What was 1920’s art like? By: Marisol Menendez and Libby Davis Art Influences • Art in the 1920’s was mainly influenced by two movements: Dada and Surrealism. Dada Art • Dada was an anti-art movement . Anti Art painters rejected in some way the conventional artistic standards. • It was born out of negative reaction to the horrors of World War I. It rejected reason and logic‚ prizing nonsense‚ irrationality and intuition. Many Dada artist scattered across Europe after Great War ended. Dada’s
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Pop Art Pop art has become one of the most recognizable styles of modern art. Unlike most art before the 50s‚ pop art was a new approach to representational visual communication. This became a major directional shift of modernism‚ where the works are inspired by the “pop” of the present; from the mid-1950s onward‚ artists who drew on a popular imagery were part of an international phenomenon. Drawing from mass media and popular culture‚ the subject matter became far from traditional “high art” themes
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contained. However‚ some artists remained in the rural areas of Europe and some lived in more suburban areas. The Milwaukee Art Museum has a specific gallery that deals with this issue of the dichotomy of increasing modernism and continuing ruralism through the eyes of German Expressionist artists. All of the artists in this gallery were associated with a German Expressionist movement‚ mostly die brücke and der blaue reiter‚ and the pieces curated together show a gradient of subject from country to city
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The Performing Arts and Inspiration Shani Paul ARTS/100 May 5‚ 2014 Angela Brasser The Performing Arts and Inspiration Many times when thinking about dance the first thing comes to mind is a concert or dancing in a bar. Never did I think dancing was a work of art. Dancing can be used for many things‚ one particular is communication. I’ve chosen two styles of dance that’s dear to me which is ballet and jazz dance. Dance is one of the most universe activities in the
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Art Worksheet Art Education 1600‚ Art and Music since 1945 Your Name Nathan This worksheet is designed to prepare you with critical skills for analyzing a visual art work. Follow the steps in this worksheet carefully and it will help you organize your thinking. In Step 1‚ you will analyze the art work in detail. Look and look again for things you don’t see the first time. In Step 2‚ you interpret the work‚ either by telling a story about the work or telling what the work means to you
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better ways to capture movement in art‚ by using overlapping and blurring of outlines. Through this‚ they better captured the energy and power o forms moving through space. Primarily cubism and the flattening of pictorial space influenced futurism. Other influences were impressionism’s urban subject matter‚ post-impressionism and the phenomenon of speed. Futuristic artworks often depicted machines‚ athletes or cities; sometimes abstracted. They conveyed the power and movement of the modern revolution
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Summer B 2012 Course Title: Art Appreciation This course is taken in whole via the Internet without attending a classroom or testing center on campus. Professor Name: Anita Kirchen Ph.D. Email: kirchena@palmbeachstate.edu - use ARH 1000 in subject line – use the course email on Blackboard once the course has started. Catalog Description: Explores important works of the visual arts from the past and present and is designed to provide insights into works of art and meet the needs of the
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Symbolism and Advertising in Pop Art Written Exam by Nicole D. Willis Student Number: 0501784 Table of Contents 1. Introduction 3 2. Arise of Consumerism in Post World War II America 8 3. Symbolism and Code 11 4. H.R. Pufnstuf and McDonaldland 13 5. The Chapman Family Collection‚ Revisiting McDonaldland 19 6. Ron English‚ Culture Jammers and Political Art 21 7. 1950’s Advertising and Post War Optimism 23 8. Appropriation Art 26 1 9. Symbolism
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view Installation Art‚ the term itself is not clearly defined. There are‚ however‚ different characteristics of it‚ and within this essay I will discuss the two most prevalent from my own point of view‚ and support my thoughts and opinions with examples from information we have encountered throughout this past semester. Although Installation Art has many qualities that it can be associated with‚ I believe that one which stands true above most is the fact that it Installation Art often casts the
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Interview With Letters Magazine Teaching Writing Through Art By Katherine Rushforth Nelson Smith * Eng. 423 * 10. 25. 2012 * blowing scarves * red hat * whispering * matching pants * rosey cheeks * bunded boy & girl * black hair * gathering clouds * hands in pockets Above Diagram: “Learning to Look”-- Art through writing activity-- Bonnie Katzive An Interview With: Bonnie Katzive How can you successfully teach writing through art? When I asked Bonnie Katzive for an interview‚ to discuss
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