800 likes | 847 Views
Exploring Art Final Exam Study Guide. Use this slideshow, along with your lecture notes, as a guide to study for the final exam. This slideshow will help but issues not addressed by this guide may appear on the test. The exam will cover anything we have learned since the midterm
E N D
Exploring Art Final Exam Study Guide • Use this slideshow, along with your lecture notes, as a guide to study for the final exam. This slideshow will help but issues not addressed by this guide may appear on the test. • The exam will cover anything we have learned since the midterm • The exam will be structure similar to the mid-term exam with multiple choice, short answer, matching, and essay questions • There will also be a memorization section where you will shown an image and you will be required to list the artist, artwork title, and the period or style of the artwork. The images on this part of the exam will come only from this study guide. Some images will have missing titles or artists and that is ok. • Additionally you will be shown a work of art you have never seen before and you must indicate the period or style associated with that artwork, guess the artist, and defend your answer. Therefor it is important to know the characteristics of artwork from each period so that you can recognize them when you encounter a new work.
Venus de Milo, or • Aphrodite of Melos • 150BCE
Laocoon and His Sons • Likely 42-20 BCE • Greek or possibly Roman copy of a Greek original
Colosseum, • Rome
Floor Mosaic of Sea Creatures • Pompeii
Classical Chinese and Japanese Art
Terra cotta warriors, Qin Dynasty, China
Huang Gongwang Dwelling in the Funchun Mountains Scroll Painting (Chinese)
Katsuchika Hokusai • Great Wave off Kanagawa
Renaissance means “rebirth” and refers to the revival of interest in ancient Greek and Roman culture and Art
Artists became very interested in the natural world and in replicating it as accurately as possible. • Linear perspective • Chiaroscuro • Atmospheric perspective • Idealized bodies (like the Greek and Romans)
Italy was the birthplace of the Renaissance. • Powerful Church located here, patron of the arts • Economically Powerful • Social structure that had city-states competing for the best artists
David • Bronze • Donatello, 1430
The Birth of Venus • Sandro Botticelli • 1480, 6’7” x 9’2”
Renaissance of Northern Europe • Less dramatic a change than was seen in Italy • Still a concern with accurate depictions and effects of light and space, particularly fine details • Growth out of late Middle Ages artwork
Arnolfini and Wife • (one of many names) • Jan van Eyck, 1434
Decent from the Cross • Rogier van der Weyden, 1435
Decent from the Cross (Detail) • Rogier van der Weyden, 1435
Account of the symbols of objects in the text • The Ambassadors • Hans Holbein the Younger, 1533
The High Renaissance to the Late Renaissance • “If a ninja turtle was named after him… • …he’s probably from the high renaissance.” • -Neal Galloway
Vitruvian Man • Leonardo da Vinci, 1490
David • Michelangelo, 1501-1504
Sistine Chapel Ceiling • Michelangelo, 1508-1512
School of Athens • Raphael, 1509-1511
Venus of Urbino • Titian, 1538
Enlightenment Art • Rococo, Neoclassicism, Romanticism and Realism
French Art Academy and annual Salons • Inherently conservative • Women were not allowed as students, pre-trained women could apply as artists. • Hierarchy of artwork subjects • History including biblical • and mythological subjects • Portraiture • Still life • Landscape
Rococo • The Swing • Fragonard, 1767-68
The Oath of the Horatii • Jacques-Louis David, 1784-85 • Neo-Classical
Realism • The Stonebreakers • Gustave Courbet, 1849
Modern Art • (Modernist, Modernism)
Modern Art • Tendency toward abstraction and non-representation • Visual experimentation • Photography’s effect on painting and drawing • Industrial Revolution • Influence of Science and Technology on artistic practice and philosophy • Self referential
Avant-Garde and Kitsch • Clement Greenberg
Les Demoiselles d’Avignon (The Mademoiselle of Avegnon) • Picasso, 1907
Expressionism • The Joy of Life • Henri Matisse, 1905-06
The Fountain • Marcel Duchamp (R. Mutt), 1917 • Dada
Number 8 • Jackson Pollock • Abstract Expressionism
Obey • (different versions) • Shepard Fairy
Girl and Soldier, West Bank Wall • Banksy, 2007
Graphic Novels and • Video Games
Graphic Novels • A mashup of two artistic mode of expression: • Image-making and writing
Maus • Art Spiegelman
Flower, That Game Company • 2009
Contemporary Art • Art that was made from about 1960s to present day • Categorizing Art that is being made now is difficult. Perhaps we will have a better understanding of the influential artists of our time, only in 100 years from now.
Breakdown of the divisions between media- Many contemporary artists draw, paint, sculpt, make video art etc… • Outward looking- Frustrated with the insulated nature of Modern art, most contemporary artists make art that comments on issue in the world at large (rather than art that talks about art) • Everything is possible- The legacy of Modernism, artwork in any media on any topic is a potentially legitimate way of working • Well crafted- Art of the mid-20th century could often get away with a messy and haphazard style or construction. This is no longer as acceptable in the Post-modern world. Contemporary Art