1 / 24

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?.

keiji
Download Presentation

Colonial and Revolutionary Art Making A New Nation, Part I

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. 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

More Related