Term
|
Definition
Optopenetical Dada Poem by Hugo Ball |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Artistic approach in which the artist relinquishes artistic rational control, enabling unconscious impulses to direct the form of the work |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Characterized by realistic or illusionistic landscapes that are fantastical. Includes visual images from the artists unconscious or ideas borrowed from Freud's literature. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Technique in which the artists puts texture under a piece of paper and rubs it. Surrealist painters added detail to these shapes to develop and explain thoughts. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Artistic technique in which layers of paint are built up on a canvas, the canvas is layed over a 3D object and the paint is scraped away to reveal the texture of the object.
Artists used the images that were created unconsciously to form representational images. |
|
|
Term
The Paranoiac-Critical Method |
|
Definition
Creates a realm of reality that is not real with meticulous precision.
"Materializing images of concrete rationality... in order that the world of the imagination... (is of) the same durability... as that of te exterior world." -Dali |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Zurich Dadaists such as Tristan Tzara practiced the art of chance within the framework of poetry by cutting single words from an article and placing them in a new order as they were chosen at random. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
A poem read in different languages, with different rhythms, tonalities, and by different persons at the same time. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
The limited part of unfathomable reason, of an order inaccesible in its tonality - Hans Arp |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Functional object redefined as art by putting it in a new context. Introduced by Marcel Duchamp during the New York Dada movement |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Poetry that presents random sequences of letters as phonetic sounds in which the letter's sizes and fonts are used as a score for the reader. Invented by Raoul Haussmann during the Berlin Dada movement |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
The combination of multiple pieces of different photos, often from newspapers and magazines in reference to mass production |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
American themes such as landscape and people used to represent the virtues of a declining heartland. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
American style of painting in the 1920's and 1930's that uses portraits and landscapes to comment on the depression and attack the politics that were responsible for it. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
During the American Depression President Roosevelt began the Federal Art Project as part of the New Deal. Artists recieved goverment subsidies for public art projects, which stimulated the economy and encouraged society. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
A style of painting that emphasizes the flattness of a canvas by using large blocks of color.
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
"Popular (designed for masses), transient, expendable, low cost, mass produced, young, witty, sexy, gimmick, glam, big business" Richard Hamilton |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Collage and assemblage of objects that are taken from everyday visual culture |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Paint0sculpture hybrides in which 3d objects, normally unassociated with art, are put in to a painting (form of assemblage) |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Action painting in which paint is spontaneously dribbled, splashed, or smeared onto the canvas to encorporate a sense of chance into the work. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Style of painting in which the canvas is covered from edge to edge and corner to corner, in which each area of the canvas is given equal attention and significance. This invites the viewer's eye to travel across the entire piece instead of resting on a single focal point. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
The branch of psychology concerned with the perception of sound and its psychological effects |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Marcel Duchamp, Bicycle Wheel, 1913. New York Dada
Combine |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Marcel Janco, Cabaret Voltaire, 1916. Berlin Dada |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Hans Arp and Sophia Tauber, Untitled (Duo Collage) 1918. Zurich Dada
Chance, Atomitism, Collage |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Hans Arp, Collage Arranged According to the Laws of Chance, 1916-1917. Zurich Dada
Chance, Atomistism, Collage |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Sophia Tauber, Dada Head, 1920. Zurich Dada, Neo Dada
Combine |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Marcel Duchamp, L.H.O.O.Q., 1919New York Dada
Readymade |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Marcel Duchamp, Fountain, 1917. New York Dada
Readymade |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Raoul Hausmann, The Spirit of Our Time (Mechanical Head), 1919. Berlin Dada.
Assemblage |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Raoul Hausmann, ABCD, 1923-24. Berlin Dada
Collage |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Hannah Hoch, Cut With the Kitchen Knife Dada Through the Last Weimar Beer Belly Cultural Epoch of Germany, 1919-1920. Berlin Dada
Collage
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
John Heartsfield, Whoever Reads Borgeois Newspapers Becomes Blind and Deaf: Away with the Stultifying Bandages! 1925. Dada.
Photomontage, collage |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Max Ernst, Forest and Dove, 1927. Berlin Dada, Surrealism
Grattage, Dream painting |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Max Ernst, Two Children Are Threatened by a Nightengale. 1924. Surrealism
Dream Painting |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Joan Miro, Carnival of Harlequin, 1924-25. Surrealism. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Salvador Dali, Accomodations of Desire, 1929. Surrealism
Dreamscape |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Salvador Dali, The Persistence of Memory, 1931. Surrealism
Dreamscape |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Salvador Dali, The Disentegration of the Persistence of Memory, 1954. Surrealism |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Rene Magritte, The Human Condition, 1934Surrealism. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Meret Oppenheim, Object (Luncheon in Fur) 1936. Surrealism
Feminism, gender roles |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Claude Cahun, Self Portrait, 1928. Abstract Expressionism.
Gender roles |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Pablo Picasso, Guernica, 1937. Abstract Expressionism. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Edward Hopper, Nighthawks, 1942. American Regionalism.
Federal Art Project |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Dorthea Lange, Migrant Mother, 1936. Social Realism.
Federal Art Project |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Robert Motherwell, Elegy to the Spanish Republic No. 110, 1971
Abstract Impressionism |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Willem de Kooning, Woman, I, 1950-52
Abstract Impressionism |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Jackson Pollock, Mural, 1943. Abstract Expressionism.
All-over painting, Gestural Painting |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Jackson Pollock, White Light, 1954. Abstract Expressionism.
All-over painting, Gestural Painting |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Lee Krasner, Polar Stampede, 1960. Abstract Expressionism.
All-over painting |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Mark Rothko, Multiform No.2, 1948. Abstract Expressionism.
Color Block painting |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Barnett Newman, Vir Heroicus Sublimis, 1940. Abstract Expressionism.
All-over painting. Color block painting. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Barnett Newman, Voice of Fire, 1967. Abstract Expressionism.
Color block painting. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Richard Hamilton, Just What is it that makes todays homes so different, so appealing? 1956. Pop Art.
Photomontage. Collage |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Robert Roscheberg, Bed, 1955. Abstract Expressionism.
Combines |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Robert Roschenberg, White Painting (Four panels), 1951 . Abstract Expressionism.
All-over painting. Color block painting |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Jasper Johns, Flag, 1954-55. Pop Art. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Jasper Johns, Target with Plaster Casts, 1955. Pop Art.
Combine |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Jasper Johns, Painted Bronze, 1960. Pop Art.
Combine |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Roy Lichtenstein, I Know How you Must Feel, Brad." 1963. Pop Art. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
james Rosenquist, F 111, 1965. Pop Art.
Social Realism. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Andy Warhol, 32 Cambell's Soup Cans, 1962. Pop Art |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Andy Warhol, Marilyn Monroe, 1963. Pop Art |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Andy Warhol, Green Car Crash, 1963. Pop Art |
|
|