Robert Klippel (19 June 1920 – 19 June 2001) was an Australian Sculpture and Teacher. There were approximately 1,300 Sculptures and 5,000 drawings made by Klippel crammed into his little house for over 30 years and every single work has effected the way that modern art is today.…
Augusta Christine Fells was born on February 29, 1892 in Green Cove Springs, Florida. Augusta was born to Edward Fells, Cornelia Murphy Fells. Augusta was part of a large family and started making art at a very young age, using naturally found clay. Because Augusta was so into art she sometimes skipped school to make more of her sculptures. Her father, a Methodist minister did not approve of her of this doing and did whatever he could to stop her. Even though her father disapproved this doing, she continued to make sculptures. At the age of 15 August married John T. Moore in 1907 and had her only child, Irene, in 1908. After Moore died a few years later her and her family moved to West Palm Beach, Florida, in 1915. Around that same time she married James Savage, but she divorced him in the early 1920s and kept his name. When moving to this new spot in Florida Augusta encountered a challenge, the lack of clay. Savage eventually found some materials from a local potter. With those materials she created a group of figures that she entered in a local county fair. All of her work paid off and she won the contest. Along with winning the prize, the superintendent of the fair, George Graham Currie offered her to study art despite the racism of that time. After winning that contest and getting to study more about art Savage thought her career was going to…
In my research paper I will be discussing two very famous African American artists named Beverly Buchanan and Carrie Mae Weems. I will also be discussing the women 's biographies, artwork, artstyles, and who influenced them to become artists. In terms of artwork, I will be discussing the techniques, characteristics and the media they use to make up their work individually.…
Mickalene Thomas (born Jersey January 28, 1971[1][2]), is a contemporary African American artist best known for her complex paintings made of rhinestones, acrylic and enamel. Her work draws from Western art history, pop art and visual culture to examine ideas around femininity, beauty, race, sexuality and…
Shirley Chisholm was known for many reasons.She was the first African American woman in congress. Who has an autobiography titled Unbossed and Unbought and was born in Brooklyn on November 30th 1942. She earned her master's degree from Columbia University. She was the first African American woman to run for president she was also the first African American congresswoman.…
Lucy Stone was born on August 13, 1818, in Massachusetts. She defied her parents to pursue her studies in college and became the first woman from Massachusetts to earn a bachelor's degree. In 1848, Stone was a lecturer of the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society, an abnormal profession for a woman at that time. Throughout the 1850s, she had campaigned for women’s suffrage with Susan B. Anthony who was supposed her close friend. She also supported the Women’s National Loyal League, helped found the American Equal Rights Association and was elected president of the Stat Woman’s Suffrage Association of New Jersey. Stone didn’t want to get marry because she believed that laws at that time made her depend on her husbands. However, in 1885, Henry Browne…
Harriet Hosmer, conceived October 9, 1830, in Watertown, Massachusetts, was one of the pioneer for women sculptors in the 19th century. To begin with, she was an American lady to achieve a worldwide notoriety as a neoclassical stone worker. Her works have often been translated as women's activist as a result of her battle for women's rights later in life, yet towards the start of her vocation her models were unambiguously regular. Hosmer followed in the strides of male neoclassical stone workers in portraying delightful, exceptionally sexualized female casualties. She was raised from a youthful age by her father who was widower. Hosmer had a whimsical childhood. Her father empowered her physical movement, friendly identity and masterful interests.…
1. The work of this brilliant African American chemist changed the entire meat packing industry.…
Understanding the struggles that the people behind the African-American Museum of Philadelphia, the DuSable Museum of African-American history in Chicago, the International Afro-American Museum in Detroit, and the Anacosta Neighborhood Museum in Washington D.C is the core of Andrea Burns’ work. Financial, cultural, and political difficulties all went into the creation of these museums. These people did not want just to be included as a part of larger museums, but, Philadelphia being a prime example, wanted to be their own museum that fully and completely represented their own culture. They truly wanted to make these exhibits to show their culture and make statements in their own way. For example, the "The Rat: Man's Invited Affliction" exhibit…
Mary Edmonia Lewis: named wildfire by her Chippewa mother and black father, then adopted a Christian name when she went to Oberlin College. She later studied sculpture in Boston and Rome.…
Our tape projects shows artistic investigation in that we had to look into the aspects of this character to try and figure out how we could best represent them with what we had. We looked into the culture of the show and his character in order to do just that. As for the process, it was quite a long one. We first had to figure out the stance and position of the character that would best represent the character (oddly enough, in our case, it was his dead, which happens quite a lot to his character in the show, surprisingly) and what props/colors we would need to make his character known. Once we had it all planned out, we started the tape, using different parts of each person in our group. We used Darian’s limbs, lower body, stomach area, and head, and then used Rachel’s upper body. We used the technique of wrapping the tape around the part needed with the sticky side out and building up until it was thick enough and very carefully cutting the tape off the person, without hurting the structure of the tape or the person. Once all our pieces were all cut out, we put them all together, using even more tape. The spray painting came next. We used the spray paint to color in the pants, shirt, hair, and shoes. One of our characters signature items is his trench coat and tie that he is almost always wearing. We used the actual articles of clothing for that. Since our character is also an angel, we made angel wings out of cardboard and then spray painted those as well and attached them to the tape sculpture itself. We did this project and used this character because, seeing as we both are big fans of the show and this specific character, it is sort of a nerdy representation of the both of us. The material and media influenced our artistic decisions because, using mainly tape, it forced us to think simply. We needed mostly the vague outline of a human figure through the tape which was time consuming and difficult in itself, and the props we needed…
Moore’s sculptures are exhibited all around the world. In Moore’s homeland, the sculptures are exhibited in Kew Botanical Gardens, the natural suuroundings of the gardens compliment the sculptures. It feels as if the sculptures are different during the different times of the day. In the morning, when the sculptures are wrapped in mist, or during middag when the blue sky and sunshine makes them shine, or in the evening, when the sculptures absorb the red evening sun. All these different interpretations and perspectives would not be possible to see if the sculptures were in a museum, where no natural light would compliment the sculptures. Moore always manages to draw a connection between the sculptures and the landscape. For example, in the following picture, there is a hole in the sculpture, and when you look through there is an abundance of green, if there was a white wall behind it, the sculpture would not be as impressive. Personally, I love the fact that the sculpture is almost one with nature, it really blends into the surroundings.…
Guillermo Estrella Tolentino (24 July 1890 – (?) 1976) is a Filipino sculptor who was named National Artist for the Visual Arts in 1973. He is hailed as the “Father of Philippine Arts.”…
Napoleon Abueva, nicknamed Billy, was born on January 26, 1930 in Tagbilaran, Bohol to Teodoro Abueva, a Bohol congressman and Purification Veloso, president of the Women’s Auxiliary Service. His father was a friend and contemporary of former Philippine President Manuel Roxas and Ambassador Narciso Ramos. He was a member of the Provincial Board, and later became the Provincial Governor of Bohol. He ended his career as a Congressman in 1934. Both of Abueva's parents died serving their country.…
Sculpture in art refers to a branch of visual arts that involves the three dimensional depiction of art forms. According to Wikipedia, sculpture is one of the plastic arts, that is, arts which involve the physical manipulation of plastic mediums such as clay or plaster. Sculpture originally referred to the addition of material, that is modelling and the removal of material, that is carving, but the reduction in the distinction of the various art forms coupled with modernism has changed what might be termed as sculpture.…