Is my Elvis lunchbox art? I must admit that this assignment was somewhat challenging for me. In reading the Sporre’s “Reality Through The Arts” (pg25)‚ I’ve come to realize that I tend to lean more towards an Aesthetic approach in evaluating and analyzing art. While I may find intrinsic emotional value or inspiration in pieces of art‚ I mainly see‚ consider and enjoy it for what it is. The artwork that I chose is a sculpture in my home that when looking at it gives me a different way of viewing
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The meaning of "art" has changed since the industrial revolution and a clarification has to come if we should be able to handle the problem from our own angle. First of all‚ the esotery of art must disappear; its limitation to specialists; the mysticism around it; the looking out for geniuses only. It is good to believe that in the future art may be explained in intellectual terms with greater clarity than it is possible today. Psychoanalysis already shows the mechanics of dreams‚ the role of the
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highlighted through continuity‚ where the alignment of the shape and figures ensures that a viewer moves from one part to another in a definite order. Proximity is another unity design elements‚ all the parts of the art are grouped together‚ clustered‚ and enclosed into sets (Malloy‚ 2014). The art displays harmony‚ where related materials‚ colours‚ and textures are used. The unity design is brought about by harmony‚ whereby‚ the related colours and materials are utilised in the elements‚ such as flowers
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ESSAY- “Artists are no longer the makers of their art but have become manages and coordinators” Marcel Duchamp was born on July 28th‚ 1887 in France. He is most famous for his ready-made artwork called “Fountain” 1917‚ a urinal which was not made by Duchamp‚ the only modification made to the urinal was a signature signed by Marcel Duchamp which was not his. This caused controversy over whether this was really an artwork. In saying this‚ Marcel Duchamp‚ his ready-mades (‘Bicycle Wheel”1913 and “Fountain”1917)
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Academic Institutionalization of the "fine arts” and the nature of academic instruction * The academy set the standard for what was art. * Very specific criteria * Only allowed to do History Painting: an event out of history‚ the bible‚ or mythology * Other than history – portrait‚ still lives‚ genre painting * Subject matter: history/mythology/politics * Studying in Rome was the high point of artistic development * Mengs‚ Parnassus‚ 1761 *
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Lesbianism‚ Feminism and Identity in Art CS3 - 2009/10 Kayley Healy Contents Page Introduction Chapter 1 – Robert Mapplethorpe (Self Portraits) Chapter 2 – Marcel Duchamp Chapter 3 – The Guerrilla Girls Chapter 4 – Lesbianism What is Lesbianism? History of Lesbianism Lesbian Identity Chapter 5 – Lesbianism and Gender in Art. Dyke Action Machine Toxic Titties Jocelyn Schneider Foye (Gender Identification Cards) Stacey Halper (Drag Kings) Conclusion Illustrations
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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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"Art does not exist unless it is shared‚ it requires both artist and audience." Discuss the extent to which you agree or disagree with the claim made above. Use relevant reasons and examples to support your point of view. The statement "Art does not exist unless it is shared‚ it requires both artist and audience" suggests that art must to be shared for if it is not shared it has no worth. In other words‚ the public is the driving force for what is deemed art‚ and if at one point the artwork is not
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And what of our human art? Must we not say that‚ in building‚ it produces an actual house‚ and in painting‚ it produces a house of a different sort‚ as it were a man-made dream for waking eyes?- Plato “A photograph is never interesting for its own sake‚ as art must be…‚” was the claim of conservative writer and philosopher Roger Scruton in his controversial 1989 paper ‘But is it art?’ Many responded strongly to Scruton’s claim that a photograph‚ unlike a painting‚ can never be representational
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Abstract art Abstract art uses a visual language of form‚ color and line to create a composition which may exist with a degree of independence from visual references in the world. Western art had been‚ from the Renaissance up to the middle of the 19th century‚ underpinned by the logic of perspective and an attempt to reproduce an illusion of visible reality. The arts of cultures other than the European had become accessible and showed alternative ways of describing visual experience to the artist
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