Art Nouveau:
·
Dates the movement started and ended: 1890 –
1910
·
Movement originated: France
· Movement spread to or remained in area of origin: France, Germany, Belgium,
Switzerland, Austria, Malta, Britain, Italy, Hungary, Spain, Czech lands, Latvia, and all over central and Eastern Europe. It also spread to Portugal, Japan, Norway, and South America.
Cubism:
·
Dates the movement started and ended: Early 20th
Century; 1907 - 1911
·
Movement originated: Developed in Paris; Cubism
was pioneered by Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque.
Expressionism:
·
Dates the movement started and ended: Early 20th
Century
·
Movement originated: Germany
·
Characteristics defining movement: Expressionist
sought to express meaning or an Emotional experience rather than a physical
reality. A typical trait in this
movement was the suggestive term of emotional angst, or
sadness, anger, or just emphasize extreme emotions; having the capacity of causing
the viewer to experience these extreme emotions with the drama and often horror in which
the scenes depict. Expressionism has
been compared with Baroque, but according to
Alberto Arbasino, the difference is that “Expressionism doesn’t shun the violently
unpleasant effect, while Baroque does. Expressionism throws some terrific f***
you’s. “
Fauvism:
·
Dates the movement started and ended: Lasted for
only a few years; from 1904 – 1908
· Movement originated: France
· Movement spread to or remained in area of origin: Fauvism started and most
remained in France.
· Definition of movement: Fauvism, French for “the wild beasts”, its subject matter had a high degree of simplification and abstraction. Fauvism can be classified as an extreme development of Van Gogh’s post-impressionism fused with the pointillism of Seurat. Characterized with vivid colors, free treatment of form, and resulting in a vibrant and decorative effect.
Alice Bailly.
· Movement originated: Paris, France
· Definition of movement: Impressionists constructed their paintings from freely brushed colors that took precedence over lines and contours. Paintings were mostly of realistic scenes Of modern life, and often painted outdoors.
· Characteristics defining movement: Impressionist painting characteristics included relatively small, thin, yet visible brush strokes, open composition, emphasis on accurate depiction of light in its changing qualities; common, ordinary subject matter, inclusion of movement as a crucial element of human perception and experience, and unusual visual angles.
·
Dates the movement started and ended: 1906 - 1989
·
Movement originated: I’m not quite sure where
Modernism first originated from; many different countries and cultures represented their
own modernism art, especially throughout Europe and USA.
Pop Art
·
Dates the movement started and ended: 1950’s –
Present day
·
Movement originated: Great Britain and USA
· Movement spread to or remained in area of origin: It was huge in these two areas of the
World, although it did spread out
to countries such as Spain, Japan, Italy, Belgium, Russia United Kingdom, and the Netherlands· Movement spread to or remained in area of origin: It was huge in these two areas of the
Its materials from advertising, comic books, multi-media sources, and other mundane cultural objects and ideas. It is widely interpreted as the reaction to the wide ideas of abstract expressionism, as well as an expansion upon them. It is aimed at popular images in which to employ, rather than the elitist culture in art; most often through the use of irony.
· Dates the movement started and ended: 1880 – 19th Century
· Movement originated: France
· Movement spread to or remained in area of origin: beginning in France by the famous artist Manet, and spreading to Great Britain; this movement mainly stayed within Western and Central Europe.
· Definition of movement: Post-impressionists were extending impressionism, while rejecting its limitations. They continued to use bright, vivid colors, thick application of paint,
Distinctive brush strokes and real-life subject matter. They also emphasized geometric forms, Distorting forms for expressive effect, and used unnatural or arbitrary colors.
· Characteristics defining movement: A known characteristic of Post-impressionism was to reduce objects to their basic forms while retaining the bright, fresh colors of Impressionism. Another defining characteristic was to use color in vibrant, swirling brush strokes to convey the artist’s feelings and state of mind.
· Artists (list 2 -3) known for their work in this movement: Vincent Van Gogh, Manet, and Georges Seurat.
Surrealism:
· Dates the movement started and ended: 1920’s and onward
· Movement originated: Paris, France
· Movement spread to or remained in area of origin: The most important center of the
Of the movement started in Paris, but soon spread far throughout the rest of the world.
· Definition of movement: A cultural movement that started in the 1920’s, Surrealism features the element of surprise and unexpected juxtapositions. Surrealist artists define their work as an expression of a philosophical movement, and above all, surrealist artists were explicit in the assertion that Surrealism was an important revolutionary movement.
· Characteristics defining movement: Surrealism is defined by its proposal to express, either
Verbally, in writing, or in any other manner, the real functioning of a thought. Surrealism is based upon the belief that in the superior reality of certain forms of previously neglected Associations, in the disinterested train of thought. Surrealist artists believed that it would Advocate the idea that ordinary and depictive expressions are very vital and important, but in which the sense of their arrangement must be opened to the full range of imagination, According to the Hegelian Dialectic.
· Movement was used in other areas, such as architecture, aside from just the fine arts:
· Surrealism was a huge movement that spread far throughout other aspects of art, such as in Literature, music, theatre, cinema and films, sculptures, politics, cultural ideas, comedy, and an Interesting part played within the Feminist movement.
· Artists (list 2 -3) known for their work in this movement: Dorothea Tanning, Salvador Dali, And Rene Magritte.
· Dates the movement started and ended: Late 19th Century
· Movement originated: This movement originated in France, Russia, and Belgium.
· Movement spread to or remained in area of origin: Symbolism remained mostly in Europe,
Such as in Switzerland, Poland, Germany, Austria, Norway, Finland, Scotland, and Lithuania. But it also spread countries such as the USA, Brazil, and Israel.
· Definition of movement: Symbolism was mostly a large reaction to naturalism and realism; Anti-idealistic artistic styles that were attempts to represent reality in its true, gritty form. Symbolism was created in favor of spirituality, imagination, and dreams.
· Characteristics defining movement: Characteristics of the subject were to represent naturalist interest in sexuality and other taboo topics. Symbolists believed their art should be represented in absolute truths, that could only be described indirectly.
· Movement was used in other areas, such as architecture, aside from just the fine arts: Symbolism was strongly rooted in literature and poetry; as well as in visual arts, the movement was also involved in music, theatre, and philosophy.
· Artists (list 2 -3) known for their work in this movement: Odilon Redon, Edvard Munch, and Ferdinand Khnopff.
Vocabulary
Asymmetry: Lack
of symmetry in spatial arrangements or in mathematical or logical relations.
Balance: A state
of equilibrium; equal distribution of weight, amount, etc.
Collage: A
technique of composing art by pasting on a surface of various materials not
normally associated with each other.
Composition: The
act of combining parts or elements to form a whole.
Design: To
prepare the preliminary sketch or the plans for a work to be executed;
especially to plan the form and structure of.
Form: External
appearance of a clearly defined area, as distinguished from color or material;
configuration.
Function: Then
kind of action or activity proper to a person, thing, or institution; the
purpose for which something is designed or exists.
Genre: a class or
category of artistic endeavor having a particular form, content, technique, or
the like.
Gesture drawing: A
work of art defined by rapid execution.
Line: A mark or stroke
long to in proportion to its breadth, made with a pencil, pen, tool, etc.
Media: Materials
and techniques used by an artist to produce a work.
Mixed media: Artistic
media, as pen and ink, chalk, and graphite, used in combination.
Motif: A recurring
subject, theme, idea, etc. Especially in a literary, artistic, or musical work.
Movement: The
act, process, or result of moving; a particular style or manner of moving.
Multimedia: The
combined use of several medias, as sound full-motion video in computer
applications.
Pattern: a
decorative design, as for wallpaper, china, or textile fabrics, etc. a natural
or chance marking, configuration, or design.
Performance art: A
collaborative art form in a fusion of several artistic media, such as painting,
film, video, music and dance; deriving in part of the 1960’s performance
happenings.
Portfolio: a
flat, portable case for carrying loose papers, drawings, etc. or something of
the like.
Rhythm: movement
or procedure with uniform or patterned recurrence of a beat, accent, etc. the
pattern of regular or irregular pulses caused in music by the occurrence of
strong and weak melodic and harmonic beats.
Shape: the
quality of a distinct object or body in having an external surface or outline
of specific form or figure.
Space: the
unlimited or incalculably great three-dimensional realm or expanse in which all
material objects are located and all events occur.
Still life: the
category of subject matter in which inanimate objects are represented, as in
painting or photography.
Structure: mode
of building, construction, or organization; arrangement of parts, elements, or
constituents.
Style: a
particular kind, sort, or type, as with reference to form, appearance, or
character; distinctive, or characteristic mode of action or manner of acting.
Texture: the
characteristic physical structure given to a material, an object, etc., by the
size, shape, arrangement, and proportions of its parts; the visual and especially tactile quality of a surface.
Theme: a subject
of discourse, discussion, meditation, or composition; topic; a unifying or
dominant idea, motif, etc., as in a work of art.
Unity: the state
of being one; oneness; the state or fact of being united or combined into one,
as of the parts of a whole; unification.
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Cites:
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