտմբերի 25-ին
Մալագյում:Հայտնի է որպես Կուբիստական
շարժման հիմնադիր: Աշխատել է բազմազան
ժանրերում` նպաստելով այդ ժանրերի զարգացմանը:
Պիկասոն դեռևս վաղ տարիքից դրսևորել է
գեղարվեստական ընդունակություններ` իր
մանկության և երիտասարդության շրջանում
նկարելով ռեալիստական ոճում: Սակայն 20-րդ դարի
առաջին կեսին նրա ոճը փոխվում է
տեսությունների, տեխնիկաների և գաղափարների
ազդեցության տակ: Պիկասոյի արտիստիկ
կատարումները նրան բերեցին համաշխարհային
ճանաչում՝ դարձնելով նրան 20-րդ դարի արվեստի
ամենահայտնի կերպարներից մեկը:
3. Ութ
տարեկանում նա
նկարում է իր
առաջին լուրջ
նկարը
յուղաներկով`
"Պիկադորը", որի
ց չի բաժանվում
<<Պիկադոր>>
Պաբլո Պիասո ողջ կյանքում:
4.
5. Պիկասոյի Կապույտ շրջանը /1901-1904թթ./
բաղկացած է մռայլ նկարներից` կապույտ և
կապտա-կանաչավուն ստվերներով, ու միայն
հազվադեպ են հարստացված այլ գույներով: Թե
երբ է սկսել այս ժամանակաշրջանը անորոշ է:
Հնարավոր է, որ այն սկսվել է 1901թ. գարնանը
Իսպանիայում կամ նրա կյանքի երկրորդ կեսին`
Փարիզում: Նիհար մայրերի և նրանց երեխաների
շատ նկարներ թվագրված են եղել այդ տարեթվին:
Նրա խոժոռ գույների օգտագործումը և երբեմն
թախծալի թեմաների պատճառներն էին
փողոցային կանայք և մուրացկանները: Պիկասոն
շատ տպավորված էր Իսպանիա կատարած
ճանապարհորդությունից և իր ընկերոջ` Կարլոս
Կասագեմասի ինքնասպանությունից: 1901թ.
աշնանից սկսած Պիկասոն ետմահու նկարել է
Կասագեմայի դիմանկարները: Այդ նույն
տրամադրությունը արտահայտվել է «Չափավոր
հոգեհացը» փորագրությունում /1904թ./, որտեղ
պատկերված է մի կույր տղամարդ և մի կին,
երկուսն էլ հյուծված` նստած դատարկ սեղանի
շուրջ: Կուրությունը, Պիկասոյի այս շրջանի
աշխատանքերի հերթական թեման էր: Այս թեման
ներկայցված է նաև «Կույրերի ճաշը» /1903թ./ և
Կելեստինայի դիմանկարում /1903թ/, ինչպես
նաև Սոլերի և Սյուզան Բլոխների
դիմանկարներում:
Կապույտ շրջան
6. Վարդագույն շրջան
Վարդագույն շրջանը /1904-
1906թթ/ բնորոշվում է որպես ավելի
ուրախ շրջան` գազարագույն և
մանուշակագույն երանգներով`
հատկանշվելով կրկեսի մարդկանցով:
Ծաղրածուներին և կատակերգական
բնավորությունը սովորաբար
պատկերում
էր վանդակավոր հագուստով, որը
Պիկասոյի համար դարձավ սիմվոլ:
1904թ. Փարիզում Պիկասոն
հանդիպում է Ֆերնանդե Օլիվերի
հետ և այս շրջանի շատ նկարներ
նկարել է նրա ջերմ բարեկամական
ազդեցության ներքո: Այս շրջանի
օպտիմիստական տրամադրությամբ
նկարները հիշեցնում են 1899-
1901թթ. շրջանը, և 1904թ. կարող է
համարվել անցումային շրջան այս
երկու շրջանների միջև:
7. Աֆրիկյան
ազդեցության շրջան
Պիկասոյի Աֆրիկյան շրջանը
/1907 -1909թթ./ սկսվեց այն
ժամանակ, երբ նա նկատեց Լես
Դեմոիսելես դը Ավինգոյին:
Հիմնական գաղափարները
զարգացան այս
շրջանում, որոնք Պիկասոյին
առաջնորդեցին ուղիղ դեպի
Կուբիզմի շրջան, որը հաջորդն
էր:
8. Մահը
Պաբլո Պիկասոն
մահացել է 1973թ.
ապրիլի 8-ին
Ֆրանսիայում, այն
պահին, երբ նա և իր
կինը` Ժակլինը
դիմավորում էին
ճաշկերույթի եկած
հյուրերին: Նրա
վերջին խոսքերն էին.
«Խմեք իմ կենացը,
խմեք իմ
առողջության համար,
գիտեք, որ ես այլևս
չեմ կարող խմել»: