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Bell Ringer 4/8

Bell Ringer 4/8. M.Socrative.com – Room #38178 Question: 1. Who was one of the most original American artists of the time? 2. What did Harlem Renaissance artists do?. Photography & Architecture. Photography. After World War I, significant aesthetic changes occurred in photography

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Bell Ringer 4/8

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  1. Bell Ringer 4/8 • M.Socrative.com – Room #38178 • Question: • 1. Who was one of the most original American artists of the time? • 2. What did Harlem Renaissance artists do?

  2. Photography & Architecture

  3. Photography • After World War I, significant aesthetic changes occurred in photography • Photography was still fairly new • The first camera was invented in 1820 • Several days of exposure was required (8 hours at minimum in direct sunlight) at first. By 1900 it’s down to minutes

  4. View from the Window at Le Gras - Niepce

  5. Photography All photography was originally monochrome (or black and white) Color film comes in the early 20th century, but a lot of photographers stuck with black and white due to its much lower cost

  6. Cameras • 19th Century Studio Camera (portraits)

  7. Cameras • Box Camera – first mass-produced pocket camera using film. • 1900

  8. Cameras • Compact Kodak folding camera • 1922

  9. Cameras • Leica-II • 1932

  10. Photography • Early explorations of photography as an art form tended to employ darkroom techniques, tricks, and manipulation that created works appearing staged and imitative of paintings • Photographs were not getting created from a compositional standpoint, but from an effect viewpoint • People believed that photography must look like “art” (painting) to be art. • You’d see blurred images, extreme contrast, etc. • This movement was NOT popular and did NOT stand the test of time

  11. Photography • During the early years of the 20th century, however, a new generation of photographers arose who determined to take photography towards a more direct and sharply focused approach • Called “straight” photography • It expressed what was photography’s unique vision – recording a moment in time precisely, no tricks!

  12. Photography • The principal American force behind the recognition of photography as a fine art was Alfred Stieglitz (1864-1946) • His own work gained recognition for his clarity of image and reality shots • Especially of clouds and New York City architecture

  13. Alfred Stieglitz Dirigible, 1910 Old & New New York, 1910

  14. Photography • In 1902, Stieglitz formed the Photo-Secessionist group and opened a gallery referred to as 291 • It was at 291 Fifth Avenue in New York City • In addition to showcasing photography, Stieglitz’s efforts promoted many visual artists, including Georgia O’Keefe(who he would eventually marry)

  15. Alfred Stieglitz • Portrait of Georgia O’Keefe

  16. Photography Stieglitz also promoted photography as a fine art in the pages of his illustrated quarterly magazine, Camera Work

  17. “Camera Work” No. 1 No. 2

  18. “Camera Work” No. 9 No. 49

  19. Ansel Adams One of the most famous “straight” photographers was Ansel Adams (1902-1984) He was a leader of modern photography through his sharp, poetic landscape photographs of the American West

  20. Adam’s “Evening, McDonald Lake, Glacier National Park”

  21. Adam’s “The Tetons and the Snake River”

  22. Adam’s “Mount Williamson in the Sierra Nevada”

  23. Ansel Adam • His work did much to elevate photography to the level of art • It emphasized sharp focus and subtle variety in light and texture, with rich detail and brilliant tonal differences • In 1941, he began making photomurals for the United States Department of the Interior • Forced him to master the techniques for photographing the light and space of immense landscapes

  24. Photo Murals for the Government http://www.doi.gov/news/photos/Ansel-Adams-Mural-Project-Opens-at-Interior-Department.cfm

  25. Dorothea Lange There were photographers who choose to document social problems During the Great Depression, a large-scale program in documentary photography began in the US Dorothea Lange (1895-1965) was in the program

  26. Dorothea Lange • Her photographs graphically detailed the erosion of the land and the people of rural America during the Great Depression • Her “Migrant Mother”  • (possibly the most famous photograph of all time!)

  27. Dorothea Lange • Florence Thompson, a 32 year-old widow with 10 children, looks past the viewer with a preoccupied, worried expression • With her furrowed brow and prematurely aged face, she captures the fears of an entire population of people

  28. Dorothea Lange • Two of her children lean on her for support, their faces buried in their mother’s shoulders • Lange consciously avoided including all of the children – she didn’t want to contribute to the widespread resentment of wealthier people in America about overpopulation

  29. Dorothea Lange • She was distressed by the Depression and began photographing the poor and unemployed, bringing their plight to national attention • She took pictures of California’s migrant workers, captioned with their own words • They were so effective that the state established migrant worker camps to alleviate the suffering

  30. Dorothea Lange Eighteen-year-old mother from Oklahoma, now a California migrant. Migratory workers from Oklahoma washing in a hot spring in the desert.

  31. Architecture

  32. Architecture Frank Lloyd Wright (1867-1959) was one of the most influential and innovative architects of the 20th century He wished to initiate new traditions

  33. Frank Lloyd Wright Prairie style was developed around 1900 Wright drew on the flat landscape of the Midwest as well as the simple horizontal and vertical accents of the Japanese style Wright followed Louis Sullivan in his pursuit of form that expressed function He took painstaking care to devise practical arrangements for his interiors and to make the exteriors of his building reflect the interior

  34. Frank Lloyd Wright The Dana-Thomas House –Prairie Style

  35. Frank Lloyd Wright Wright also designed some of the furniture for his houses In doing so, comfort, function, and integration with the total design were his chief criteria Textures and colors in the environment were duplicated in the materials, including large expanses of wood, both in the house and for its furniture

  36. Frank Lloyd Wright He made a point of giving furniture several functions Tables, for example, might also serve as cabinets All spaces and objects were precisely designed to present a complete environment

  37. Furniture

  38. Frank Lloyd Wright Wright was convinced that houses profoundly influence the people who live in them, and saw the architect as a “molder of humanity” Wright’s works range from the simple to the complex and from the serene to the dramatic He was always experimental

  39. Wright’s Robie House The Serene side of Frank Lloyd Wright

  40. Wright’s Kaufman House The dramatic side of Frank Lloyd Wright

  41. Wright’s Kaufman House • Also known as “falling water” • Wright’s buildings seem to grow out of, and never violate, their environment • This is one of his most inventive designs

  42. Wright’s Kaufman House • In Bear Run, Pennsylvania • It seems to erupt out of its natural rock site • Its beige concrete terraces blend harmoniously with the colors of the surrounding stone

  43. Wright’s Kaufman House • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9CVKU3ErrGM

  44. Le Corbusier (1887-1965) He was concerned with integrating structure and function and was especially interested in poured concrete He demonstrated his belief that a house was “a machine to be lived in” in several residences of that period By “machine” he meant that a house should be efficiently constructed from standard, mass produced parts, and logically designed for use

  45. Le Corbusier (1887-1965) He used a series of slabs supported on slender columns The resulting building was boxlike, with a flat roof, which could be used as a terrace

  46. Le Corbusier’s The Villa Savoye

  47. Le Corbusier’s The Villa Savoye • The supporting structures freed the interior from the necessity of weight-supporting walls • The design is crisp and functioning

  48. Le Corbusier’s The Villa Savoye • A Tour

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