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Claude Monet, Jardin de la Princesse, 1867
-view of the city being prepared for a large event
-while working as a copyist at the Louvre, he secretly paints his own work from the window
-lacks topographical accuracy, but adjusts view to portray his perspective
-greater picture of the modern city, vibrant Paris environment
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Gustave Caillebotte, Le Pont de l’Europe, 1876
-alientation of modern experience, lacks vibrant/variation of impressionist street scenes
-bourgoise couple and working class man in background with his back turned away
-large new cast iron bridge/structure in paris, lack of greenery
-notice his perspective/concept of linear space!
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Claude Monet, La Grenouillère, 1869
-Monet and Renoir take a holiday, leave Paris for the weekend to a a popular bathing spot (popular concept at the time- men and women together gathering to bathe- the bourgoise SPRING BREAK!)
-the two set up and pain the area simultaneously
-Monet- more landscape effects, light on water
-Renoir-focused on people
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Claude Monet, Impression: Sunrise, 1873
-highly criticized by critics at the time
-sunrise, harbour not clear/identifiable
-conflict/integration of nature and man
-lacks academic finish
Societe Anonyme- impressionist group, began exhibition
work goes up at impressionist exhibition 1874 (event started after impressionist work rejected from salons over and over; goes on every year until 1882)
commune- rebellion in france after defeated in the franco-prussion war
Napoleon III overthrown, middle/lower classes take control
critics apply impressionist work to intransigents, rebellious and revolting citizens in france
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Claude Monet, Boulevard des Capucines, 1873
-impressionism
-masses moving into the cities after renovation of paris,
-urban setting, dynamic/exciting moving quality of city scene,
-entire space rather than specifics, view from afar without specifics/detail
-captures optical world; passing moments; movements
-suggestion of both eternal and ephemeral beauty, rather than purely material world
-artists own subjective experience of what he sees
-obvious brush strokes
-high contrast between light/dark areas
Impressionists:
-transition from realism to every-day, embrace paint effects
-captures a general feeling
-strong focus on overall light rather than specific forms, light effects on leaves and water
-elevated angles
-individual perspective on overall scene
-INTRANSIGENTS-
--name given to revolutionaries; resistance/rejection of norm
--people going against concervatives.republicans
--many associated impressionists with this term who go against classical styles
--painters grasp impressionist term , so as not to be associated with controversial/negative connotations
--didn't necessarily engage/associate with nature of revolutionaries, but rather capture and embrace their own individuality.
elements of both
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Auguste Renoir, La Grenouillère, 1869
-Monet and Renoir take a holiday, leave Paris for the weekend to a a popular bathing spot (popular concept at the time- men and women together gathering to bathe- the bourgoise SPRING BREAK!)
-the two set up and pain the area simultaneously
-Monet- more landscape effects, light on wate
-Renoir-focused on people |
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Auguste Renoir, At the Moulin de la Galette, 1876
-Changing city after hausmann's rennovations in 1860s
-new privileged middle class, engaging in leisure activities
-rise of entertainment- theaters, operas, ballets, circuses, cafes
-Artists go into the cities, begin depicting more urban subjects
-outdoor dance hall, eventually such places develop a racy reputation (can-can derived from french dance halls)
-in this scene, more wholesome/daytime feel, sunday dancing
-renoir includes his favorite model- idea of conviviality, fraternizing with friends
-freshness, spontenaity of brush strokes, feathery, lighthearted nature
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Edouard Manet, Bar at the Folie-Bergère, 1881
-famous cafe work
-more upscale dance hall for upper-class (more up scale than those attended by Degas)
-Bar Maid-
psychologically compelling
emotion not clear- remote and disengaged, not typical/expected of a bar maid
-series of dijunctures in the work, ambiguous meaning
-woman in front of a mirror which reveals hat she is looking at- trapeze, audience
-typically bar maids also prostitutes, woman being sold off
-woman in the mirror/reflection is the same figure as the barmaid? unclear meaning
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Edgar Degas, L’Etoile, 1878
-As impressionist exhibition develops, more of a division among artists- especially degas and others who didn't feel impressionism was appropriate term/concept for their style, thought it limited to loose brush stroke style
-opera and theater major cultural passtime. Degas takes on as his favorite subjects and attends many events
-ballets between opera acts
-Dancers an object of desire for wealthy upper class
-bellerinas typically from working class families, not middle/upper
-young girls solicited- men with theater subscriptions were allowed access back stage and in dressing rooms
-Degas revolutionary in his portrayal of dancers and this world
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Mary Cassatt, Woman in Black at the Opera, 1877
-woman as the observer rather than person being objectified
-she gazes out, peering forward, depicted in masculine way
-turns male stereotype, new perspective of female's engagement/experience
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Mary Cassatt, Five o’clock Tea, 1880
-female impressionists-a separate perspective of modern life
-limited experience of feminine domestic sphere; most of their works of the home, domestic duties, a very different reality
-private social world of women; nuances of domestic sphere and social activity
-expectations to take domestic world seriously
-social networking with other families
-in painting, sense of third party even though not depicted
sense of discomfort, seclusion, stiffness
-conveys the world as structured, something that can be understood- what you see is what is
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Berthe Morisot, Reading, 1869-1870
-female impressionist, also engaged with private life of women
-painting of morisot's sister who gave up painting/art for her family, while morisot married a supportive artist (manet's brother) and did not have to
-standard behavior of bourgeois women- cannot roam streets without an escort
-pregnant woman expected to stay inside
-disconnection from scene- engaged in thoughts and contemplation
-sacrifice inherent in feminine domestic situation
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Georges Seurat, A Bathing Place, Asnières, 1883-4
POST IMPRESSIONIST- name given after painters were alive, did not adopt the name at the time
-1880s- impresionism no longer a vital movement, division of group, shows end in 1882
-Seurat- neo-impressionism
POINTILISM-tiny dabs of paint, color theory
-new intellectual and systematized form
-eliminates lines, but more solid figures/definition
-continuity of form, very ordered and planned, many studies before he begins painting
-internal and sense of stillness
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Georges Seurat, Sunday Afternoon at La Grande Jatte, 1886
Neo-impressionism
-seurat astounds art world, impressionism suddenly seems romantic and passe
-looking to ground impressionism, give it stillness and form
-seurat's underlying system, carefully planned art contrasts with spontaneous nature of impressionism
-reliant on structure and science rather than instinct/impulse
-very scientific approach to art- studies color, mixes complimentary colors to find optimal value
-juxtaposes complimentary colors with thousands of dabs of paint
-Chromo lumination: colored light; color and optics to convey mood
-Pointilism: pure components of color applied in tiny dots, eye blends them together
Subject matter related to impressionism-social scene, in the park
-Seurat individualizes people, cut outs clean and clear,
-alienation, figures not engaged with one another or their life
-mass production of modern experience
-the work called a criticism of urban life
Seurat a socialist, interested in lower class, depicts range of socio-economic classes in work
Thought he ultimatized democratic art form in his new philosophy/style
Many artists drawn to this new avenue/style of the future
Some offended by seurats idea of universal style/method
Critics thought work too structured, not democratic but dehumanizing
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Paul Cézanne, The Bay from L’Estaque, 1886
-Joins Pissarro in the countryside, work side by side on a series of works
-Cezanne not want to view the world only with the eyes, but convey how the world is known to be rather than how it appears.
-develops monumentalized landscapes, scenes become internalized and separated from movement of everyday life
-sees the world through spheres, shapes, a search for form
-disposes of painterly effects, discards formula of shadows/modeling effects
-bright contrasting colors to convey depth and materiality
-uses bright colors to bring objects forward
-motifs, color ranges
-not truthful/photographic but truth of lasting structure behind fleeting visuals
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Paul Cézanne, Still Life with Basket of Apples, 1890-94
-begins work on still life, conceptualizes objects, explores their shape, structure, color relationship
-everything in a state of change- apples casually placed, rolling, different spacial views
-swells objects with color, materializes them with sense of touch/density
-actual subject matter not important, but is something to analyze
-idea of LIVED PERSPECTIVE- presents the world as he individually experiences it
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Paul Cézanne, Madame Cézanne in a Yellow Armchair, 1893
-consistently focuses on concept of "coming into being" and emerging order
-disjuncture, flatness of chair, cutting dark line
-spacial relationship at odds, things don't match up
-cezanne a person with social anxieties, worked alone a lot, usually could not paint women
-idea of repressed feminine sexuality
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Paul Gauguin, Vision After the Sermon, 1888
Symbolism, primitivism
-critical of modernity, seeks to abandon polluting and alienating effects of modernity; interested in primitivism
-escapes the city, moves to an artists colony in Breton
-primitive cultures a new "current"
-ritualized lives of Breton people, women visualize the sermon they just heard, joacob wrestling the angel, represented through color and imagery
-combines the primitive with subjective vision
-draws from dramatism and theatrical experiences, theatrical role playing
-intertwine his intellectual perspectives with his painterly style
-Equally experimental in his formal techniques
--more reductive, flat-plain style; stain-glass window paint technique, flat plains with dark outlines, representative of medieval art
--flat plains-abstracted visionary world
--colors no longer describe the world but represent alternative states
Symbolism- remove onself from the world that is known to an abstract world of feelings, aesthetic experiences, visions, color
tendency of people to obstruct themselves from the world that is known- drugs, heightened spirituality
the interior world of a visionary
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Paul Gauguin, Self Portrait with a Halo, 1889
Symbolism, primitivism
-thoughts as abstract passages
-seeks meaningful authentic experiences
-Art should be an abstraction; one's vision of the present rather than reflective
-symbols reflect the perspective of his life rather than a bodily experience
- related to freud's idea of the liminal self, primitive form of consciousness
-impulse to aesthticize the self
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Paul Gauguin, Teha’amana with her Ancestors, 1892
-leaves for Tahiti in 1890 to re-engage with primitive
-wanted to find/define himself within this culture, though it was connected to france
-fascination with mythology of tahitians
-he studied/read about it rather than learned from natives- as many of them were disengaged and had been converted to christianity
-misogynistic tone of colonialism in other lands, western influences
-christian missionaries required tahitians to wear modest dresses
-guagain claimed he married tahitian woman
-critics/feminists critical, situate his work as genderized, limited perspective, question his degrading views of their world
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Vincent Van Gogh, The Sower, 1889
brighter palatte vivid colors
longing for infinite beyond what is known
spiritual impulse
references realists (millet's the sower 1848), but with a desire for more
heightened colors and spirituality anchors spirituality in the everyday
explosion of sun- pulling toward the supernatural
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Vincent Van Gogh, Starry Night, 1889
in mental institution
view from hospital window- search for meaning beyond his known life
apocolyptic, heavenly sphere, separation of the spiritual world and the rational world
spiritual charge
prior to suicide |
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André Derain, Three Boats on the Beach at Coullouire, 1905
fauves-wild beasts rar!
under 15 artists
avante garde 1905 salon indepenent
influenced by retrospectives: cezanne
searching for new meaning for COLOR
flatness of canvas, color alone to display depth
color as spatial illusion, hot colors to cool
simplified subjects, landscape is key subject
carves space with color, engages with formal aspects of paint without structure/science
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Henri Matisse, Open Window at Collioure, 1905
ambiguous, as to whether the view is inside or outside
view of painting from open window outide or
view of boats from inside out window
fauvist use of color
push and pull of brush strokes to project image to viewer
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Henri Matisse, Woman with a Hat, 1905
scandalous success
ambiguous/disjointed body form- face is mask like, discontinuity of skin color disconcerning claw hand
a labaratory event?
conventional subject matched with highly experimental forms and color
purchased by gertrude stein and brother- they offer fauve art gateway to success, emergence in artistic circle
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Henri Matisse, Joy of Life, 1906
salon des independent.
incorporates color/flatness
art of the past both immediate and classical
spatial incoherence/ primitive quality
engaging and challenging classical
pictoral structure and form at odds with classical subject
flat plains of solid color, reduced lines, ambiguities of space- collapse of space between background and foreground
after 2 retrospectives- Ingres and Manet, this work rectifies the difference between the two (ingres' classical concepts, manet's flat/painterly)
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Henri Matisse, The Red Studio, 1911
stays true to Fauvism after 1907
(after Picasso appears and Fauvism dissappates)
stays true to color/act of making art
what should art be about?
painting about reduction
awkwardness in spatial relationships
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Pablo Picasso, Les Demoiselles d’Avignon, 1907
philosophical brothel
25 years old breaks with previous work
"trauma painting"
anxiety over female sexuality/ assaults viewer from jagged world: TIME OF FREUD
fractures unity/baroque theatricality
interested and engaged with El Greco
each figure disconnected from eachother
cant tell which side and from what vantage we see them from
eliminates original allegorical intent of the painting
influenced by african masks
one of the figures wears a mask towards viewer although squatting body is faced away
barbaric world
magical blackness
the sleeping figure shown vertical
the painting a physical confrontation, fully engages viewer
form triumphs subject matter
Breaks three major traditions of western art: 1, idealization; 2, emotional distance; 3, fixed focus perspective
relevant reading:
*Leo Steinberg, “The Philosophical Brothel” October 44 (Spring 1988)
in the reading there were a series of picasso's drawings, steinberg traces the evolution of the painting from allegorical scene to “Tidal wave of female agression” he also named figures:
Gisante's body language suggests she should be lying down, she levitates and has erotic charge Dryad Curtain figure- sexual outsider changes from male to female, go-between, non-participant, gowned, violently angular, sexually aggressive
the squatter- back to spectator but mask faces/ african mask, direct confrontation of viewer
Spectator- collision with art, inside
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Pablo Picasso, La Vie, 1903
picasso's blue period
incorporates outcasts beggars prostitutes
this painting:
3 phases of sexulaity
young sexuality
dissillusionment
maternity
haunted by a mood of pessimism and stoic suffering
symbolist influence
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Georges Braque, Houses at L’Estaque, 1908
this painting has little cubes therefore becomes the name cubism
influenced and engaged by picasso helps create cubism
all about perspective
proto-cubist
eliminates every vestige of a horizon line
historic painting that provoked the term cubism
compact assortment of nothing but houses and trees simplified into an elementary family of forms
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Pablo Picasso, Three Woman, 1908
ref. Braque
3d figures
color minimalized subtle tonal differences
picasso broke down form into planar components
braque simple geometry
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Picasso, Portrait of Ambroise Vollard, 1910
open structure of interlocking arcs and angles
plays with portraiture, figure still identifyable and present but broken down
monochromatic
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Braque, The Portuguese, spring 1911
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Picasso, Ma Jolie (Woman with a Zither), winter 1911
ANALYTIC CUBISM- breaks up forms into small pieces,appears flat but an investigation of space
objects seen from different views/perspectives
symbols referencing more than one thing/multiple meanings
broken down canvas but clear title
Ma jolie- "my pretty," the name of a popular song in france, and a nickname for his girlfriend at the time
monochrome pallette
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Picasso, Still Life with Chair Caning, 1912
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Picasso, Guitar, Sheet Music and Glass, 1912
SYNTHETIC CUBISM
flattened wood grain
wall paper effect
different languages/messages through signs
Krauss criticizes viewer's interpretation of painting
many identify the "jour" as a reference to specific french journals, looking into the specifics of the messages, attempting to personify them
Krass criticizes attaching meaning to work as based on picasso's biography/background, feels it limits understanding and possibilities of meaning
against fixed meanings
Relevant reading- Krauss
SEMIOTICS- shifts focus from the author (artist) and the work to its reception
-work no longer an original piece, biography and back story no longer important
-no monolithic viewer, idea of many viewers/perspectives
1, concerned with signified and signifyer, 2, looks laterally for meaning in current culture, 3, posits a changeable constructed unstable meaning, 4, polysemic-capable of signafying multiple signafiers, 5, concerned with production of meaning (how and what)
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Henri Le Fauconnier, Abundance, 1910
Context:
cubism- a formal enterprise, play with issues of formal aspects, scientific system; influence of picasso/braque on other artists
French Nationalism- pre war era, extreme expansion of industry in Paris
3rd republic weak- threatened by extremists on both sides, polarization (monarchists and anarchists)
national obsession with the dryfus trial- jew found guilty for disclosing info to germans, later found inocent, country divided- liberals support him, suspicion of liberals, plays part in fragile state of france
german/nazi influence
racism- fear of foreigners in france
difficulty finding national unity/culture
1911- cubism revealed to the world, cubism exhibition, though picasso and braque worked alone
cubist phenomenon gets tied up with political issues, politicians critical of cubist artists
Abundance: language- simplifies the cubism style, not as scientific, butengaged with larger political issues in its meaning
work represents folklore and tradition
collective labor- french tradition, woman carrying apples, a small child with her, innocence
incorporates a narrative (unlike picasso/braque)
new form of cubism combined with traditional themes
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Robert Delaunay, Sun, Tower, Airplane (Hommage to Blériot), 1913
- symbol of national strength and technological progress
-fascinated with Eiffel Tower- symbol of national pride, incredible engineering feat
-interest in simultamaity- spans of time, 4th dimension, "space time," new space continuum in art
-many symbols- plane flying, eiffel tower, ferris wheel (invention of the modern age), represent flourishing industry and technology
-sun infiltrates painting, plays with color and light
---energy of the universe/nature verses technology
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Marcel Duchamp, Nude Descending a Stairway, 1912
-painting poorly received, he begins separating himself and sends the painting to an exhibiotion in new york, very successful, becomes a celebrity in the united states
-his work more engaged with italian futurists, progression into dada
-embrace modernis, new beauty of speed and technology
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Umberto Boccioni, States of Mind, Those who Go, 1911
excerpt from the Futurist Manifesto
1. imitation is despised
2. good taste should be rebelled against
3. critics: useless or harmful
4. whirling life of steel pride, fervor speed
locomotive train-speed and force of machinery
accoustic sensation of plains- sense of reverberations, movement of the machine
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Umberto Boccioni, Unique Forms of Continuity in Space, 1912
-futurism
-speed and force represented through sculpture
-study in human musculature
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Amádéé Ozenfant, Guitar and Bottles, 1919
1912- war breaks out, "call to order," xenophobic in nature, cubism attacked- too individualized and indecipherable
Purism- most extreme response to call to order
formal focus on clean geometries
simultaneously embrace technology
emphasis on reason and rationality
manifesto published- pre vs post war culture- self indulgent frivolous society, clean up and reconstruct in post war era
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Hans Arp, Collage with Squares arranged According to the Laws of Chance, 1916-1917
Beginnings of Dada
high quality construction paper ripped up fell at random.
World War One
context/rebellion
diminishing role of artist as creator
draws questions about fundamental truths
what is art? what is beauty? what is creation?
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Marcel Duchamp, Fountain, 1917
READY MADE: product mass produced then exhibited as art
urinal as fountain, but upside down if used the urine would spray back at user
purpose reversed and abstracted
SAID IN CLASS NEEDS MORE INFO:
ref. Benjamin article
for the most part, we have seen art through reproduction
reproductions free art from religous fervor.
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Marcel Duchamp, LHOOQ, 1919
uses french slang to say she has a hot ass
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Man Ray, Indestructible Object, 1922-3 |
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Hannah Hoch, Cut with a Kitchen Knife, 1919
photo montage, created at random
tzara's dada poetry, random words placed into an order to make poetry
similar concept
full name reflects this:
Cut With a Kitchen Knife Dada Through the Last Weimar Beer Belly
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Vladimir Tatlin, Counter Relief, 1915
CONSTRUCTIVISM
born in Moscow
influenced by icon tradition
(religous paintings popular in Russia well after being out of fashion in Europe)
also influenced by modern/futurist incorporates sharp angles
MOST RADICAL SCULPTURE of its time!
fractural study of the handling of materials
(how iron is different from wood, for example)
dynamic relationship between materials
juts forward from walls involving viewer
ABANDONS TRADITIONAL SCULPTURAL MATERIALS
uses wood, iron, glass
industrial materials/juxtaposed materials
real materials real space
involve space!
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Vladimir Tatlin, Monument to the Third International, 1920
Real Materials Real Space
after revolution Lenin commisions this project
CLASSLESS ART
real soviet implications
propoganda sculpture
never realized beyond model stages
would have been a giant monument larger than the Eiffel Tower by 1/3
A propoganda center
inside would be four glass forms each a different shape: cube, pyramid, cylinder etc...
different purposes for each: a lecture hall, offices, information center, radio center
each would rotate at different rates
the bottom at once a year the top at once a day
SOARING DYNAMIC ASPIRATIONS OF COMMUNISM
engineers create new forms
too ambitious! not enough materials or practical know-how for its creation. used in parades to inspire.
marks a beginning transition for the constructivists as they moved from pure art to engineering, making designs for rooms, textiles, clothing, theater
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Alexander Rodchenko, Oval Hanging, 1920
CONSTRUCTIVIST
new relationship between art and production
artists go into factories to become cultivators of the future
art related to self rather than the object outside
could be flattened.
one material but twisted, engages space hangs from ceiling
explores balance and structures
not specific utilitarian function
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Liubov Popova, Textile Design, c. 1924
constructivist move to industrial design, art as utilitarian purpose, real use, textiles colorful meant to be seen in movement. most successful in getting desings out into public realm, meant to create new communist lifestyle of classless productivity and excitement. modern engagement with machine.
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