"Ingres odalisque" Essays and Research Papers

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    ROMANTICISM AND NEO-CLASSICAL Romanticism a word that makes one think that it is a piece of art that shows love‚ a man and a woman. But it is not quite that‚ romanticism can mean freedom‚ rebellion‚ it could symbol intuition‚ emotion‚ the individual‚ and truth. It refers to art work that states feelings‚ moods‚ and dominates. An individual expression of experiences which cannot and could not be evaluated or assessed in purely rational or materialistic terms. Romanticism was one of the most unique

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    Neoclassical Art Analysis

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    Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres in 1814 and is perfect example of Neoclassicism which was the revolt of the Rococo style of art. The artwork is placed in the Louvre Museum in Paris. This painting captures the image of an odalisque‚ which we refer to as a concubine. The painting depicts beautiful hues of blue‚ and a dark background and shadows which creates a seductive scenery while enhancing the curves and shapes of the model. With the contrast of light and dark colors‚ Ingres was able to achieve the

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    Venus Of Urbino Summary

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    exemplifies the theme of the male gaze in this artwork by having Venus naked and creating the inviting look on her face. He depicts her as an object which leads to the male pleasure. In “La Grande Odalisque” by Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres‚ http://www.artble.com/‚ the subject is clearly the odalisque‚ or slave.

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    circles: farm workers‚ manual laborers‚ and lower class individuals. The subject of Manet’s’ Olympia was well within that canon: the painting is a portrait of a real Parisian prostitute who was well known during that time. By contrast‚ Ingres’ The Grande Odalisque is a truly Romantic painting. Romanticism‚ that occurred before Realism was a philosophy that favored imagination and sensuality above the real and the rational. It was a vast movement that encompassed not

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    looking at art intended to imitate nature. Rather‚ Matisse’s decision to paint with such violent color was an attempt to infuse life back into art‚ by keeping the viewer’s eye active and unsettled as they regard his unblended forms. Like Fiorentino and Ingres‚ Matisse also collapsed the space of this scene into a two-dimensional‚ pictorial world that abandons scientific perspective and resemblance to the observable world. And in a move distinctly influenced by his 20th century predecessors like Cézanne

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    Ch. 3 Perception Key 1. I would award Tom Wesselmanns’ Great American Nude painting for first place because the artistic form of colors are bright and full of life which leads me to believe that the artist that painted this picture also felt this woman herself was bright and full of life. But the woman still has a little bit of mystery which is why he didn’t paint a face on her. We can tell she lives a modern lifestyle because of the phone‚ perfume and flowers. For second place‚ I would award

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    Baroque Art Research Paper

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    commissioned David to paint depictions of Napoleon’s pageantries. Napoleonic architecture also served as an excellent vehicle for consolidating authority and to embrace a more streamlined classicism. Ingres’ “Grande Odalisque” is a painting of a traditional nude with a rather startling mix of elements. Ingres’ subject went back to Titian and Giorgione‚ the female head is in the style of Raphael‚ the proportions and cool color scheme are reflections of Mannerist painters‚ and the painting of a member of

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    Romanticism and Rationalism Romanticism began in the mid-18th century and reached its height in the 19th century. The Romantic literature of the nineteenth century holds in its topics the ideals of the time period‚ concentrating on emotion‚ nature‚ and the expression of "nothing." The Romantic era was one that focused on the commonality of humankind and‚ while using emotion and nature; the poets and their works shed light on people’s universal natures. Romanticism as a movement declined in the late

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    ARTS 1301

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    ARTS 1301 Exam 1. Question 001-18 (Points: 1) The drawings from Ardèche Gorge are located in southern France at: a. Chauvet cave. b. Lascaux cave. c. La Villedorphe. d. Nomadic cave. Save Answer 2. Question 007-18 (Points: 1) The "Toreador" fresco was created by the ________ culture. a. Neolithic b. Roman c. Minoan d. Greek Save Answer 3. Question 011-18 (Points: 1) Neolithic culture developed quickly in the world’s fertile valleys. By 4000 bce‚ urban societies had developed

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    Romantic Art

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    In Romantic art‚ nature—with its uncontrollable power‚ unpredictability‚ and potential for cataclysmic extremes—offered an alternative to the ordered world of Enlightenment thought. The violent and terrifying images of nature conjured by Romantic artists recall the eighteenth-century aesthetic of the Sublime. As articulated by the British statesman Edmund Burke in a 1757 treatise and echoed by the French philosopher Denis Diderot a decade later‚ "all that stuns the soul‚ all that imprints a feeling

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