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postmodernism AVI 4M1. First, some background:. Eurocentric view of the world. Background:. Background: The traditional notion of Western Art:. Kant : Art is concerned with Truth and Beauty, and is universally understood.
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postmodernism AVI 4M1
Background: Background: The traditional notion of Western Art: Kant: Art is concerned with Truth and Beauty, and is universally understood. Art is an ennobling thing; Truth and Beauty enter the soul of the receptive viewer and make him/her nobler. Hegel: Liberal progressivism: history (Art included) is linear; things inevitably get better. By this way of thinking, Art improves through history. European civilization was considered to be the best.
Background: Background: Traditional Viewof Western Art: - Art makes the viewer nobler through Truth and Beauty;
Art makes the viewer nobler through Truth and Beauty; The Death of Socrates, David
Background: Background: Traditional Viewof Western Art: - Art makes the viewer nobler through Truth and Beauty; • - There was one, agreed-upon notion of art; one story; a male story;
There was one, agreed-upon notion of art; • one story; • a male story; • Augustus, Roman sculpture
Background: Background: Traditional Viewof Western Art: - Art makes the viewer nobler through Truth and Beauty; • - There was one, agreed-upon notion of art; one story; a male story; - Art is earnest, formal and serious;
- Art is earnest, formal and serious; Michelangelo Buonarroti, David
Background: Background: Traditional Viewof Western Art: - Art makes the viewer nobler through Truth and Beauty; - There was one, agreed-upon notion of art; one story; a male story; - Art is earnest, formal and serious; - High Art (fine art) is distinct from low art (craft and folk art).
“High Art” “Low Art”
Background: Background: Traditional Viewof Western Art: - Art makes the viewer nobler through Truth and Beauty; • There was one, agreed-upon notion of art; one story; a male story; - Art is earnest, formal and serious; - High Art (fine art) is distinct from low art (craft and folk art). - Art can be analyzed by using the Elements and Principles of Design.
Art can be analyzed by using the Elements and Principles of Design • Gericault, Raft of the Medusa.
Background: Background: Traditional Viewof Western Art: - Art makes the viewer nobler through Truth and Beauty; • There was one, agreed-upon notion of art; one story; a male story; - Art is earnest, formal and serious; - High Art (fine art) is distinct from low art (craft and folk art). - Art can be analyzed by using the Elements and Principles of Design. Art was made by primarily men, trained in a male-dominated tradition. Art was usually made for and paid for by men in the “Establishment” (the nobility, the wealthy, the Church, the government, etc).
Who made this? When /where was it made? For whom was it made? What is its message? Michelangelo Buonarroti, Pieta, 1499, marble
Background: Modernism:While Modernist art was no longer always made for the Establishment, Avant Garde / Modernist Art hadn’t really changed that much…. • Art still makes the viewer nobler: through the Truth of the Artist’s vision; • Still one, agreed-upon notion of art; • one story; the male artist’s story; - Art is still earnest, formal and serious; • High Art (fine art) is still distinct from • low art (craft and folk art). • Art can still be analyzed by using • the Elements and Principles of Design.
Who made this? When /where was it made? For whom was it made? What is its message? Piet Mondrian, Composition in Red, Yellow, Blue and Black, 1922, oil on canvas
Modernism had two threads: • Expressionism • Dadaism • Cubism • Surrealism • Abstract Expressionism • Pop Art Cold Modernism Hot Modernism • detached; earnest; serious; formal; high/low art • Playful, ironic, subversive of serious earnestness; no high/low art • Visual/ optical: the Elements and Principles of Design fit • Idea-based / Conceptual: the Elements and Principles of Design don’t fit!
Dadaism • Surrealism • Pop Art Hot Modernism • Playful, ironic, subversive of serious earnestness; no high/low art • Idea-based / Conceptual: the Elements and Principles of Design don’t fit!
Hot Modernism’s use of: • readymades /found objects; • chance; • humour / Irony; • the centrality of the concept, • redefined what art could be… And lead to and lead to a new tradition in art now known as…
postmodernism New forms of Art-making became the norm: - Time-based art: performance, video art, installation art; - Conceptual art (art that may not have any physical form, but rather is purely an idea); Gary Kosuth, One and Three Chairs, 1965
African-American Feminist The biggest change is that the white, male notion of art is no longer the only one; there are now many stories - as many stories as there are artists and viewers. Developing World Gay / Lesbian
Judy Chicago, The Dinner Party
Barbara Kruger, You Construct Intricate Rituals
Joyce Wieland, Reason Over Passion
Barbara Kruger, You Construct Intricate Rituals
Who made this? When /where was it made? For whom was it made? What is its message? Betty Saar, The Liberation of Aunt Jemima
Background: Postmodernism: • Art does not make viewers nobler: it rather engages their intellect and imagination; • there is no agreed-upon notion of art; • there are many stories; - Art is often playful, ironic, satirical; • There is no clear distinction between • high art and low art; -The Elements and Principles of Design no longer apply as they don’t address conceptual content or context..
Deconstruction is necessary in Post Modern art: Deconstruction means ‘taking apart’ art in order to interpret it. Artworks are meant to be decoded and read. Since there is no agreed-upon story anymore, many meanings can be derived. Context is the key to deconstruction: context refers to the conditions surrounding a person or thing.
Context In Post Modernism we consider the context of the artwork, the artist and the viewer / critic and how all these contexts interact to create meanings.
Deconstruction: Context of the Artist: >Gender / Race / Sexual orientation > Philosophy / goals / movement > Historical context > Geographical context • Context of the Artwork: • >Title • >Medium • >Date (historical context) • >Style • >Size • >Location • >Content of artwork Context of the Viewer / Critic: >Gender / Race / Sexual orientation > Philosophy / agenda > Historical context > Geographical context