Unit VIII Course Project Art Gallery: Commentary

ART 1301, Art Appreciation I 1 Cou rse Learning Outcomes for Unit VIII Upon completion of this unit, students should be able to: 1. Justify visual arts in relation to history and culture. 1.1 Identify art’s role in society. 4. Analyze artworks using the application of media, techniques, and processes. 4.1. Explain trends of early 20 th-century art. 5. Recognize an artwork or artist by style and time period. Reading Assignment Chapter 22: Early Twentieth Century Chapter 23: Between World Wars The below link contains an interactive audio that will further explain Dali Surrealism using Salvador Dali’s The Persistence of Memory as an example: Pearson (n.d. ). Salvador Dali, the persistence of memory . [Audiovisual webpage]. Retrieved from http://closerlook.pearsoncmg.com/view.php?type=closerlook&id=656 Click here to access the Closer Look video titled “Salvador Dali, The Persistence of Memory .” Click here to access the video transcript. The below link contains an interactive audio that will further explain Pablo Picasso ’s Guernica . The video explains the history of the art piece. Pearson (n.d.). Pablo Picasso’s Guernica [Audiovisual webpage]. Retrieved from http://closerlook.pearsoncmg.c om/view.php?type=closerlook&id=640 Click here to access the Closer Look video titled “Pablo Picasso’s Guernica .” Click here to access the video transcript. Unit Lesson Chapter 22: Early Twentieth Century Before World War I, 1900 to 1914 : Throughout the first decade of the 20th century, many western precepts concerning our understanding of reality changed tremendously. The following include some of the scientific advancements that contributed to these changes:  Sigmund Freud publishes The Interpretation of Dreams , an enormous work that elucidated the supremacy of the subconscious mind, 1900.  Flight of the first powered aircraft. Wright brothers, 1903. UNIT VIII STUDY GUIDE Twentieth Century Art ART 1301, Art Appreciati on I 2 UNIT x STUDY GUIDE Title  The radioactive element radium is isolated by Marie and Pierre Curie, 1903.  Einstein’s theory of relativity forever altered the world’s understanding of space, time, and matter, 1905. Many changes in Western lifestyle were brought about in the 20th century. Countless new factory jobs drew people from the countryside into the unfamiliar and perhaps objectionable environments of the crowded cities (urbanization). The burgeoning market economy and long work days of the industrial revolution displaced the worker from home life —a big adjustment from the rural family -farm lifestyle. Many factory workers were faced with low wages and dangerous or disagreeable working conditions while the affluent prospered. Gross disparities in wealth between social classes resulted in the most brutal uprisings of the 20th century. China, Ru ssia, and Mexico saw the bloodiest of these revolutions. The early 1900s also saw extraordinary transformations in art. Many 20 th-century artists were stirred by changes in thinking and perception brought on by scientific advances. These changes in art, i t can be said, somewhat mirrored the 20th century itself in that the changes happened very quickly and in diverse ways.

There was a cascade of independent thought brought on by investigation and discovery. Expressive style s: The new forms of painting in t he early 20th century were deeply influenced by Impressionist and Post -Impressionist artists, as well as ancient and non -Western cultures such as Africa and Oceania. This influence led them to negate the authority of the Renaissance, which had dominated We stern culture and art for over 500 years. As stated by Frank ( 2014 c), “Expressionism is a general term for art that emphasizes inner feelings and emotions over objective depiction” (p. 395). In Europe, Romantic or expressive tendencies can be traced from 17th century Baroque art to the early 19th century painting of Eugene Delacroix, who influenced the expressive side of post impressionism (Frank, 2014c). The three main schools of Expressionism were: 1. Les Fauves ( the W ild Beasts) 2. Die Bricke (The Bridge) 3. Der Blaue Reiter (The Blue Rider) The Fauves were a French development led by Henri Matisse whose intent was to show enthusiasm.

Fauvism used color a s an expressive element. While F auvism is an expressive style, Expressionism refers to art that emphasi zes inner feeling and emotion. The Bridge and the Blue Rider were schools of German Expressionism. Members of the Bridge, who focused on depicting raw emotion, hoped to lead a revolt against academic painting and establish a new, vigorous aesthetic that would form a bridge between the Germanic past and the modern experience (Frank, 2014c) . The Blue Rider group, led by W assily Kandinsky, shared the concern members of the Bridge felt for developing an art that would turn people away from false values toward spir itual rejuvenation. The three groups shared common goals but differed slightly. The Germans’ work was characterized by sharp, vivid, often angular subject matter, loud color, and a crude manner of depiction. They were heavily influenced by the work of Post Impressionists Paul Gauguin , Vincent Van Gogh , and Edvard Munch. They placed great importance on the human condition, exploring the themes of sorrow, passion, spirituality and mysticism. They were also influenced by medieval German art and Africana and Oceana. Cubism : Cubis m was a contrast to Expressionism. Cubist painters emphasized the composition of visual elements in a painting over personal expression. They ignored the concept of linear perspective and depth that the Renaissance painters had established and made the pic ture plane a two dimensional space. Pablo Picasso used angular shapes, even turning faces into triangular forms in Les Demoiselles d’Avignon (as shown below) . George Braque painted forms that piled up rhythmically without showing depth. ART 1301, Art Appreciati on I 3 UNIT x STUDY GUIDE Title Cubism became Synthetic Cubism when Picasso and Braque added color, patterned surfaces , and cut -out shapes to form a collage of materials. This was taken to the extreme when Picasso created a guitar from pieces of sheet metal (shown below) , begin ning a new trend in sculpture toward constructing sculptures. Previously , sculptures had been either carved or modeled. (Frank, 2014a, slide 25 ) ART 1301, Art Appreciati on I 4 UNIT x STUDY GUIDE Title Futurism : Inspiration from Cubism led to Futurism in Italy. Futurist s expanded the Cubist concepts of multiple vantage points (no vanishing point) by adding implied motion or the feeling of speed. They were trying to capture the new speed of life in the early 20th century and focused on the idea of a speeding car. This concept of motion was brought back to Cubism by Marcel Duchamp when he was influenced by sequential images captured by a camera. His painting, Nude Descending a Staircase, No. 2 , depicts an abstract body in movement. (Frank, 2014a, slide 35) ART 1301, Art Appreciati on I 5 UNIT x STUDY GUIDE Title Chapter 23: Between World Wars 1917 -1939 Dada : Dada, an ambiguous word, was a protest against the horrors of World War I. Dada was a rebellion against the traditional values that these artists felt had contributed to an absurd and horrific war. WWI was the first mechanized mass killing the world had ev er experienced. The Dadaists rejected many of the previously accepted aesthetic and social values (Frank, 2014c). They felt that trying to find meaning in such a horrific world was a pointless exercise. They sought instead to sound an alarm against declini ng moral values to make a desperate appeal for all art to share a creative basis on which to build a universal consciousness. The Dadaists used spontaneity, chance, and a sense of play in their work. Marcel Duchamp was their most radical member and was po ssibly the wildest artist of the 20th century. He often used mass -produced objects , which he called readymades . He is most famous for signing a urinal with someone else’s name and calling it Fountain and for drawing a mustache and goatee on a postcard of t he Mona Lisa. Dadaists expanded on the Cubists ’ use of collage and created photomontage in which parts of different photographs are reassembled in interesting ways. A commonly held sentiment among Dadaists was that art was dead. “By this they meant that i t was useless to try to create bea uty in a world that could destroy itself” (Frank, 2014 c, p. 413). Surrealism : Surrealism began in the mid -1920s when a group of writers and painters gathered to protest the direction of European culture (Frank, 2014c) . They were concerned that the consciousness of Europeans was unbalanced due to excessive emphasis on science, rationality, and progress. (Frank, 2014a, slide 53) ART 1301, Art Appreciati on I 6 UNIT x STUDY GUIDE Title They believed in the importance of the unconscious mind and in dreams, hallucinations, and fantasies (Frank, 2014c) . The Surrealists were influenced by the Dadaists and the writings of Sigmund Freud. In 1924, Andre Breton published the first Surrealist manifesto, in which he argued for dreams and reality to coexist. Max Ernst, a former Dadaist and soldier , was an import ant Surrealist. He was haunted by his combat experience. He used frottage technique, rubbing the canvas over a rough surface, to allow for free association and play in his canvasses. Salvador Dali, a Spanish Surrealist, used a representational technique t hat looked almost like photography to create paintings with disturbing images that seemed unreal, like dreams where there is a mystery. Belgian Surrealist Rene Magritte also used illogical subjects as in The Lovers (shown below and on page 415 of your cour se textbook) where they cannot kiss due to the cloths over their heads. Abstract Surrealist Joan Miro used automatism processes such as scribbling or doodling to explore the unconscious. The hope was that an accident might rev eal a suggestion. The Surrealists wanted to expand their consciousness by avoiding using any of the rational planning that art making traditionally involved. Constructivism and De Stijl : Artists of both Constructivism and De Stijl were hoping to create th e basis for a utopian society. “Constructivism , in Russia, focused on developing a new visual language for a new industrial age ” (Frank, 2014 c, p. 417). Using new materials such as plastic, Constructivists were seeking to create art that was relevant to modern life. A group of Dutch artists, known as De Stijl, used geometric elements with the goal of creating a world of universal harmony. De Stijl advocated the use of basic shapes, mostly rectangles, to free painting from both depicting objects and expre ssing personal feelings. Piet Mondrian was known for his many paintings of rectangles using primary colors with black and white. For example, the below image shows Piet Mondrian ’s work, also shown on page 419. (Frank, 2014b, slide 18) ART 1301, Art Appreciati on I 7 UNIT x STUDY GUIDE Title Ideas from Const ructivism and De Stijl movements regarding the search for a new visual language combined with the new materials like steel frames, plate glass walls, and reinforced concrete resulted in a new style of architecture known as International Style. Building cou ld become 3 -dimensional freestanding sculptural artworks. A German school known as the Bauhaus , which designed products, furniture , and buildings, was part of the International Style. (Frank, 2014b, slide 28) ART 1301, Art Appreciati on I 8 UNIT x STUDY GUIDE Title The 1930s : The 1930s was a time of politica l unrest. The Spanish Civil W ar saw the first mass bombing in the northern town of Guernica in 1937. Picasso was commissioned by the Spanish government to paint a mural that year. He responded by painting a mural showing the brutal attack as a statement ag ainst all war (shown below and on page 421 of your textbook). Art of social realism took hold in many countries. Social realism was about communicating social causes and issues. This was supported by the governments as a way of showing an ideal life. In Mexico , the government (Frank, 2014b, slide 34) (Frank, 2014b, slide 30) ART 1301, Art Appreciati on I 9 UNIT x STUDY GUIDE Title paid painters to create murals telling the stories of their history and the recent revolution. This was to be a national art to glorify the traditional Mexican heritage and the new government. Look at the b elow work and consider what you believe it says about the Mexican culture. American artists focused on regional aspects of America after they trained in Paris. Edward Hopper portrayed American life in cities, where he used lig ht to organize the painting. The below image shows Hopper’s Nighthawks and is also located on page 428 of your course textbook. Grant W ood portrayed life in the rural Midwest with the stiff look of early photographs. Thomas Hart Benton created murals depic ting American scenes with curvilinear forms. (Frank, 2014b, slide 38) ART 1301, Art Appreciati on I 10 UNIT x STUDY GUIDE Title The United States was in the Great Depression with m any people unable to find work. The government developed programs that paid people to work on public arts projects known as the W orks Progress Administration (WPA ). The government also hired photographers to document the Dust Bowl. African American artist s were encouraged to connect with their African roots. A style developed on this idea known as the Harlem Renaissance. The W PA ha d community art centers in 100 cities, one of which was Harlem. This is where Jacob Lawrence got his start. His work, General Toussaint l'Ouverture Defeats the English at Saline is shown below and included on page 430 of your course textbook. Their artwork was displayed in a traveling exhibition that influenced other artists across the country. (Frank, 2014b, slide 55) ART 1301, Art Appreciati on I 11 UNIT x STUDY GUIDE Title Reference s Frank, P. (201 4a ). Chapter 22: Early Twentieth Century [PowerPoint slides]. Boston, MA: Pearson Frank, P. (201 4b ). Chapter 23: Between World Wars [PowerPoint slides]. Boston, MA: Pearson Frank, P. (2014 c). Prebles’ artforms: An introduction to the visual arts (11th ed.). Boston, MA: Pearson Suggested Reading If you would like to study the content from the required reading further, consider reviewing the below PowerPoint presentations. The presentations include images of the artwork discussed in the chapter and explanations: Click here to access the Chapter 22 PowerPoint Presentation. Click here for a PDF version of the presentation. Click here to access the Chapter 23 PowerPoint Presentation. Click here for a PDF version of the presentation. (Frank, 2014b, slide 63) ART 1301, Art Appreciati on I 12 UNIT x STUDY GUIDE Title Learning Activities (Non -Graded) Before completing your graded work, consider practicing with the learning activity provided below . Visit the website titled “ Encounter with Marcel Duchamp ” at www.marcelduchamp.org and go to the “Encounter Room,” which displays reproductions of works by this radical artist. View the works and read the accompanying stories. Write an essay about whether you consider these objects to be art. If so, what makes them art? If not, what is the difference between them and a work of art? Also , write about what kind of Dada sculpture yo u would create to look similar to Duchamp’s. How big would your sculpture be, and how would you construct it? Non -graded Learning Activities are provided to aid students in their course of study. You do not have to submit them. If you have questions, cont act your instructor for further guidance and information.