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Do Now Use the following four Surrealist paintings as primary sources, what can you infer about the early 1900s?

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Presentation on theme: "Do Now Use the following four Surrealist paintings as primary sources, what can you infer about the early 1900s?"— Presentation transcript:

1 Do Now Use the following four Surrealist paintings as primary sources, what can you infer about the early 1900s?

2 The Metamorphosis of Narcissus

3 Geopolitical Child Watching the Birth of the New Man

4 The Angel of the Home

5 Europe After Rain

6

7 Themes in Early Modern Art 1.Uncertainty/insecurity. 2.Disillusionment. 3.The subconscious. 4.Overt sexuality. 5.Violence & savagery.

8 Edvard Munch: The Scream (1893) Expressionism  Using bright colors to express a particular emotion.

9 Franz Marc: Animal Destinies (1913)

10 Wassily Kandinsky: On White II (1923)

11 Gustav Klimt: Judith I (1901) Secessionists  Disrupt the conservative values of Viennese society.  Obsessed with the self.  Man is a sexual being, leaning toward despair.

12 Gustav Klimt: Wrogie sily (1901) Gustav Klimt: Wrogie sily (1901)

13 Gustav Klimt: The Kiss (1907-8)

14 Gustav Klimt: Danae (1907-8)

15 Henri Matisse: Carmelina (1903) Henri Matisse: Carmelina (1903) FAUVE  The use of intense colors in a violent, and uncontrolled way.  “Wild Beast.”

16 Henri Matisse: Open Window (1905) Henri Matisse: Open Window (1905)

17 Georges Braque: Violin & Candlestick (1910) CUBISM  The subject matter is broken down, analyzed, and reassembled in abstract form.  Cezanne  The artist should treat nature in terms of the cylinder, the sphere, and the cone.

18 Georges Braque: Woman with a Guitar (1913) Georges Braque: Woman with a Guitar (1913)

19 Georges Braque: Still Life: LeJeur (1929)

20 Pablo Picasso: Les Demoiselles d’Avignon (1907)

21 Picasso: Studio with Plaster Head (1925)

22 Pablo Picasso: Woman with a Flower (1932) Pablo Picasso: Woman with a Flower (1932)

23 Paul Klee: Red & White Domes (1914)

24 Paul Klee: Senecio (1922)

25 George Grosz Grey Day (1921) George Grosz Grey Day (1921) DaDa  Ridiculed contemporary culture & traditional art forms.  The collapse during WW I of social and moral values.  Nihilistic.

26 George Grosz: Daum Marries Her Pedantic Automaton George in May, 1920, John Heartfield is Very Glad of II (1919-1920) George Grosz: Daum Marries Her Pedantic Automaton George in May, 1920, John Heartfield is Very Glad of II (1919-1920)

27 George Grosz The Pillars of Society (1926) George Grosz The Pillars of Society (1926)

28 Raoul Hausmann: ABCD (1924-25)

29 Marcel Duchamp: Fountain (1917)

30 Marcel Duchamp: Nude Descending a Staircase (1912) Marcel Duchamp: Nude Descending a Staircase (1912)

31 Salvador Dali: Soft Construction with Boiled Beans (Premonition of Civil War), 1936 Surrealism  Late 1920s-1940s.  Came from the nihilistic genre of DaDa.  Influenced by Feud’s theories on psychoanalysis and the subconscious.  Confusing & startling images like those in dreams.

32 Salvador Dali: The Persistence of Memory (1931)

33 Salvador Dali: The Apparition of the Face and Fruit Dish on a Beach (1938)

34 Salvador Dali: Geopoliticus Child Watching the Birth of a New Man (1943)

35 Functionalist Architecture Bauhaus  A utopian quality.  Based on the ideals of simplified forms and unadorned functionalism.  The belief that the machine economy could deliver elegantly designed items for the masses.  Used techniques & materials employed especially in industrial fabrication & manufacture  steel, concrete, chrome, glass.

36 Walter Gropius: Lincoln, MA house (1938)

37 FRQ Use at least three examples from philosophy, art, literature, or science to explain the changes in European attitudes after WWI.


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