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Colonial and Revolutionary Art Making A New Nation, Part I

Colonial and Revolutionary Art Making A New Nation, Part I. American Studies William Fremd High School. Questions for the Art Quiz. Explain why art was mostly absent for the first few decades of the American Colonies?.

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Colonial and Revolutionary Art Making A New Nation, Part I

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  1. Colonial and Revolutionary ArtMaking A New Nation, Part I American Studies William Fremd High School

  2. Questions for the Art Quiz • Explain why art was mostly absent for the first few decades of the American Colonies? • What was the MOST COMMON colonial art depiction of black (African) and white (European)-racial relations? Why? • How were gender (men and women/boys and girls) roles MOST OFTEN portrayed in colonial art?

  3. Earliest Art in Colonial Life • Art should be considered an artifact of history, not as a document. • Art was notably absent for the first 50-60 years of colonial life. Why? Thomas Smith: Self-Portrait, 1680

  4. Limners • Someone who draws for a specific, private audience • Primary occupation was home decorating (furniture, etc.); portraiture was a sideline • Frequently anonymous (unsigned) Anonymous: The Mason Children, 1670 (attributed to the Freake painter)

  5. Anonymous: Elizabeth Freake and Baby Mary, ca. 1670

  6. Anonymous: Anne Pollard

  7. Ralph Earl: Roger Sherman

  8. Ralph Earl: Portrait of A Man with A Gun

  9. Wife Sister Wife’s Sister Daughter, Elizabeth (I & II) Not there. Then, there. Then, not there. Then, there again? Wealth Robert Feke: Sir Isaac Royall and Family

  10. John Hesselius: Charles Calvert and Colored Slave, 1761

  11. Justus Engelhardt Kuhn: Henry Darnall III as A Child 1715

  12. 18th Century Painting • Drastic improvements in technique: depth, perception • Artists were more well trained. John Singleton Copley: Paul Revere

  13. John Singleton Copley: The Gore Children

  14. John Singleton Copley: Mr. and Mrs. Mifflin

  15. John Singleton Copley: Boy and Squirrel

  16. How is this style different from the others we have seen so far? John Singleton Copley: Watson and the Shark

  17. John Singleton Copley: Watson and the Shark

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