Introduction To Modern Art

For your final project, you will complete a virtual art museum visit and thoroughly discuss two to four works. Please pay close attention to the following assignment criteria. CHOOSE WORKS OF ART DATING AFTER 1870 BEGINNING WITH IMPRESSIONISM.

Go to this “gallery” website for referencing your Final Project: http://smarthistory.khanacademy.org/

You should already be familiar with this website from your previous weeks’ work. As you may have remembered, the site is broken down by dates. Cruise the dates and artworks located in those eras of art influence and address the following final project guidelines:

  1. Be no lessthan three pages, but no more than four pages in length.
  2. Compare and contrast a minimum of two artworks (no more than four) in which you will relate specific terminology and factsfrom your textbook and glossary readings.
  3. Discuss the relevance and/or influence of each work to history/ art history (via historical context, i.e What was going on in the world at that time that influenced the works and/or vise, versa?).
  4. Include a minimum of three resources per work of artfrom the book and/or internet to support your claims.
  5. Include a citation for each sourceused.
  6. Incorporate correct art history vocabulary in your examination.

ATLEAST 8 OF THESE GLOSSARY TERMS HAVE TO BE IN THE ESSAY.

Glossary Terms

The following are glossary terms with which you need to become familiar and to utilize within your work this week. You do not need to utilize them all; however, you need to utilize at least three of these terms per assignment response. Please note that some terms are carried over from previous weeks as they apply. Still, you should review all terms each week.

  • Abstract Expressionism
    • Also known as the New York School. The first major American avant-garde movement, Abstract Expressionism emerged in New York City in the 1940s. The artists produced abstract paintings that expressed their state of mind and that they hoped would strike emotional chords in viewers. The movement developed along two lines: gestural abstraction and chromatic abstraction.
  • Action painting
    • Also called gestural abstraction. The kind of Abstract Expressionism practiced by Jackson Pollock, in which the emphasis was on the creation process, the artist’s gesture in making art. Pollock poured liquid paint in linear webs on his canvases, which he laid out on the floor, thereby physically surrounding himself in the painting during its creation.
  • Assemblage
    • An artwork constructed from already existing objects.
  • Chromatic abstraction
    • A kind of Abstract Expressionism that focused on the emotional resonance of color, as exemplified by the work of Barnett Newman and Mark Rothko.
  • Color field painting
    • A variant of Post-Painterly Abstraction in which artists sought to reduce painting to its physical essence by pouring diluted paint onto unprimed canvas, allowing these pigments to soak into the fabric, as exemplified by the work of Helen Frankenthaler and Morris Louis.
  • Conceptual art
    • An American avant-garde art movement of the 1960s that asserted that the “artfulness” of art lay in the artist’s idea rather than its final expression.
  • Deconstruction
    • An analytical strategy developed in the late 20th century according to which all cultural “constructs” (art, architecture, and literature) are “texts.” People can read these texts in a variety of ways, but they cannot arrive at fixed or uniform meanings. Any interpretation can be valid, and readings differ from time to time, place to place, and person to person. For those employing this approach, deconstruction means destabilizing established meanings and interpretations while encouraging subjectivity and individual differences.
  • Earthworks
    • An American art form that emerged in the 1960s. Often using the land itself as their material, Environmental artists construct monuments of great scale and minimal form. Permanent or impermanent, these works transform some section of the environment, calling attention both to the land itself and to the hand of the artist. Sometimes referred to as earthworks.
  • Environmental art
    • An American art form that emerged in the 1960s. Often using the land itself as their material, Environmental artists construct monuments of great scale and minimal form. Permanent or impermanent, these works transform some section of the environment, calling attention both to the land itself and to the hand of the artist. Sometimes referred to as earthworks.
  • Gestural abstraction
    • Also known as action painting. A kind of abstract painting in which the gesture, or act of painting, is seen as the subject of art. Its most renowned proponent was Jackson Pollock. See also Abstract Expressionism.
  • Hard-edge painting
    • A variant of Post-Painterly Abstraction that rigidly excluded all reference to gesture, and incorporated smooth knife-edge geometric forms to express the notion that painting should be reduced to its visual components.
  • Impasto
    • A layer of thickly applied pigment.
  • Installation
    • An artwork that creates an artistic environment in a room or gallery.
  • Minimalism
    • A predominantly sculptural American trend of the 1960s characterized by works featuring a severe reduction of form, often to single, homogeneous units.
  • Neo-Expressionism
    • An art movement that emerged in the 1970s and that reflects the artists’ interest in the expressive capability of art, seen earlier in German Expressionism and Abstract Expressionism.
  • Performance art
    • An American avant-garde art trend of the 1960s that made time an integral element of art. It produced works in which movements, gestures, and sounds of persons communicating with an audience replace physical objects. Documentary photographs are generally the only evidence remaining after these events. See also Happenings.
  • Photorealism
    • A school of painting and sculpture of the 1960s and 1970s that emphasized producing artworks based on scrupulous fidelity to optical fact. The Superrealist painters were also called Photorealists because many used photographs as sources for their imagery.
  • Photorealism
    • See Superrealism.
  • Pixels
    • Shortened form of “picture elements.” The tiny boxes that make up digital images displayed on a computer monitor.
  • Pop art
    • A term coined by British art critic Lawrence Alloway to refer to art, first appearing in the 1950s, that incorporated elements from consumer culture, the mass media, and popular culture, such as images from motion pictures and advertising.
  • Post-Painterly Abstraction
    • An American art movement that emerged in the 1960s and was characterized by a cool, detached rationality emphasizing tighter pictorial control. See also color field painting and hard-edge painting.
  • Postmodernism
    • A reaction against modernist formalism, seen as elitist. Far more encompassing and accepting than the more rigid confines of modernist practice, postmodernism offers something for everyone by accommodating a wide range of styles, subjects, and formats, from traditional easel painting to installation and from abstraction to illusionistic scenes. Postmodern art often includes irony or reveals a self-conscious awareness on the part of the artist of the processes of art making or the workings of the art world.
  • Site-specific art
    • Art created for a specific location. See also Environmental art.
  • Superrealism
    • A school of painting and sculpture of the 1960s and 1970s that emphasized producing artworks based on scrupulous fidelity to optical fact. The Superrealist painters were also called Photorealists because many used photographs as sources for their imagery.
  • ACA WITH A REFERENCE PAGE AND REFERENCES IN THE PARAGRAPH, I WILL CHECK FOR PLAGIARISM.

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