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Causes of the Mood of the late 19th century: |
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- The growth of democratic governments had taught people that they had the right to share in the material benefits of the Industrial Revolution. Discontent.
- Scientific priogress=higher population=shortage in food and housing=moved to the city.
- The growht of a world finanacial market, primarily dependent on the value of gold, gave new power to big businesses.
- Too many political and social groups pitted against each other. Church attendance fell.
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- Christianity was a slave religion
- Democracy was the rule of the mediocre masses.
- Only valid force was "will to power": the energy that casts off all moral restraints in its pursuit of independence.
- Society can only improve if strong and bold individuals establish new values of nobility and goodness. (Ubermensch)
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Manet: "Le Dejeuner sur l'Herbe"
- Quotes other paintings
- Subject is risque (they new the place. It was too real)
- Style: flat scenes instead of 3D perspective and different perspectives as well.
- Nude=not an idealized body. She seemed too real because she was staring at out of the painting.
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- Manet: "A Bar at the Folies-Bergere"
- Blur of shapes/colors in the reflected background(impressionistic)
- Weird perspectives. (Girl and reflectiong are not equal)
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- Monet: "Water Lilies"; "Argenteuil" (all of his have the same techniques)
- Combines, separate, unblended colors to produce the effect of light on the eye.
- Pure visual representation --no intellectual or formal
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- Renoir: "Le Moulin de la Galette"
- patches of color stimulate sunlight through the trees.
- His interest included people as well as nature...including woman.
- Happy mood: gestures of love from people. Movement of the background.
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- Degas: "The Tub" and "The Rehearsal"
- unusual points of view
- Shows a non glamerized instant in time.
- "The Tub": has some still life.
- He always turns to ballet=movement
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- Cassatt: "MOther coming Sara's hair"
- focus on child: only see mothers back and undetailed background.
- seems to be a moment in time because the child is unaware.
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Morisot: "A View of Paris from the Trocadero"
- Human interest brings scenes to life and scene in scale.
- Deep perspective: multiples planes
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- Saurat: "A Sunday on El Grande Jatte"
- tiny points!
- Scientific accuracy
- people aren't realistically rendered. They seem stiff.
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- Cezanne: "Still Life with Commode"
- everything is distorted.
- multiple perspectives
- spacially ambiguous
- geometric shapes!
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- Cezanne:
- deliberately avoids effects of perspective
- reduces elements to flat planes
- huge brushstrokes
- no specific emphasis on any part of it.
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- Van Gogh: "The Night Cafe"
- conflicting colors: brightest red, weird color of green and yellow (harsh colors)
- exaggerated perspective
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- Fauvism
- Matisse: "The Joy of Life"
- bright colors
- dreamlike unreality
- no consistant perspective/porportion
- simple flowing lines
"The Red STudio": distorts to help viewers see through his eyes. Only paints the things that are important to him (his paintings)
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- Munch: "The Scream"
- explores social and psych problems
- restless weaving lines
- scary coloring
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- relatively small, thin, yet visible brush storkes
- open composition
- emphasis on the accurate depiction of light in it's changing qualities
- ordinary subject matter
- unusual visual angles
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- Individualistic
- vivid colors
- thick paint
- distinct brushstrokes
- real-life subject
- more inclined to used geometric form (saurat/cezanne)
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- Violent color contrasts
- no effect of light/depth
- art for art's sake
- technique deliberately crude to disturb the form of objects
- nature interpreted and subjected to spirit of the artists
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- brilliant, clashing colors
- mysticism, self-examination, speculation on the infinite
- nature used to interpret the universe
- no use of traditional perspective
- art to convey emotional or psychological truth
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- symphonic poem; tone poem
- programs (plots) derived which their music would describe.
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- tone poems.
- "Don Juan"; "An Alpine Symphony"
- most successful
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- first to make his personal emotions the basis for a symphony. (he had a depressive end) Died of cholera.
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Genius. his music touches on areas of human existance that wer eunexplored before his time and increasingly significant to ours. |
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impressionistic.
atmospheric music.
shifting tone colors
abandoned the concept of themes |
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atonal: deliberately avoided traditional chords and harmonies
Pierrot Lunaire
Sprechstimme: voiced speech
12-tone technique: serialism: uses the 12 notes of the chromatic scale which are carefully arranged in a series. The basic row serves as the basis for a movement or an entire movement. |
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He was concerned with the effect social injustices had on the individual rather than the whole.
Crime and PUnishment |
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uses irony and satire to show the passivity and emptiness of his characters
"The Bet": he ironically challenges most of our basic values |
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stream of consciousness style of writing: reproduces his thought process as they actually occur rather than as edited
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American
"The Awakening": her escape is to yield to her sexual desires and find freedom by throwing herself into a passionate/unloving affair. |
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reflected primary characteristics of modernist temper.
fragmentation of line/image, the abandonment of traditional forms, overwehlming sense of alienation and human homelessness, an ambivalence about the traditional culture, and intense desire to find some anchor in a past that seems to be excaping.
"The HOllow Men" |
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Kafkaewqu experience: a person feels trapped by forces that seem simultaneously ridiculous, threatening, incomprehensible, and dangerous.
"The Trial" |
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writer, critic, founder of HOgarth Press
"Three Guineas": agains thte descrimination of women in public intellectual life |
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- "Les Demoiselles d'Avignon"
- Analytical cubism: more concerned with exploring the geometric qualities of objects seen without reference to linear perspective.
- picture becomes more distorted L-R
- you're the customer
- African art
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- "Guernica"
- protest art
- images recur repeatedly: his horror at the dstruction of war
- somber colors:reinforces his feeling of the war
- symbols: bull=brute force of Spain; dismembered figure=fascism has broken his country to bits; screaming horse=torment of spanish people; oil lamp, open window=hope
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- "Persistance of Memory"
- Jusxtaposition of near photo-realistic elemtns
- objects don't obey laws of physics
- colision of objects that don't make sense
- we don't know if there is a theme
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- Klee "Around the Fish"
- free floating objects
- cubist: cylindrical forms
- expressionist: colorism
- surrealism: brilliant colors=dreamlike world; floating shapes; some enigmatic
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a fixed series of chords, 12 bars (measures) in length, is restated continuously throughout hte piece. The ongoing variation occurs above hte chords which offers a new perspective on a familiar story. |
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ARmstrong
singing improvised syllables with no literal meaning |
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he uses the style of montage (sharp juxtaposition of shots by film cutting and editing).
His close-ups were meant to convey a whole scene quickly. |
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explicit propaganda
made documentaries for Nazi Germany, designed to glorify nazi party |
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one of hte most influential of the period between the wars.
school was closed by nazi's in 1933
the Bauhaus "style is almost a synonym for "modern" architecture and design.
It's influence would persist well into the last quarter of the 20th century and still lingers today. |
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