1 / 26

Art History Timeline

Art History Timeline. 30,000 BC- present. England. Ireland. Stone Age 30,000-10,000 b.c. 40,000 years ago Humans were hunter-gatherers– day revolved around food Portable art- could take with them Stationary art- cave walls, stayed forever Art was about FOOD or FERTILITY Artists unknown.

alima
Télécharger la présentation

Art History Timeline

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 History Timeline 30,000 BC- present

  2. England Ireland Stone Age30,000-10,000 b.c. 40,000 years ago Humans were hunter-gatherers– day revolved around food Portable art- could take with them Stationary art- cave walls, stayed forever Art was about FOOD or FERTILITY Artists unknown

  3. Egyptian5,000 b.c.- 300 a.d. Painting and sculpture Symbolic: animals, colors, size Emphasis on life after death

  4. CLASSICAL ARTGreek & Roman1700-1400 b.c. • Classical Art’s main medium was sculpture • Greek: Athletics, Mythology, Daily life, Doric/Ionic columns • Athens • Most famous temple: Parthenon (dedicated to Athena) • Perfection, balance, idealism • Roman: Mythology, Real people, Historical events, Corinthian columns • Rome • Most famous temple: Pantheon (dedicated to 7 gods) • Practical, realism

  5. The Senate Ancient Ruins Roman Art SarcófagoLudovisi– The Battle of Rome Pantheon Vatican City- St. Peter’s Basillica Colosseum

  6. Asian653 b.c-1900 a.d Chinese, Japanese, Indian Oldest and continuous kind of art– traditional Painting, sculpture, pottery, decorative arts Ceramic factories showed wealth and power of emperors (still have today) Serene, meditative art; Nature Ink on silk or paper

  7. Hanshan Temple- bell rings at Chinese New Year- there is one in Japan too Chinese Art Hanging Temple- for 3 religions: Buddhism, Confucianism, and Taoism Terracotta Soldiers– more than 7,000 total Buddha- Yungang Grottoes- over 51,000 Buddha statues in this cave

  8. Byzantinea.d. 476-1853 • Eastern Rome • More abstract & symbolic than Roman art • Flat or One-dimensional • Why the change? Debate over whether there was a decline in artistic talent or if there was an oriental influence. • Artists were members of the religious house • Long, Narrow, Solemn faces– Bodies faced front • Religion- icon image of Jesus Christ • Dedication of Constantinople- capitol city, ruled by Constantine • Illumination of biblical texts • Ivory reliefs, no sculptures-- idolatry

  9. Byzantine Art San Vitale Basillica in Ravenna, Italy Mosaics Giunta Pisano, Crucifix in Bologna, Italy

  10. Islamica.d. 476-1453 • Architecture, calligraphy, painting, glass, ceramics, textiles (rugs) • Maze-like designs, repeating elements- arabesques • Only God is perfect • Infinite and indivisible nature of God • People were not portrayed in art- idolizing • Secret miniatures • Architecture: Mosque, Tomb, Palace, Fort

  11. Middle Ages500-1400 • Also known as the Dark Ages: decrease in prosperity, stability, and population • Art was associated with churches because it was costly, so almost all art was religious • Over 1,000 years of art in Europe; includes many major art movements: • Romanesque: Piestic paintings- religious, large churches, no portraits, muted colors • Gothic art: brighter colors, sculptures, realism, naturalism, stained glass, symmetry

  12. Middle Ages Art fresco Vaulted ceilings & Flying buttresses

  13. Renaissance1400-1550 Rebirth of Classical traditions– but apply scientific advancements & religious changes Naturalism, 3D, lifelike “rescuing and restoring art” from the “crude Byzantine style” Anatomy & human emotion Themes: religious altar pieces, fresco cycles, and small works for private collections Techniques: perspective, foreshortening, sfumato, chiaroscuro, balance, proportion

  14. Renaissance Techniques foreshortening sfumato chiaroscuro

  15. Mannerism1527-1580 Break rules Artifice over nature Intellectual sophistication Beautiful, “has style” Compositional tension & instability rather than balance & clarity of the Renaissance Elongated proportions, stylized poses, no clear perspective, theatrical lighting, strange settings

  16. Baroque1600-1750 Started by Catholic church- the arts should communicate religious themes Art as a weapon in the religious wars- church wanted to speak to the illiterate, not just the well informed To impress visitors– express triumph, power, & control The name was at first given as an insult– too many unnecessary details, noisy--translates to “elaborate” Exaggerated motion, clear details

  17. Wanderer above the Sea of Fog Romanticism1780-1850 The Nightmare Sea of Ice, Wreck of Hope Liberty Leading the People • Not love romance, but GLORIFICATION– glorified concepts such as liberty, survival, ideals, hope, awe, heroism, despair, and the various feelings that nature evokes in humans (views & sunsets) • First start seeing feelings of the artist, not everyone feels the same • Creation from nothingness– originality • Characteristics: • Emotional emphasis • Nature can kill you (shipwrecks, lots of shipwrecks) • Current events • No exact style, technique, or subject matter The Raft of the Medusa

  18. The End of the Working Day Realism1848-1900 Bonjour, MonsiuerCorbet Focus on every day life Represent art truthfully– portray exactly what they saw Rejected Romanticism– avoided over exaggerated emotionalism and drama, instead portrayed things as they really were with no emotions involved Included all classes of people in all aspects of life (even if it was ugly) Ordinary people in ordinary life Photography was introduced and became popular The Arnolfini Portrait

  19. Impressionism1865-1885 Haystacks • Began in Paris by a group of artists • Name comes from Monet’s painting, “Impression Sunrise” • Characteristics • Small, thin, visible brushstrokes • Ordinary subject matter • Capturing effects of natural light & how it changes • Unusual visual angles • Movement • Colors often aren’t mixed, instead laid side by side • Avoids using black paint, grays (complimentary colors to shade) • Didn’t wait for paint to dry • Painted in evenings to create shadows & studied natural colors of light Lydia Leaning on Her Arms

  20. Post-Impressionism1885-1910 Continued impressionist style, but emphasized geometric forms Exaggerated an aspect of impressionism Impasto- thick application of paint– shows off texture and paint marks Used unnatural color Pointillism

  21. Fauvism1900-1910 Led by Matisse and Derain Only had 3 exhibitions, lasted a short time Wild brushstrokes Strong color Not realistic; abstract; simple Color theory study

  22. Cubism1905-1920 Considered most influential movement of 20th century Objects are analyzed, broken up, and rearranged Many viewpoints instead of just one Abstract Inspired movements in other art forms (music, literature, theatre)

  23. Surrealism1917-1950 Painting dreams Exploring the unconscious– automatic writing Illogical scenes that looked realistic Made creatures out of every day objects Element of surprise

  24. Abstract Expressionism1940-1960 First American-only influenced movement-- NYC Spontaneous, automatic, subconscious “It’s better to catch the spirit of the sea, rather than all it’s tiny ripples.”

  25. Modernism1960-present Freedom of expression Experimentation Pop-Art Consumerism Radicalism Startled audiences Collage, installations “ready-mades” Performance art

More Related