Shared Flashcard Set

Details

intr to visual arts final
lola final
100
Art History
Undergraduate 2
12/02/2008

Additional Art History Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
[image]
Definition
August Rodin
Turn of the Century Sculpture
The Burghers of Calais
Term
[image]
Definition

August Rodin
Turn of the Century Sculpture

walking man

Term
[image]
Definition

August Rodin

Turn of the Century Sculpture

Term
Definition
african art
Term
[image]
Definition
Cubism
Term
[image]
Definition

picasso
Cubism

guitarist

Term
[image]
Definition

picasso

Cubism

Term
[image]
Definition

picasso
Cubism

The Bottle of Suze  

Term
[image]
Definition

picasso
Cubism

Guernica   

Term
[image]
Definition

picasso
Cubism

Head of a Woman

Term
[image]
Definition

picasso
Cubism
Cast in bronze in unique way

glass of Absinthe

Term
futurism
Definition

Influenced by motion pictures,

used to imply motion

express the value and beauty of “mechanicalness” and speed.

influenced Modern sculpture.

Term
[image]
Definition

futurism
marcel duchamp
Making things seem mechanical and moving

New ideas of movement

Term
[image]
Definition

futurism

Unique Forms of Continuity in Space

Term
Modern Architecture
Definition
New materials, old designs
Term
[image]
Definition

Modern Architecture
Wrought iron, Parisians hated it, meant to be torn down

Eiffel Tower

Term
[image]
Definition
Modern Architecture 
Louis Sullivan
Wainwright Building, St. Louis      
Term
[image]
Definition

Modern Architecture 
Mies van der Rohe 
All glass house, to feel a part of nature

Farnsworth House    

Term
[image]
Definition

Modern Architecture 
Mies van der Rohe
Simple was better, less was more
Be true to the materials

Seagram Building

Term
Dada
Definition

a reaction to war

anti-art of nihilism,

meant to be meaningless and useless, advocating anything antisocial and immoral.

influenced later art toward spontaneity, humor, and absurdity.

Term
[image]
Definition

Dada
Marcel Duchamp
    
Mona Lisa represented traditional art

L.H.O.O.Q.

Term
[image]
Definition
Dada
Marcel Duchamp
Bicycle Wheel 
Ready made
Things of use in society combined made useless
Term
[image]
Definition

dada

marcel duchamp

Term
[image]
Definition

dada
marcel duchamp
The Bride Stripped Bare of Her Bachelors, Even    

The men figures represented uniformed figures in society

Term
Surrealism
Definition

Artists only found Dada relevant for about a decade.
Surrealism focused on the workings of the subconscious mind and dreams as the way to access truth.
Various methods were used to access the inner mind.

Some artists such as Dali and Magritte used realistic images in strange combinations.

Automatists painters such as Miro developed non-objective paintings by using a spontaneous approach.
French poet Andre Breton was the leader of Surrealist.
Few women were part of the Surrealist movement but Frida Kahlo.  

Term
[image]
Definition

Surrealism
Salvador Dali
Symbolism: time is organic and can be destroyed
The Persistence of Memory

 

Term
[image]
Definition
surrealism
Rene Magritte
 This is not a Pipe   a.k.a. “Treachery of Images
Term
[image]
Definition
surrealism
Frida Kahlo
The Two Fridas 
Term
[image]
Definition

surrealism
Joan Miro Automatism
Dutch Interior I

Reminiscent of Bosch
Abstracted

 

Term
[image]
Definition

surrealism

Two elements of sophisticated sculpture

Object   a.k.a. Luncheon in Fur 

Term
Non-Objective Painting
Definition
art which comes from the artist’s imagination or subconscious with no apparent relationship to visual reality.
The purpose is to communicate thoughts and feelings much as instrumental music does.
Kandinsky was the first.
Another influence on artists The Interpretation of Dreams written by Sigmund Freud.
also interested the Formalists who wanted to express visual unity, mathematical order, and rationality. 
Term
[image]
Definition
Non-Objective Painting
Wassily Kandinsky
Sketch I for Composition VII
Non-Objective style
Expressionism
Term
[image]
Definition
Non-Objective Painting
Wassily Kandinsky
Improvisation No. 30 (Cannons) “Blue Rider” style   Expressionism
Term
[image]
Definition
Non-Objective Painting
Piet Mondrian
Composition in Red, Blue, and Yellow (style)
Formalism
The form of art was the form of life?
Balance of color and line
Term
Modern Sculpture
Definition
Influenced Modernism.
Vitalism was based on the theory that all living things share the same vital forces and that sculpture should embody that force.
Assemblage was the sculptural answer to collage in painting.
Some of Modern sculpture is abstract & some is non-objective.   
Term
[image]
Definition
Modern Sculpture
Aleksandr Archipenko
Walking Woman 
Founders of abstraction of modern sculpture
Negative space within the composition
 
Term
[image]
Definition
Modern Sculpture
Constantin Brancusi
Bird in Space
Vitalism
Term
[image]
Definition
Modern Sculpture
Not anything in particular, but the sense of potential to grow
Implied movement
Term
[image]
Definition
modern sculpture
Head of a Woman
Abstract
New material
Term
[image]
Definition
modern sculpture
Head of a Woman
Abstract
New material
Term
Abstract Expressionism
Definition


During and after WWII many European artists moved to the U.S. 

New York replaced Paris as the world center for art.

  The gallery system for selling art developed.  Fostered by Carl Jung’s ideas of the “collective unconscious”, European styles blended with the American focus on independence. 

The idea of the “Avant Garde” defined artists as the front line in regard to new ideas of art and culture. 

 Photography was developing as an art form dealing with realistic representation.

Artists turned to introspective work based on spontaneity, energy, and intuition resulting in what one critic described as “a herd of independent minds struggle for self knowledge.” 

Clemet Greenberg was an influential New York critic who contributed to defining Ab. Ex. 

Some Ab. Ex. Painters were considered “action painters” & some were “color field painters”. 

 Many Ab. Ex. paintings are actually non-objective instead of abstract.

As we have seen in the past, the name was given to the group by a critic.
Mixing of cultures
Federal job creation programs
Eastern culture influences
Clement Greenberg one of largest pieces
“What I am, what am I” idea

Term
[image]
Definition

Arshile Gorky

Abstract Expressionism

The Liver is the Cock’s Comb

Things and memories of his past, personal symbolism 
Term
[image]
Definition

Willem De Kooning 

Abstract Expressionism

Women paintings- similar style in many paintings

Dutch Abstract Action painting

Term
[image]
Definition

Jackson Pollock

Abstract Expressionism

Autumn Rhythm (Number 30) (style)

action painting

Only American of the abstract expressionist

Clement Greenburgh: important critic, adored Pollock

Term
[image]
Definition

Mark Rothko

Abstract Expressionism

Blue, Orange, Red (style) 

Color field painting

Spiritual experience with paintings

Term
[image]
Definition

Abstract Expressionism

Mark Rothko 

No direct natural light, or artificial light

Catholic

Term
[image]
Definition

Abstract Expressionism

Helen Frankenthaler        

Mountains & Sea

Term
[image]
Definition

Abstract Expressionism

Helen Frankenthaler        

Bay Side

Term
Kinetic Sculpture
Definition

Kinetic sculpture used real movement, instead of the past's implied

This seemed appropriate in a machine oriented society. 

Movement added the element of time to the element of space which sculpture represents

Term
[image]
Definition

Alexander Calder

kinetic

Mobiles 

non-objective

He invented mobiles
Term
[image]
Definition

Alexander Calder

kinetic

Stabiles

non-objective

He invented mobiles

Stabiles

Term
[image]
Definition

Metamatic  

kinetic

Term
[image]
Definition

kinetic 

Homage to New York  

 
Term
Neo-Dada
Definition

 

The art of Robert Rauschenberg was a rejection of Abstract Expressionism and reflected our cluttered world. 

Using real objects in collage paintings and assemblage sculpture he created “combines” which were both painting & sculpture in the same piece.

He also revived the Dadaist idea of using chance occurrences.
Term
[image]
Definition

Robert Rauschenberg

neo-dada

Term
[image]
Definition

Robert Rauschenberg

neo-dada

Term
[image]
Definition

Robert Rauschenberg

neo-dada

Term
[image]
Definition

Robert Rauschenberg

neo-dada

Term
Pop Art
Definition

The focus was ‘60s reflected American’s concern for material things and our “throw away” society. 

 a commentary on the triviality of the contemporary culture using references to comic strips, movies, advertising, and most of all TV. 

Pop artists rejected abstraction and returned to realistic images of everyday objects, glorifying the mundane and at the same time trivializing the values of art and culture.

Typically an American style, Pop art described the American way of life. 

The ‘60s are the beginning of Post-Modernism.

Term
[image]
Definition

Richard Hamilton 

Just What Is It That Makes Today’s Home So Different, So Appealing 

 

Term
[image]
Definition

Jasper Johns 

What is the criterion for art? 

pop art

Term
[image]
Definition

Jasper Johns

Is the flag or a  painting of the flag? 

pop art

Term
[image]
Definition

Jasper Johns

 

Does art have to be something that is not real life  

pop art

Term
[image]
Definition

Andy Warhol    

pop art

  
Term
[image]
Definition

Andy Warhol    

Desensitized to commercialism  

pop art

Term
[image]
Definition

Andy Warhol

Wanted to be apart of the beautiful people 

pop art

Term
[image]
Definition

Claes Oldenburg

What should we be afraid of? War or materialism?

pop art

Term
[image]
Definition

Claes Oldenburg

No meaning

pop art

Term
Op Art
Definition
 

Op art was a brief trend in the ‘60s based on optical illusion. 

art about life

influenced by photography

commercial culture

art is the experience

appropriation: taking something someone has done

It was influenced by earlier theories on perspective, non-objective art, scientific investigation of optical perception, and the culture of the time.

Artists were also influenced by performance art and the idea of art as an experience rather than as an object. 

1960 the end of modern

still trying to engage the viewer

Term
[image]
Definition

 Op Art

 

 Orion
Term
[image]
Definition

Op Art 

Current

 

 

Term
Environmental Sculpture
Definition

monumental art,

spiritual experience

Art as experience was reactionary to the Minimalist movement of the ‘60s which focused on art as object.

Artists were also motivated in part by the desire of some artists to sidestep the increase of museum and gallery control of art.

Environmental art could not be treated as a commodity.

Usually created on a monumental scale and influenced by the art and architecture of ancient cultures (Egyptian & Pre-Columbian pyramids etc.), these works were built for a specific location.

Often far from civilization, a pilgrimage is necessary to see the work in person.

Richard Serra’s urban site specific sculpture created a controversy over the role of art in public places

Term
[image]
Definition

Environmental scultpture

connection between nature and technology 

spiritual connection, power of nature

Lightening Field 
Term
[image]
Definition

Environmental Sculpture

Robert Smithson

Term
[image]
Definition

Christo

temporary

The Running Fence
Term
[image]
Definition

environmental sculpture

Christo 

 “Gates” Central Park NYC
Term
[image]
Definition
Site specific art/Environmental sculpture 

Richard Serra 

 petitioned to remove

Tilted Arc
Term
formalist art
Definition

Formalism is the theory of “art for art’s sake.” 

This theory is relatively new

originating in New York in the ‘50s and ‘60' through the theories of Clive Bell and Clemet Greenberg. 

Formalists hold that aesthetic value is the only criteria for judging the quality of a work of art. 

Term
Super Realism (1970s)
Definition

Influenced by the historic interest in realistic representation, and aided by advancements in photography, painters in the mid ‘70s turned to extremely realistic paintings.

The focus, texture, clarity of detail, and the additions or deletions of details create an image not possible with a camera.

Following George Segal’s realistic figures molded from a live model, sculptors using new materials were able to produce figures so life like they are hard to distinguish from real human beings.

The decade of the ‘70s was a time for many “neo” styles such as pattern and decoration, narrative, and expressionism.

New ideas were evident as well, such as conceptual art, performance, video art, & installations.
Term
[image]
Definition

Super realism 

Duane Hansen

 new technology

a comment on the human condition

 questioning our perceptions

 Tourists
Term
[image]
Definition

super realism 

John De Andrea 

 questioning perceptions

 

 

 

Before Marianne Left
Term
[image]
Definition

super realism 

Williamsburg Bridge  (style) 

Term
[image]
Definition

Super Realism 

Chuck Close 

 Lucas II

Term
[image]
Definition

Super realism 

Chuck Close

 

 

Self portrait

Term
Trends in the ‘80s
Definition

Feminist and civil rights activists were becoming increasingly vocal in the ‘80s. 

As had the Pop artists, women and minority artists were using the techniques of advertising to promote their ideas. 

Brief interest in the art of the street brought fame to several “graff” (graffiti) artists.

Term
[image]
Definition
 Trends in 80's 

Guerrilla Girls   

Poster
Term
[image]
Definition
 Trends in 80's 

Jenny Holzer 

Truisms
Term
[image]
Definition
 New York City Subway Drawings (style) 
Term
[image]
Definition

Jean-Michael Basquiat 

 influences of primative art

Flexible (style)
Term
The ‘90s & CONTEMPORARY TRENDS (subject to change)
Definition

It is difficult to give shape to an era still in progress. 

This is not a definitive account but an attempt to address some current themes.
Term
[image]
Definition
 

The ‘90s & CONTEMPORARY TRENDS  

Nam June Pike

Electronic Superhighway: Continental U.S., Alaska 
Term
[image]
Definition
 The ‘90s & CONTEMPORARY TRENDS
Term
[image]
Definition
 The ‘90s & CONTEMPORARY TRENDS

Judy Pfaff 

 Deep Water  
Term
[image]
Definition
 The ‘90s & CONTEMPORARY TRENDS

Judy Pfaff 

 helter skelter

 
Term
[image]
Definition

 The ‘90s & CONTEMPORARY TRENDS

Andy Goldsworthy  

no outside or artifical

Term
[image]
Definition

The ‘90s & CONTEMPORARY TRENDS

 Mel Chin

 instrumentalist: new plants that have developed that leech toxic things out of the soil

landfill

 

 

 Revival Field
Term
[image]
Definition

Frank Gehry

The ‘90s & CONTEMPORARY TRENDS

Term
[image]
Definition

The ‘90s & CONTEMPORARY TRENDS  

Frank Gehry  

ment to be a sculpture

Term
automatists
Definition
developed non-objective paintings by using a spontaneous approach, versus realistic images
Term
vitalism
Definition
on the theory that all living things share the same vital forces and that sculpture should embody that force
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