Henry Moore was a British sculptor known for his abstract forms and emphasis on the relationship between positive and negative spaces. Sculpture can be created through subtractive processes like carving or additive processes like modeling and casting. Modern sculpture utilizes many materials and techniques, from traditional stone and metalworking to constructed sculpture incorporating found objects and nontraditional materials like chocolate or Styrofoam. Contemporary sculptors continue pushing technical and conceptual boundaries.
The document discusses various methods for purifying water on both large and small scales. For large-scale purification, it describes processes like storage, filtration using slow sand filters or rapid sand filters, and disinfection through chlorination. Storage allows settling of particles while filtration removes up to 99% of microbes. Chlorination kills pathogens and aids other treatment processes. For small-scale purification, it discusses boiling, chemical disinfection using chlorine or iodine, and water filters. Methods for well disinfection include adding bleaching powder or using a double pot system. Overall, the document provides an overview of water purification techniques from the large municipal scale to individual household levels.
Aboriginal art tells Dreamtime stories through pictures and symbols representing the natural world. Aboriginal artists use earth colors from the desert landscape and apply paint made from natural materials with their fingers or sticks, as there were no art shops selling brushes. Aboriginal paintings depict the Dreamtime through symbols and patterns of dots representing the flora and fauna of the Australian environment.
Aboriginal art originated in Australia and is an important part of Aboriginal culture and spirituality. It tells stories from the Dreamtime using symbols and earth colors to represent natural elements and spiritual beings. Aboriginal art often features dots and handprints, with the hand symbolizing a connection to the land. Rock art sites across Australia provide insight into Aboriginal history, wildlife, and beliefs through pictures made directly on rock surfaces.
Aboriginal art developed over 40,000 years in Australia and is closely tied to Aboriginal beliefs and culture, with different styles of art reflecting Dreamtime stories, body decoration, and X-ray paintings depicting animal anatomy. Traditional Aboriginal art includes rock paintings, bark paintings, sand and body paintings, with natural pigments depicting ancestral beings and symbols important to Aboriginal spiritual and cultural practices.
Aboriginal art was traditionally created to tell important stories and pass down cultural knowledge through generations. It served as a language to convey complex meanings and lessons through symbols and designs painted on natural materials. While Aboriginal art still takes inspiration from traditional stories, it is now often painted on canvas and uses dot painting techniques to represent symbols and hide secret messages within the artwork.
The document discusses the importance of personal hygiene for kids. It provides guidance on proper handwashing, brushing teeth, wearing clean clothes and shoes, sneezing and yawning etiquette, and hair care. Maintaining good personal hygiene is essential for remaining healthy, feeling good about oneself, and protecting against illnesses by reducing the spread of germs. The document emphasizes establishing routines and habits for washing hands regularly, brushing teeth twice daily, wearing freshly laundered clothes and shoes, covering one's mouth when sneezing or yawning, and properly washing and drying hair.
Henry Moore was a British sculptor known for his abstract forms and emphasis on the relationship between positive and negative spaces. Sculpture can be created through subtractive processes like carving or additive processes like modeling and casting. Modern sculpture utilizes many materials and techniques, from traditional stone and metalworking to constructed sculpture incorporating found objects and nontraditional materials like chocolate or Styrofoam. Contemporary sculptors continue pushing technical and conceptual boundaries.
The document discusses various methods for purifying water on both large and small scales. For large-scale purification, it describes processes like storage, filtration using slow sand filters or rapid sand filters, and disinfection through chlorination. Storage allows settling of particles while filtration removes up to 99% of microbes. Chlorination kills pathogens and aids other treatment processes. For small-scale purification, it discusses boiling, chemical disinfection using chlorine or iodine, and water filters. Methods for well disinfection include adding bleaching powder or using a double pot system. Overall, the document provides an overview of water purification techniques from the large municipal scale to individual household levels.
Aboriginal art tells Dreamtime stories through pictures and symbols representing the natural world. Aboriginal artists use earth colors from the desert landscape and apply paint made from natural materials with their fingers or sticks, as there were no art shops selling brushes. Aboriginal paintings depict the Dreamtime through symbols and patterns of dots representing the flora and fauna of the Australian environment.
Aboriginal art originated in Australia and is an important part of Aboriginal culture and spirituality. It tells stories from the Dreamtime using symbols and earth colors to represent natural elements and spiritual beings. Aboriginal art often features dots and handprints, with the hand symbolizing a connection to the land. Rock art sites across Australia provide insight into Aboriginal history, wildlife, and beliefs through pictures made directly on rock surfaces.
Aboriginal art developed over 40,000 years in Australia and is closely tied to Aboriginal beliefs and culture, with different styles of art reflecting Dreamtime stories, body decoration, and X-ray paintings depicting animal anatomy. Traditional Aboriginal art includes rock paintings, bark paintings, sand and body paintings, with natural pigments depicting ancestral beings and symbols important to Aboriginal spiritual and cultural practices.
Aboriginal art was traditionally created to tell important stories and pass down cultural knowledge through generations. It served as a language to convey complex meanings and lessons through symbols and designs painted on natural materials. While Aboriginal art still takes inspiration from traditional stories, it is now often painted on canvas and uses dot painting techniques to represent symbols and hide secret messages within the artwork.
The document discusses the importance of personal hygiene for kids. It provides guidance on proper handwashing, brushing teeth, wearing clean clothes and shoes, sneezing and yawning etiquette, and hair care. Maintaining good personal hygiene is essential for remaining healthy, feeling good about oneself, and protecting against illnesses by reducing the spread of germs. The document emphasizes establishing routines and habits for washing hands regularly, brushing teeth twice daily, wearing freshly laundered clothes and shoes, covering one's mouth when sneezing or yawning, and properly washing and drying hair.
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.
The document discusses current concepts of endodontic irrigation. It notes that complete mechanical cleaning of the complex root canal system is impossible, so irrigation is necessary to eradicate present infections and prevent future reinfection for successful treatment. Sodium hypochlorite is the most commonly used irrigant but has disadvantages like toxicity. Chelating agents like EDTA and citric acid are used to remove the smear layer. Chlorhexidine has antimicrobial properties and can remain active in tissue but does not remove debris. No single solution is ideal, so combining solutions in the proper sequence maximizes effectiveness.
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.
Pablo Picasso was born in 1881 in Malaga, Spain and showed a talent for art from a young age. He attended a prestigious art school in Barcelona and had his first small art exhibition in 1901. Picasso helped pioneer the Cubist art movement in Paris in 1907, depicting objects and scenes from different viewpoints using distinct shapes. He produced over 50,000 works in his lifetime across many mediums and is considered one of the most influential artists of all time.
Water purification techniques can purify water on a large, medium, or small scale. On a large scale, sources like rivers and lakes undergo screening, aeration, flocculation, sedimentation, filtration, and disinfection to remove contaminants. Methods include using coarse or fine screens, different types of aeration, adding chemicals like alum during coagulation, settling solids via sedimentation, and using sand or membrane filters along with chlorination, ozonation, or UV radiation for disinfection. On a medium scale from wells or springs, addition of chlorinated lime is used. Small scale purification involves boiling, adding chemicals like bleach or iodine, or demineralization through processes like reverse osmosis
Tiffany designed stained glass windows and lamps, glass mosaics, blown glass, ceramics, jewelry, enamels and metalwork.
Tiffany changed glass making by incorporating metal strips directly into his designs.
A slideshow connected to a lecture of Art Since 1965 available at Art History Teaching Resources (http://arthistoryteachingresources.org/), written by Virginia Spivey.
Assemblage is an art form that involves transforming everyday objects into art through non-traditional techniques. The presentation provided examples of assemblages created by various artists like Joseph Cornell, Michael DeMeng, and Lynne Whipple that incorporated found objects like photographs, dolls, bottles, and maps. Students were encouraged to be inspired by the examples but develop their own visions, and to collect materials with permission for their own assemblage focusing on possible themes of mythology, relationships, self-portraits, or memories.
This document discusses water pollution, purification, and disinfection. It outlines various causes and sources of water pollution including sewage, industrial waste, and agricultural runoff. It then describes common waterborne diseases and laws governing water pollution. The document provides details on large and small-scale water purification methods including storage, filtration using slow sand filters and rapid sand filters, and disinfection using chlorination. It concludes with discussing other disinfection methods like ozonation and UV light.
Cubism was an early 20th century avant-garde art movement that revolutionized European painting and sculpture. Cubism was characterized by the geometric simplification and fragmentation of forms to depict objects from multiple viewpoints and angles in the same image. Key artists of Cubism included Pablo Picasso, Georges Braque, and Juan Gris, who developed both Analytical Cubism, using monochrome colors and geometric shapes, and Synthetic Cubism, incorporating materials like newspaper into colorful collages. Cubism had a significant influence on subsequent art movements through its radical reimagining of visual representation.
A Visual History of the Visual Arts - Part 3: "The Age of Globalization"piero scaruffi
A Visual History of the Visual Arts - Part 3 The Age of Globalization - A free supplement to "A Brief History of Knowledge" (Amazon ebook) - The slideshare version is not downloadable. The downloadable chapters are here: http://www.scaruffi.com/art/history/index.html
Relief sculpture involves raising or lowering forms from a flattened background without disconnecting them. There are three degrees of relief sculpture: high relief, where forms stand far from the background; low relief, where forms are slightly raised; and sunken relief, where forms are hollowed within the background. The document instructs the recipient to create a low relief sculpture including a face, descriptive text, and an interesting background.
nazar ka lagana (nazar utarnae ke upay) ek bahut hee bada dosh maana gaya hai kaha jaata hai kee jab kisee kee buree nazar lagatee hai to banate hue kaam bhee bigad jaate hai . kisee ka achchha chalata hua bizanes bhee kharaab ho jaata hai nazar anajaane mein ya jaanate hue lag jaatee hai aisa bhee kahate hai kee maan kee nazar bhee bete ko lag jaatee hai doston ham is lekh mein baat karane vaale hai nazar kaise lagatee hai
1) Aboriginal people are the indigenous people of Australia who tell stories called Dreamings about how the world began using symbols in art.
2) Aboriginal art comes from Australia and uses natural earth colors like black, yellow, red, and white as well as dots to represent natural elements and was created using fingers or sticks without brushes from materials found in the desert environment.
3) Traditional aboriginal music uses rhythmic singing accompanied by percussive instruments like clapsticks or body slapping as well as the didgeridoo.
Sonia Delaunay was a Ukrainian designer and painter known for her cubist artwork using geometric shapes. She designed swimsuits and painted colorful pictures influenced by cubism, which aimed to create a new perspective in art. A video link is provided to learn more about her life and contributions to art.
This document presents a case involving the prosthodontic treatment of a 18-year-old female patient with dental pain and esthetic issues. The patient was examined and found to have caries, missing teeth, and periodontal issues. Treatment options considered included extraction, implants, removable partial dentures, and fixed bridges. A glass fiber post was selected to reinforce tooth #32 due to loss of coronal structure after root canal treatment. A core buildup was completed along with composite restoration. The treatment addressed the patient's chief complaints and restored esthetics and function.
The document provides information about various pigments that were used for art and decorative purposes before and after the Industrial Revolution. Before 1760, the range of available colors was limited to earth and mineral pigments as well as those from biological sources. Rare pigments from botanical, animal, insect and mollusk sources were traded over long distances. Certain colors like blue and purple were expensive and associated with royalty. The document then discusses specific pigments like ultramarine blue, Indian Yellow, and carmine red; describing their origins, compositions, and historical uses in painting. It also covers various painting mediums like tempera, fresco, oil, watercolor and their development over time. In summary, the document outlines the key
The history of photography began with early experiments and discoveries in optics and light in ancient Greece and China. The first permanent photograph was created by Joseph Niépce in 1827 using a camera obscura. Louis Daguerre later developed an early photographic process known as the daguerreotype. In the mid-1800s, advances such as the wet plate negative process and dry plates made photography more portable and accessible. The development of roll film and handheld cameras in the late 1800s brought photography to the masses. In the early 1900s, Oskar Barnack created the 35mm film format, which became the standard for film cameras. Digital photography was introduced in the late 20th century, revolutionizing the industry.
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!)
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.
The document discusses current concepts of endodontic irrigation. It notes that complete mechanical cleaning of the complex root canal system is impossible, so irrigation is necessary to eradicate present infections and prevent future reinfection for successful treatment. Sodium hypochlorite is the most commonly used irrigant but has disadvantages like toxicity. Chelating agents like EDTA and citric acid are used to remove the smear layer. Chlorhexidine has antimicrobial properties and can remain active in tissue but does not remove debris. No single solution is ideal, so combining solutions in the proper sequence maximizes effectiveness.
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.
Pablo Picasso was born in 1881 in Malaga, Spain and showed a talent for art from a young age. He attended a prestigious art school in Barcelona and had his first small art exhibition in 1901. Picasso helped pioneer the Cubist art movement in Paris in 1907, depicting objects and scenes from different viewpoints using distinct shapes. He produced over 50,000 works in his lifetime across many mediums and is considered one of the most influential artists of all time.
Water purification techniques can purify water on a large, medium, or small scale. On a large scale, sources like rivers and lakes undergo screening, aeration, flocculation, sedimentation, filtration, and disinfection to remove contaminants. Methods include using coarse or fine screens, different types of aeration, adding chemicals like alum during coagulation, settling solids via sedimentation, and using sand or membrane filters along with chlorination, ozonation, or UV radiation for disinfection. On a medium scale from wells or springs, addition of chlorinated lime is used. Small scale purification involves boiling, adding chemicals like bleach or iodine, or demineralization through processes like reverse osmosis
Tiffany designed stained glass windows and lamps, glass mosaics, blown glass, ceramics, jewelry, enamels and metalwork.
Tiffany changed glass making by incorporating metal strips directly into his designs.
A slideshow connected to a lecture of Art Since 1965 available at Art History Teaching Resources (http://arthistoryteachingresources.org/), written by Virginia Spivey.
Assemblage is an art form that involves transforming everyday objects into art through non-traditional techniques. The presentation provided examples of assemblages created by various artists like Joseph Cornell, Michael DeMeng, and Lynne Whipple that incorporated found objects like photographs, dolls, bottles, and maps. Students were encouraged to be inspired by the examples but develop their own visions, and to collect materials with permission for their own assemblage focusing on possible themes of mythology, relationships, self-portraits, or memories.
This document discusses water pollution, purification, and disinfection. It outlines various causes and sources of water pollution including sewage, industrial waste, and agricultural runoff. It then describes common waterborne diseases and laws governing water pollution. The document provides details on large and small-scale water purification methods including storage, filtration using slow sand filters and rapid sand filters, and disinfection using chlorination. It concludes with discussing other disinfection methods like ozonation and UV light.
Cubism was an early 20th century avant-garde art movement that revolutionized European painting and sculpture. Cubism was characterized by the geometric simplification and fragmentation of forms to depict objects from multiple viewpoints and angles in the same image. Key artists of Cubism included Pablo Picasso, Georges Braque, and Juan Gris, who developed both Analytical Cubism, using monochrome colors and geometric shapes, and Synthetic Cubism, incorporating materials like newspaper into colorful collages. Cubism had a significant influence on subsequent art movements through its radical reimagining of visual representation.
A Visual History of the Visual Arts - Part 3: "The Age of Globalization"piero scaruffi
A Visual History of the Visual Arts - Part 3 The Age of Globalization - A free supplement to "A Brief History of Knowledge" (Amazon ebook) - The slideshare version is not downloadable. The downloadable chapters are here: http://www.scaruffi.com/art/history/index.html
Relief sculpture involves raising or lowering forms from a flattened background without disconnecting them. There are three degrees of relief sculpture: high relief, where forms stand far from the background; low relief, where forms are slightly raised; and sunken relief, where forms are hollowed within the background. The document instructs the recipient to create a low relief sculpture including a face, descriptive text, and an interesting background.
nazar ka lagana (nazar utarnae ke upay) ek bahut hee bada dosh maana gaya hai kaha jaata hai kee jab kisee kee buree nazar lagatee hai to banate hue kaam bhee bigad jaate hai . kisee ka achchha chalata hua bizanes bhee kharaab ho jaata hai nazar anajaane mein ya jaanate hue lag jaatee hai aisa bhee kahate hai kee maan kee nazar bhee bete ko lag jaatee hai doston ham is lekh mein baat karane vaale hai nazar kaise lagatee hai
1) Aboriginal people are the indigenous people of Australia who tell stories called Dreamings about how the world began using symbols in art.
2) Aboriginal art comes from Australia and uses natural earth colors like black, yellow, red, and white as well as dots to represent natural elements and was created using fingers or sticks without brushes from materials found in the desert environment.
3) Traditional aboriginal music uses rhythmic singing accompanied by percussive instruments like clapsticks or body slapping as well as the didgeridoo.
Sonia Delaunay was a Ukrainian designer and painter known for her cubist artwork using geometric shapes. She designed swimsuits and painted colorful pictures influenced by cubism, which aimed to create a new perspective in art. A video link is provided to learn more about her life and contributions to art.
This document presents a case involving the prosthodontic treatment of a 18-year-old female patient with dental pain and esthetic issues. The patient was examined and found to have caries, missing teeth, and periodontal issues. Treatment options considered included extraction, implants, removable partial dentures, and fixed bridges. A glass fiber post was selected to reinforce tooth #32 due to loss of coronal structure after root canal treatment. A core buildup was completed along with composite restoration. The treatment addressed the patient's chief complaints and restored esthetics and function.
The document provides information about various pigments that were used for art and decorative purposes before and after the Industrial Revolution. Before 1760, the range of available colors was limited to earth and mineral pigments as well as those from biological sources. Rare pigments from botanical, animal, insect and mollusk sources were traded over long distances. Certain colors like blue and purple were expensive and associated with royalty. The document then discusses specific pigments like ultramarine blue, Indian Yellow, and carmine red; describing their origins, compositions, and historical uses in painting. It also covers various painting mediums like tempera, fresco, oil, watercolor and their development over time. In summary, the document outlines the key
The history of photography began with early experiments and discoveries in optics and light in ancient Greece and China. The first permanent photograph was created by Joseph Niépce in 1827 using a camera obscura. Louis Daguerre later developed an early photographic process known as the daguerreotype. In the mid-1800s, advances such as the wet plate negative process and dry plates made photography more portable and accessible. The development of roll film and handheld cameras in the late 1800s brought photography to the masses. In the early 1900s, Oskar Barnack created the 35mm film format, which became the standard for film cameras. Digital photography was introduced in the late 20th century, revolutionizing the industry.
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!)