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Joseph Cornell. Post-War and Contemporary Artist. 1903-1972.
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Joseph Cornell Post-War and Contemporary Artist 1903-1972
Cornell used boxes as a means of personal expression. A creative but reclusive genius, Joseph Cornell was famous for his compartmentalized box creations. Cornell's boxes displayed assemblages of tiny bits and fragments of his life's experiences to kindle a much broader emotional insight. Image of the renowned American artist Joseph Cornell {Is the use of black and white more powerful than color to show emphasis?}
Romantic Museum, Joseph Cornell. Cigar box covered in cloth 1865-1875. • There are a number of reasons an artist may want to make an assemblage. For traditional artists like Cornell, adding a found object is an effective way to add texture and depth to a collage, or to add a funky 3-D appeal. Another reason two-dimensional artists may want to create an assemblage is because it is a non-threatening way to explore making sculpture. • {Do you think unity is easier demonstrated from inside the box?}
Roses des Vents, 1942, Cornell Mondrian boxes Robyn Gordon-Regaining Sense of Peace Think of areas to design as particular spaces or sections at a time to develop. {How can color be used as an expression of balance?}
Cornell’s boxes gave us “clues” to his favorite pastime through the use of image proportion. M’lleFaretti, Joseph Cornell, 1933 • {Why do you think Cornell used three flower vases in a row? Can you name the principle of design the vases demonstrate?}
Today we used Joseph Cornell’s art to recognize the aesthetics of boxesthat makes a statement or ‘speaks’ to us by affecting our senses in some way. • Sometimes there are prompts like printed material (a particular letter symbol), bits of old advertisements (magazine cut-outs), or a nostalgia object (3-D), so that an art piece defines a personal statement. Aesthetics communicates differently in some way to each of us as we view these boxes. • It is in our nature to try to make sense of the nonsensical sometimes – even though we have to accept that life is sometimes like art (and like Cornell’s boxes) – just the principle of the thing!
Can you find balance, proportion, rhythm, emphasis, and unity in these art boxes? Joseph Cornell • Apt.3, Altered art box Aldwyth, Ackland Museum, cigar box Student art box from Rowe Junior . High School in Athens, PA.