The location I chose for my ethnographic essay was The Museum of Modern Art‚ commonly known as the MoMA. I traveled to the museum on Saturday‚ March 6th‚ 2017 and arrived at 3:11 pm. Surprisingly this museum was quite small at least in comparison to the grand museums I’ve visited in the past. The exhibit that I focused on was their ongoing collection gallery that displayed art from the 1880’s through the 1950’s. I chose this particular exhibit because whilst walking through the museum that this was
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the most common art. It has to do with very popular seen people‚ places‚ or things. My favorite pop artist is Andy Warhol. The way he deals with the colors and shapes are amazing. I really enjoy the piece he did with Marilyn Monroe and the Campbell soup piece too. Surrealism is a type of art I enjoy doing. When I have a strange dream I will take the most particular thing about my dream and turn it into art. I make it very mysterious and lifelike so everyone can witness what I saw in my sleep. I like
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appropriation and his ability to capitalize on images that already were famous and create himself a name while doing it. This is in fact false; he sometimes did create in a way that already used others designs that used simple things. For example‚ a Campbell’s soup can that the average person sees everyday and thinks nothing of it and make it into a beautiful piece of art that makes you appreciate the true beauty of the can. He also made himself into a court painter with America’s favorite celebrities being
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their attention on it. The same concept applies to artwork. When individuals repeatedly see works of art‚ such as a can of Campbell soup‚ they do not pay as much attention to its detail as they would if they were seeing it for the first time. This causes a problem of aesthetic authenticity for viewers because they would have a much different view toward Campbell soup cans or Coca Cola bottles if they did not see them
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painting and finally in 1961 he expressed the true meaning of pop-art to the world by making art off every day commercial goods. And now we get to the notorious Campbell soup can‚ something simple as that‚ yet Warhol decided to give them a chance of taking the path to become an art piece. Warhol makes more than twenty Campbell soup can paintings that are today a worldwide icon. One of the most known Warhol’s words about pop-art were “Once you ‘got’ pop‚ you could never see a sign the same way again
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Synchronization to achieve the benefits of CPR Regional promotions and variable customer allowances further increased pricing complexity. It is always difficult and almost impossible to keep constant product price because of the pricing complexity generated by regional promotions‚ marketing incentives and variable customer allowances. The CPR (Continuous Product Replenishment) system improved the ability to handle promotion. Traditionally‚ retail stores would need to hold large volumes of inventories
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images of the popular culture such as comic strips‚ magazine ads‚ celebrities‚ and supermarket products. This movement was marked by a fascination with popular culture reflecting the affluence in post-war society. In celebrating everyday objects such as soup cans‚ washing powder‚ comic strips and soda pop bottles‚ the movement turned the commonplace into icons. Some of the most prominent pop artists that are believed to have begun the North-American pop art revolution in the 1960s are Andy Warhol and Roy
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world with his silk screens of Hollywood beauties and the now legendary‚ Campbell ’s Soup Cans. Society‚ up until that point‚ had never seen anything so literal be called art. In fact‚ the Campbell Soup Company forced Warhol to defend the paintings as legitimate works of art after they sued him for copyright infringement. They later dropped the lawsuit after deciding it was good advertisement (Pohland 157). The Soup Cans sparked something inside Warhol and he began to use everyday objects as his inspirations:
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as more than functional. The container became an advertising vehicle and its features helped contribute to product sales. • Self-manufacture threat Temptation for major can users like food/beer producers to make their own cans was high. Campbell Soup Company had actually become one of the largest can producers in the US • Emergence of new materials such as aluminum‚ plastic for packaging Aluminum was light-weight; hence could be transported at lower costs and also recycled easily. • Diversification
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not know how vital they are to the environment. Sharks are being brutalized by fishing boats. Fishermen have been known to catch the shark‚ cut off its’ fins‚ and toss the species back in the ocean. The fins are used for consumption such as shark fin soup which is considered a delicacy in many countries. Without their fins‚ the sharks are unable to maintain their buoyancy and therefore‚ die because they have lost the ability of locomotion. Due to this brutality‚ the Union for the Conservation of Nature
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