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Definition
Shiva Nataraja
India, bronze
gives tangible form to the unknown
Hinduist god - Shiva
engulfed in flames, dances to destruction and rebirth of world
end of one cycle, beginning of another - circle
small drum - summons up creation
flame of destruction
palm down - protection
palm forward - fear not, peace
stepping on figure of evil |
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Taj Mahal
(Mughal Art)
India
Ornamental dome (roman) - set high on a drum (circular base)
Muslim/Islamic/Persian influence
Seems fragile and weighless - exterior lines reach upward
four minarets/towers for prayer
pure white marble
no human figures or deities - can't depict image of god
uses arabic writing and floral patterns
geometric forms (like mandalas)
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Corbelled Arch
looks like egyptian pyramid
Indian
as it goes up, it narrows interior space
no keystone
horizontally placed brickes - doesn't reduce wall weight
doesn't require height:width ratio like roman round arch
based on post-and-lintel construction
can create vault and dome forms like roman round arches
doesnt allow large, unobstructed interior spaces
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Torso (from Harappa)
India
soft, rounded body - relaxed abdomen = breathing exercises, yoga, enlightenment
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greatest export - buddhism, which travelers and missionaries brought over the Silk Road to China
South Asia
advanced engineering skills
didn't bury their dead with precious objects |
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Definition
Preached social equality, in opposition of social order + Brahmins
Direct and personal access to the spiritual realm
Siddhartha Guatama - Buddha
"awakening"
suffering comes from desires, solution - non-attachment
eightfold path of moral and ethical behavior
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Definition
Detail of east gate with yakshi
The Great Stupa
India - yakshi is not directly Buddhist, comes from older Indian faiths
volumptious body - fertility and abundance
continuation of life - fruitful plants (mango tree)
narrates the story of Buddha without showing Buddha himself |
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The Great Stupa
India/Buddhism
stupas - memorial mounds with Buddha's remains, spiritually visited by walking around them
not to excited - get visitors to think
dome, circle - motion of time, reincarnation |
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Buddha Preaching the First Sermon
India/Buddhism
clothing modeled close to body
first sermon - at Deer Park (deer in seat) |
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The Beautiful Bodhisattva
India/Buddhism
mural depicting a saintly being of have delaed their own reliease in order to help others attain enlightenment
looking downward at world, eyes not closed |
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Definition
Encourages enjoyment
Would become the dominant religion of India
Empasis on ritual sacrifice
Cyclical nature of time, cosmic cycles of creation, destruction and rebirth, and our lives within them
Not one religion - many related faiths
Shiva, Devi (Shakti) and Vishnu
Not based on congregational workship - approach the diety individually with gifts as sacrifices
God radiates outward into the world |
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Definition
Vishnu Dreaming the Universe
relief panel
India/Hinduism
Sleeps on serpent of infinity
Wife, goddess, female side of energy at feet
dreams god Brahma into existence who creates space + time by thinking "may I become many"
surrounded by volumptious figures
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Central Temple at Angkor Wat
India/Hinduism
Templed to diety Vishnu and the king
Based in a mandala - a diagram of cosmic realm = meaning and order |
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Definition
Enlightenment, remained a local religion
welathy individuals were followers as indicated by the temples and libraries
red + blue = typical colors |
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the Birth of Mahavira
opaque watercolor on paper
Jain/India
illuminated manuscript for library
bright colors - red and blue
no linear perspective
not proportional
unnatural twisted view of body
eyes are painted from another angle - painter moved
human eye = spiritual energy
Position and overlap are the primary clues to spatial depth |
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Definition
White Clouds of Xiao and Xiang
Chinese
hanging scroll, ink and color on paper
Landscape = more importanta nd honored subject in Chinese painting tradition
imaginary landscapes - allow viewers to wander through the mind's eye
Midair - a view we could only see if we were mobile like a bird
scrolls - convenient for traveling
can paint a horizontal scene on a hanging scroll |
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Definition
Dwelling in Funchun Mountains
Handscroll, Chinese
Ink on paper
Atmospheric perspective - broad vistas of receding landscape
Contour strokes
Commonly only a foot tall, but many feet in width
Kept rolled up, viewed only occasionally |
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Definition
optical effect caused by the atmosphere that interposes itself between us and the objects we perceive (suggests receiding landscape)
- blue scatters the most
Da Vinci, called it aerial perspective
developed during the Renaissance |
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Definition
We have a written history of 5000+ years
Invented ink, paper, movable printing, fire powder and silk making
Today - Communist since 1949
Since late 1970's - reforms and open up to West = market economy and economic take-off
Political decentralization
Ideological self-reflection
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Definition
China
Shang to Qin
Bronze and terra cotta
(1500 BC - 2060 BC)
Jade, lacquer, precious metals
First emperor of China - Qin, ordered the Great Wall of China and unified the Chinese writing system, thus came calligraphy |
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Terra Cotta Horses and Qarriors
Formative Period - Qin dynasty
First emperor of China commissioned - obsessed with attaining immortality
Surround his tomb (protection), thousands
Originally painted life-like colors
all face east
Confuscius - human conduct and just rule
Life size
Very detailed and lively |
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Definition
Han and Six Dynasties
(206BC - 580AD)
Philosophies (Confuscianism and Daoism)
Painting (mural and court painting)
Calligraphy
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Definition
Developing Period
Pragmatic (practical)
Pricipal concern - peaceful society
Correct and respectful relations among people, beginning with family, then extending outward
Kind of became a religion - linked social with cosmic order
Honor ancestors and Heaven
remained the official ideal over Daoism |
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Developing Period (Han)
Answers about what lie beyond the physical world
Concerned with bringing human life into harmony with nature
dao - "way" or "path"
Way of the Universe - a current flows through all creation
(dont fight it go along with it)
Somewhat also became a religion
Search for immortality
Escape route for educated elite |
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Definition
Sui and Tang
(581-906 AD)
Poetry
Calligraphy
Paiting
Under Sui, virtually the entire country becomes Buddhist
Vast quantities of art were created for the thousands of monasteries, temples and shrines (much of which was later destroyed)
Most popular form of Buddhism - Pure Land |
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Term
Rise of Landscape Painting |
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Definition
Song
(960-1279)
Water/Mountain ink art
continued to make Art for Daoism/Buddhism
Sculpture also played an important role - inside temples, tons of them to reflect hierarchy of paradise |
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Term
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Definition
A Solitary Temple amid Clearing Peaks
Chinese
Song Dynasty/Rise of Landscape Painting
monumental landscape - people are tiny in comparison
mobile midair perspective
monochrome ink
vertical format (hanging scroll)
flowering water
shrouding mists
buildup of forms culminating in towering mountains
human presence is small but harmonious
Daoism ideas about harmony
Confuscian perspective of order of China (emperor at top, surrounded by officials)
Buddhist - Buddha flanked by bodhisattvas
Focus on nature and on man+his story
Disconnected from viewer, far away and timeless/engages viewer and action changes over time
Gloomy, but calm/joyful but clutter and claustrophobic
Subtle meaning/overtly religious
Learn art by copying - imitation |
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Term
Characteristics of Chinese Ink Painting |
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Definition
Water and mountain often as subject matter
Life as a journey
Paint an ideal place out of idealism for escapism
Suggestive; philosophy of life - Taoism
Hiararchy, manifestation of Confucianism
"Action Painting" - the artist throws himself into the painting act - his eyes, body (esp arm and hand) and mind move with the movement of the brush
Monochromic color to highlight spirituality and purity, or escapism
Aerial view (atmospheric perspective), conveying a sense of transcendence
Figure painting focuses on depicting the spirit rather than the appearance |
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Term
Late Development and Achievement in Literature |
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Definition
Yuan, Ming and Qing
(1279-1911)
drama, play, painting and other arts
Split between scholars and government
Four Great Masters of Yuan - four scholar-painters
vivid color and silk were too pretentious, too provession
burshwork is spare and delicate |
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Term
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Definition
Calligraphy - admired above all other arts by scholars
the medium - four treasures
1. (hair) brush
2. ink
3. ink stone
4. (wrinkled) paper
Content of letters is considered unimportant
Red stamps - seals (personal stamps) Chinese concept of Authenticity/Originality
Use water to control intensity
Permanent
Right to left, top to bottom, in columns |
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Definition
Poetry
Painting
Calligraphy
(a tradition of literati painting) |
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Term
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Definition
Used to by the symbol for the emperor, and exclusively used by emperors in Chinese history
Empresses used the pheonix instead
The largest digit (9) could only be used by the emperor and his family
Forbidden city - 9 dragons on wall
No official or ordinary people have have 9 of something, possessing 9 of the same object would suggestion an intention to overthrow the emperor
- could warrant the death penalty upon his entire extended family
That hierarchical political structure was based and maintained by Confucian doctrine
Confucius did not invent or endorse that type of cruel regime |
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Modern and Contemporary Period |
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Definition
the Republic and Communist China
oil painting and art further diversified
(1911-on) |
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Term
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Definition
Formative Period (Shang-Qin)
Developing Period (Han & 6 Dynasties)
Influence of Buddhism (Sui & Tang)
Rise of Landscape Painting (Song)
Late Development and Achievement in Literature (Yuan, Ming and Qing)
Modern and Contemporary Period |
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Definition
Haniwa - figure of a horse
Japan
terra-cotta, earthenware with traces of pigment
simple forms and natural materials (common Japanese theme)
cylindrical shapes (simplified legs)
Saddle to show function
Visually pleasing
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Definition
Inner Shrine (at Ise)
Japan
Rebuilt every 20 years
Humble - wood and dirt
Very orderly
Not modernized
Cylindrical shapes, left unpainted
Can only be entered by imperial family, certain priests
Houses a sword, mirror and jewel (three sacred symboles of Shinto - native religion)
Emphasis on imitation of previous masters, tradition
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Definition
The Tale of Genji
Japan
Secular painting - court ladies + servants
Bird's eye view of interior, roof removed
Stylized
Emotion is never displayed by expression or gestures
Convey emotions through space |
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Term
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Definition
the "floating" torri
Japan
Heritage site
simple, orderly balanced
Intense and complementary colors = eye catching
Pretends to be simple but actually very sophisticated
Shinto shrine |
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Definition
Ryoan-ji Temple
Zen Buddhism (esp. popular among scholars)
Japanese
Plain, soothing colors, natural materials
Visitors go to see courtyard - stones, grass pebbles
Monks combs the pebbles over and over again - zen garden
Focus on life and nature
Tree - blossoms rapidly - opposing sudden change to otherwise suggested gradual change
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Term
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Definition
Sesshu Toyo, Zen-monk
Japanese
Hanging scroll, ink
Tree on a rock or small hill, mountain way off in distance
Emphasizes sudden enlightenment
Splash technique - poured out lump of ink and then branched it out
Shape not organized or planned
Values are different
Hierarchy (society in past) |
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Definition
Kosho, Kuya Preaching
Japanese
Buddhist
Resembles market woman - more realistic/naturalistic
6 small figures represent phrase he said over and over
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Term
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Definition
Hairdressing - Kitagawa Utamaro
Japanese
Woodblock print (well known, best in West Japan)
Everyday life, human activity
Can be repeated and reproduced
Very colorful
1st art form that came to win over Western audience |
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Term
Early Renaissance: A Revival |
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Definition
1400-1500, Florence - "new athens"
Growth of commerce and competition between cities
New merchant patrons, in addition to church and state
Revival of Classical antiquity: humanism
Focus on the natural world, on the individual, most perfect creation and on subject matter derived from Classical antiquity - mythology, nude etc...
Naturalistic or illusionistic style based on modeling, chiaroscuro, cast shadows, linear and atmospheric perspective, foreshortening, study of anatomy and proportions, expression of emotion: painting is a "window" through which we see the natural world
Painting, sculpture and architecture elevated from manual crafts to intellectual activities based on science and understanding
Artist gains new status, and modern concept of art emerges |
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Definition
Madonna in the Meadows
Raphael
Italian - High Renaissance
Subject: Virgin Mary, baby Jesus & John the Baptist
Implied triangle, Jesus divides it - creates a sense of order
Background didn't match Mary - forced, just for decoration
Oil on panel
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Definition
The Birth of Venus
Botticelli
Italian - Early Renaissance
Tempera on canvas
Headed toward more realistic
Still on one plane - flat water
Does attempt to occupy space with contrast, but color is still solid in some parts
Too orderly, the patterns like the wave flatten the picture
Cloak pattern shows realism and detail
Water values are not gradual
No linear perspective
Movement comes from diagonal lines from god of wind, hair and falling flowers
Imitates the contrapasto
Implied triangle with color
Supernatural origin - long neck, cut-off shoulder
Revival of Ancient Greek and Roman Art - similar posture to Venus de Milo
Still popularly referenced today
First to see nudity since Classical times |
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Term
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Definition
Florence and Rome
1500-1525
"Renaissance" man and concept of artists as "genius"
Begin to see more 3D
Idealized perfection of human figure
Grandeur, balance, stability and harmony |
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Term
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Definition
Study of Human Proportions
Leonardo da Vinci
Italian - High Renaissance
Numerical relationships hold the key to beauty
Perfect Human Proportions - divine order
He wrote in mirror style
Tried to capture human emotion in truest form
Very meticulous |
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Term
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Definition
Someone who is very well informed about, or very good at doing, many different, often quite unrelated, things.
Jack-of-all-trades |
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Definition
The Last Supper
Leonardo Da Vinci
Italian - High Renaissance
Very realistic and 3D
Linear perspective
Focal point - Jesus's head
Incorporated physical exhibition into painting (the wall it was painted on)
Subject: Christ + 12 disciples
Foreshortening
Don't see the bodies because of the table
Lines radiate from Christs's head - all creation radiates from God |
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Definition
Mona Lisa
Leonardo da Vinci
Italian - High Renaissance
Sfumato - dreamy, veils the painting
The background doesn't connect and isn't usual for a portrait
No perceivable transition between colors and tones
No lines or borders
Dangerous beauty, fatal attraction, mysterious sphinx
Probably used to be larger |
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Term
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Definition
The subtle and minute graduation of tone and color used to blur or veil the contours of a form in painting
Example: Mona Lisa
Translucent layer that blocks the view
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Definition
Sistine Chapel
"Creation of Adam"
Michelangelo's Ceiling
Italian - High Renaissance
He originally started as a sculptor, then hired as a painter
Took 4 years
Adam + Eve(naked)--> as God saw people
Dynamic and active
Figures are painted like sculptors
God's hand is direct, determined and powerful
Adam's hand is limp, passive and sloppy - spirit of life hasn't been breathed into him yet
Central focus - hands
Frescoes
Architectural framework of squares, rectangles and triangles
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Definition
School of Athens
Raphael
Italian - High Renaissance
Subject: All the scholars of that time
Linear perspective with round arches to mimic setting - walls within walls
Plato, hand pointing up - metaphysical world
Aristotle, looking left - earthly, physical world
Foreshortening
Well balanced - like Last Supper
Vatican Palace
Renaissance ideals of perfection, beauty, naturalistic representation, noble principles
Idealized, more perfect than life, full-bodied and dynamic bodies
Golden Age of Renaissance + Golden Age of Greece |
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Definition
David
Michelangelo
Marble
Italian - High Renaissance
Muscular, Strong (he knows body from inside out)
Right before David killed in the enemy
Suspenseful
Contraposto
Naked - Classical, spear bearer influence
Focused - wrinkles + eyebrows
Other hand is very tense
God is on his side
Hands are too big - out of proportion, probably intentional |
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Term
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Definition
David
Donatello
Italian - Early Renaissance
Younger, already killed enemy (head under foot)
More relaxed |
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Term
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Definition
Sant Andrea - Alberti
Italian Renaissance
Faux columns, not functional - more decorational
Did borrow the traingle on top of the square, the idea behind the columns and the arches
Renaissance ideal - grandeur
Rhythms to articulate facade |
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Term
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Definition
Learned to use color in oil
Focus on common everyday Christians (Protestants)
Mirror: reflect God
Obsession with minute detail
Originals of painting in manuscripts illumination
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Term
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Definition
Merode Altarpiece
Campin
Northern Renaissance
Left side - the couple who commissioned it, onlookers
Angel + Virgin Mary reading precious bible
Salvation story - The Annunciation
Lily = purity, candle, smoke - life of christ (details)
Intuitive perspective (not linear) - receding parallel lines unsystematically done
Light and shadow = jewel like quality
Northern qualities of precise outer appearance of subject |
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Definition
Double Portrait
Jan van Eyck
Northern Renaissance |
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Term
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Definition
St. Francis in the Desert
Nothern Renaissance
Light symbolizes God
Donkey = community
Clearly divided into foreground, middle ground and background
Good illusion of depth
Landscape = necessary
God = sheppard, believers = sheep |
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Term
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Definition
19th century
ex: Green house, Eiffel Tower
Metal can make beautiful architecture
Metal can provude a solid framework for a very large structure, self-sustaining and permanent |
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Term
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Definition
Geodesic Dome
Industrial style
A bubble, formed by a network of metal rods arranged in triangles and further organized into tetradomes
Can be covered in serveral lightweight materials (wood, glass, plastic)
Very light in weight relative to size
Very strong
Requires no interior support, lots of available interior space
Individual segments can be prefabricated to allow quick assembly
Endless options of climate and light control
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Term
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Definition
Skeleton and skin
First erect a steel "cage", then apply skin
Usually requires an elevator
Proto-international and international |
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Term
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Definition
Transparent, or easy to transport
Skeleton and skin construction
Cast iron
Glass
Prefabrication
Key indicator - use of industrial materials (nails, iron, steel)
Geodesic dome |
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Term
Proto-international style |
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Definition
Came with start of urbanization
Universal/basic geometric form
Skeleton and skin
Steel frame construction
Elevators
Skyscrapers
Key indicator - capped roof and terra cotta frieze decorations |
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Term
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Definition
Native materials
Architecture blends into natural environment
Interior and exterior visually and physically integrated
Open floor plans - reduce the number of interior walls
Colors mimic nature
Can see inside from outside |
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Term
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Definition
"Less is more"
Form follows function
Stripped to bare essentials
Steel and glass
Simple geometry
Key indicators - no decoration, no capped roof
Straight even lines
Fast, economic and spacious |
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Term
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Definition
Eccentric, complex, irregular, decorative, colorful
Breaks the rules - curvy lines, irregular shapes, difficult construction, unnessecary parts
Stops looking forward - looks to the past and anything else
Plays with architecture of the past and with motifs from variety of sources
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Term
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Definition
Facotry construction saves time, cuts costs, reduces waste and delivers a stronger, more precisely built structure than traditional on-site construction |
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Term
Sequence of Architectural Styles |
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Definition
Industrial/Engineered
Proto-International
Organic
International
Postmodern |
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Term
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Definition
A horizontal structural element supported at one end only, with the other end projecting into space.
Often made with reinforced concrete
Used in Organic style Fallingwater house |
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Term
Reinforced concrete/ferroconcrete |
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Definition
Concrete reinforced internally with iron rods or steel mesh
Often used with free-form, organic shapes
Not really like skeleton-and-skin, more like a shell |
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Term
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Definition
Italian for "light-dark"
In 2-D, representational art, the technique of using values to record light and shadow, especially as they provide information about 3-D form
Often used by Leonardo da Vinci |
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Term
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Definition
A painting medium in which colors are applied to a plaster ground, usually a wall (mural) or a ceiling.
Buon fresco/true fresco - applied before the plaster dries, bonds with surface
Fresco secco/dry fresco - colors applied to dry fresco
Used in Sistine Chapel, very tedius |
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Term
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Definition
In Hinduism, and especially Buddhism, a diagram of a cosmic realm, from the Sanskirt for "circle"
Serves to focus meditation in the goal of acheiving enlightenment
Clear geometry and symmetry = we live in a universe that makes sense, even if its logic and order are hidden from us during our brief lifetimes
Religious Art |
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Term
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Definition
Having only one color
Descriptive of work in which one hue - perhaps with variations of value and intensity - predominates |
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