1 / 19

Art Has Power

Art Has Power. Activist Art throughout History. How do you determine an artist’s meaning?. Remember how you felt when you saw Art like this on our field trip?. Sometimes, it is hard. .

hallie
Télécharger la présentation

Art Has Power

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Art Has Power Activist Art throughout History

  2. How do you determine an artist’s meaning? • Remember how you felt when you saw Art like this on our field trip?

  3. Sometimes, it is hard. • Artists always having meaning and intention in their work. Always, and this applies to the blank white piece puzzling you all at the Menil. Robert Hyman 1976 The artist uses only white paint, but different kinds on different materials, using different painting techniques. Paying attention to slight changes.

  4. Lets talk aesthetic theory • aesthetics |esˈTHetiks|(alsoesthetics )pluralnoun [ usu. treated as sing. ]a set of principles concerned with the nature and appreciation of beauty, esp. in art.• the branch of philosophy that deals with the principles of beauty and artistic taste.

  5. We study art history to learn symbolism to decode a painting. • Mythology • Literature • Historical Events • Religion • Time period • Materials • Influences • An other ideas?

  6. basics • Representation- art copies life • Formalism- art follows design principles. • Expressionism- art is expresses emotions and ideas.

  7. How were you judging this work? • How should you have? Which Aesthetic theory. • It is hard when you view it out of context and don’t know the Art History Background and influences.

  8. YOU NEED TO KNOW ART HISTORY!

  9. JACQUES LOUIS DAVID • The Death Of Marat • 1793 • French • The piece is "a moving testimony to what can be achieved when an artist's political convictions are directly manifested in his work." Marat became an instant political martyr while the painting became a symbol of sacrifice in the name of the republic. • Revolution • Voted for the execution of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette. • Supporter of Napoleon. • After Napoleon was overthrown, David was exiled to Belgium and later his body buried there. He was not allowed to be buried in France for his rule in overthrowing Louis XVI. However his heart is buried in Paris.

  10. Franscisco Goya • The Third of May 1808 (Execution of the Defenders of Madrid) 1814 Spanish Commemorates the Spanish resistance to Napolean. Martrydom Chiaroscuro (dramatic lighting from lantern) Stigmata Colors of the Papacy- yellow and white Crucifixion pose

  11. Pablo Picasso • Guernica • 1937 bombing of Basque region of Northern Spain during the Spanish civil war.

  12. Massacre in Korea • Criticism of American intervention In Korean War. 1951 (look familiar?)

  13. John Heartfield • 1891- 1968 • German • He is best known for political montages which he had created during the 1930s to expose German Nazism.

  14. Ben Shahn American, Lithuanian Jewish Heritage Social realism 1898 – 1969 “the lucky Dragon series” This painting is one in a series about "The Lucky Dragon," a Japanese fishing boat hit by the fallout of hydrogen bomb testing in the Bikini Atoll; 22 of the men on board became seriously ill and one, AikichiKuboyama, died. This painting depicts the conclusion of Kuboyama's funeral when 20 pigeons were released. At the funeral Kuboyama's eldest daughter carried a wooden tablet with the words, "The soul of the deceased AikichiKuboyama." His other daughter held a large photograph of her father. In relief is the hydrogen beast, a recurring symbol for nuclear destruction in Shahn's paintings.

  15. This is at the Blanton at UT

  16. Ai Wei Wei Contemporary 1957- Chinese Dissident Artist

More Related