At some point in our lives we have all encountered art. When thinking about the topic of art, creations such as paintings, drawings, and sculptures run through our minds. In today’s society, art is extremely prevalent. There are now more mediums than ever, which people can utilize to produce breath-taking artworks. Though everyone is familiar with art, people have difficulty coming up with a set definition for the term. Art is not the same as it was in the past, and is different throughout various parts of the globe. Some people are interested to get a deeper understanding of the concept and learn why it doesn’t have a specific definition.…
As far as the country, United States of America is concerned, is best known for the land of brave, armed forces, advancement in technology, leading changes and so on. With respect to each and every phase of the period, it is taking a step ahead leading to have its various cultures and sub-cultures. Besides this, a number of images and sculptures are there which had a major contribution towards shaping the culture of the country. A country 's culture is basically determined by many ways like migration as well as the recruitment. Coming to the American culture, it came into existence from various cultures after the several other people migrated here…
In the years following World War II, the United States enjoyed an unprecedented economic and political boom. Amidst this growth, many artists and intellectuals had emigrated from Europe to the United States, bringing with them their own traditions and ideas, giving rise to the the Abstract Expressionist movement. Artists including Jackson Pollock, Willem de Kooning, and Mark Rothko, sought to express emotions and individual feelings, and personified this through their diverse bodies of work by exploring new ways to reinvigorate and reinvent their medium of painting. Thus embodying a distinctly ‘individual - American’* element of confidence and creativity, so much that it was sponsored by the CIA because it could be held up as proof of the…
Discuss the interrelationship between art and nation building in the first half of the twentieth century.…
Many people today have a great misconception on what an “American” actually is. Not only today, but back in the day where Formal was the everyday casual. In “I’m an American” by Michel-Guillame Jean de Crevecoeur a man tries to depict the misconceptions that people have of the word American and stands for. He uses Pathos, Logos, and Figurative language to assist in his reasoning. He uses many examples to prove his way of thinking and uses rhetorical devices to improve the statements in his reasons.…
Throughout the past few decades, our music taste, along with our society, has developed into an expressive community. People of all ages have been using music to express themselves for thousands of years. The 1920s, as well as 2000s are prominently known for their groundbreaking new sound. The two were ferociously popular in their time, but how can two genres, each with a different sound, be so popular? The purpose of the composer, instruments used and the sound produce, are vastly different between the two. However, though time changes, some things remain the same.…
Society today has been slacking in a sense of art. “Low art” has become more popular…
References: Doss, E. (2002, April). Oxford History of Art: Twentieth-Century American Art. Cary, NC, USA: OUP Oxford. Retrieved from ebrary, 289…
Music in America has changed and grown over the years to accommodate a changing culture. Not only does music provide an emotional outlet for the musician but also for their audience. It gives the listener a creative outlet in the form of dance as well as bringing like-minded people together. With the emergence of film, however, Americans had an exciting new form of visual entertainment. “Because they showed silent films that transcended language barriers, nickelodeons flourished during the great European immigration at the turn of the twentieth century” (Campbell, Martin & Fabos, 2012, p. 192). Film provided (and continues to provide) an “anything is possible” attitude. Walt Disney once said, “If you can dream it, you can do it” and that idea pushes people to think about what else might be out there. It has made society want to learn more, do more, and be more. Television changed everything, in that Americans did not have to leave their homes to have access to visual media. Whereas film showed fantasy and fictional events, television provided a window into real life with local, national, and eventually global news. Families gathered around their televisions at night, just as they used to do with radio. “It was the TV that exposed us to Civil Rights violations in the South, to the shared pain and healing rituals after the Kennedy and King assassinations in the 1960s, and to the political turmoil of Watergate in the 1970s” (Campbell, Martin & Fabos,…
The world was still licking its wounds, but in the meantime the economy and society of the United States were growing and profiled a more central position in the international order. Editor and publisher Henry Luce described the second half of the twentieth century as The American Century. At that time, prosperity corresponded to the idea that it became possible for Europeans to emulate America’s consumption patterns and ideologies. Electronic media spread American goods, trends, and ideas over the world, a process also known as Americanism. Luce debated that America shared all good things they had with the world, like the Bill of Rights, technical skills and love of freedom en equality. In the following Cold War the European classical culture came to stand across the American modern popular culture, with jazz, Rock and Roll and…
Within the realism of the Gilded Age, European influences weaved into the American art scene as artistic…
During the 1880s to 1920s, American art changed radically. These changes reflected dramatic shifts in American society…
A complex and unclear question throughout the late 20th century and today is did the arts change history or do the arts reflect the changes that are taking place in society? It is a difficult question to answer since art and music have become so increasingly popular over the past 50 years. Also, for this question, no one’s opinion was exactly one and the same. Music and the arts had such a widespread influence on our nation over such a small period of time; it seemed as if it was sometimes hard to comprehend. Art in general became such a talked about subject during the post-WWII years and especially during the American involvement of Vietnam. During these years, and for many to come, art shaped our society in a way that the American people have never seen before. Art gave the American people a great form of expression starting in the 1950s and still plays a major role in our country today. Art had a major influence on the United States during the post-WWII years and that is the reason art changed American history.…
With the advent of mass production since the Industrial Revolution, there has been an aggregation of consumer culture to compensate for the overproduction of goods. Art is also a victim of this domineering culture of consumerism in the 21st century in the sense that people get their artistic, aesthetic, and musical experiences by buying commodities for sale, such as tickets for the Broadway shows, albums, or paintings. The commodification of music, in particular, has changed how musical communities are formed. Gone are the pre-modern eras when members of a small community coalesced in rituals, ceremonies, and fairs involving music in the form of communal expression as people today obtain musical experiences more passively. As philosopher Baker…
American Arts: In the early years American art and literature took most of its ideas and influences from European artists. During the late eighteenth century and the early nineteenth centuries, American paintings primarily included landscapes and portraits in a realistic style. The industrial revolution was responsible for new influences thereafter. American literature is also known for development of popular literary genres such as hardboiled crime fiction. As far as dance is concerned, USA has its share of dance varieties like the trademark Lindy Hop and its derivative Rock and Roll. There is also the modern square dance and the modern dance. In addition to this, there is a wide influence of several African-American dances.…