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Early Modernism “The Artist as Idea Maker” Vol. 1 -1904-1920s.

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Presentation on theme: "Early Modernism “The Artist as Idea Maker” Vol. 1 -1904-1920s."— Presentation transcript:

1 Early Modernism “The Artist as Idea Maker” Vol. 1 -1904-1920s

2 A series of “isms” Local traditions in art have given way to international trends Three “isms” are most important and have branched off throughout the 20th century- Expressionism, Abstraction, and Fantasy Expressionism- the human community Abstraction- the structure of reality Fantasy- the individual human mind Realism continues as a trend along with other movements throughout the 20th century Modernism allowed artists to assert their freedom to create in a new style and provide them with a mission to define the meaning of their times Influenced by- the beginning of the atomic age -existentialism (Nietzsche)- “God is Dead” -the invention of psychoanalysis Freud-inner drives control human behavior Jung-collective unconscious -The Russian Revolution -The Great War (humanity’s inhumanity) -The Great Global Depression -the rise of the “Avant Garde”

3 Expressionsim- -release of the artist’s inner vision -evoke feelings from the viewer Fauvism- very short-lived full of violent color and bold distortion, brutal brushstrokes Shocking to the critics and the public Called “Fauves”- wild beasts Artists wore the label with pride Sense of liberation and experimentation held the group together Color’s structural, expressive, and aesthetic capabilities

4 Henri Matisse, The Joy of Life, 1905-06 Flat planes of color, bold outlines come from Gauguin-also humanity in a state of nature- pagan scene like a bacchanal “genius of omission”- radical simplification The act of painting was joyous for him and his paintings show this

5 Matisse, The Red Studio, 1911 Believed that color was the formal element most responsible for pictorial coherence Color was not meant to imitate nature, but to express inner emotions

6 Roualt, The Old King, 1916-37 Fauvism with political connotations Reminiscent of stained glass because Roualt was an apprentice A figure of merciless authority clutching flowers

7 German Expressionism- “Die Brucke” (The Bridge) Color is important, but equal to that of distortion of images and violent brushstrokes Movement centered in Dresden, Germany and led by Ernst Kirschner Thought of themselves as bridging the old age of art with the new Influenced by medieval craft guilds- lived and worked together equally Focused on the detrimental effects of industrialization Kirschner, Self Portrait, 1915

8 Nolde, Wildly Dancing Children, 1912 Most of Emile Nolde’s paintings were religious like Roualt Slashing, violent brushstrokes for non- angry subject matter

9 Kokoschka, Self Portrait, 1913 Austrian painter related to the group Like Van Gogh- saw himself as an inner visionary, a witness to inner truth Tortured psyche influenced by Freud’s work

10 Kollwitz, The Survivors, 1923 Kathe Kollwitz Worked almost exclusively in printmaking and drawing Themes of inhumanity and injustice The plight of workers and war victims Pacifist- son died in WWI

11 Kandinsky, Composition VII, 1913 Der Blaue Reiter (The Blue Rider)- another German Expressionist movement Produced feeling is visual form Complete abstraction- non-objective work-elimination of representation Knew about music, literature, science (the atomic theory)- material objects have no structure or purpose Orchestration of color, form, line, and space- blueprints for an enlightened and liberated society, emphasizing spirituality

12 Hartley, Portrait of a German Officer, 1914 Armory Show of 1913 introduced America to Fauvism and German Expressionism Started in NY and traveled to Chicago and Boston Armory show contained over 1600 pieces of art- exposed American viewers and artists to work going on in Europe Very controversial- NY Times called it “Pathological” Alfred Steiglitz, a photographer, was pivotal in supporting American abstractionists Marsden Hartley was an American living in Munich and was directly influenced by these European movements

13 Brancusi, Golden Bird, 1919 Followed Matisse’s “genius of omission” Disturbed the basic shape of the material as little as possible Interested in primitive carvings and their formal simplicity and coherence

14 Moore, Reclining Figure, 1935-36 Henry Moore- simplicity of form continued Also influenced by prehistoric- Monoliths Classical motif that has been eroded

15 Picasso, Les Demoiselles D’Avignon, 1907 “I paint forms as I think them, not as I see them” ABSTRACTION The process of analyzing and simplifying observed reality First “rediscovered” by Cezanne Picasso- staggering contributions to the history of art and the development of abstraction Traditional artist in that he made careful studies of his work Quest for innovation, insistence on challenging established views, constant experimentation Found inspiration from African sculpture (due to widened colonialism) Fractured shapes, jagged planes, illegible space-tension between 2d and 3d Inconsistency of treatment of the women

16 Cubism a radical turning point in the history of art Dismissal of pictorial illusionism Cezanne’s idea of the cylinder, sphere, and cone New logic of design Painting moved far beyond the depiction of reality- mirrored society’s fears of the uncertainty of a non-Newtonian world Received its name after Matisse described a work by Braque as having been painted in “little cubes”

17 Picasso, Portrait of Vollard, 1910 Analytical Cubism Little contrast in color Complex and systematic design Faceted shapes, translucent divisions of space Differing views of the same subject in the same work Invented by Picasso and George Braque- at the same time, but not really in collaboration Retains some sort of depth

18 Braque, Gillet, 1914 Synthetic Cubism Invented by Braque and Picasso Puts forms back together after breaking them apart “Collage Cubism” after the French word for “paste-ups” Foreign materials are pasted onto the design- makes the collage look like a real surface Scraps are changed and painted on, giving them a double meaning Both represent and present (be themselves) Picture plane is in front of the surface New Space Concept- first since Masaccio

19 Started to add color to Cubsim in the 1920s Renaissance perspective gone wrong Jumble of flat shapes turn into a slight image Dog beats to a rhythm Picasso, Three Musicians, 1921

20 Lipchitz, Bather, 1917 Cubism in sculpture Fragmented, dissolved form Split into many planes Parallels with Braque and Picasso

21 Leger, The City, 1919 Movement of Purism invented by architect Le Corbusier, the architect Opposed Synthetic Cubism because it was out of touch with the machine age Thought that design should come from the clean functional lines of machines Ferdinand Leger- clean lines mixed with Cubist sensibility Very precise and very large!! (7’X9’)

22 Boccioni, Dynamism of a Cyclist, 1913 FUTURISM Cubism was adapted to stand for the dynamism of modern life- always moving and changing Futurists rejected the past and exalted the beauty of the machine Showed motion in a static image 2oth century energy Many of the artists of the movement were killed in WWI- by the machines that they loved

23 Jean Arp, Collage Arranged According to the Laws of Chance, 1916-17 DADA Started as a reaction to the horrors of WWI and Nihilism Began independently in Zurich and NY French for “hobbyhorse” Believed that reason and logic had been responsible for war Only hope was anarchy, irrationality, and intuition Pessimism and disgust of the artists helped them reject tradition- Arp pioneered the use of chance in artwork- releassed him from the role of artist For Dadaists, the idea of chance comes from the unconsciousness- influenced by Freud

24 Duchamp, Fountain, 1913 Duchamp was the central figure in NY Dada scene Exhibited his first “ready- made” sculptures- mass produced common products “selected” by the artist Free from the opinions of the population- neither good or bad taste Forces viewers to see the “artness” of objects

25 Surrealism- most Dada artists joined the Surrealist movement as well Included many similar ideas -used Dada techniques to “release the unconscious” Exploration of ways to express in art the world of dreams and the unconscious Inspired by Freud and Jung- interested in the nature of dreams In dreams, people moved beyond the constraints of society To bring inner and outer reality together Two forms of Surrealism; Biomorphic (interested in life forms)- Miro Naturalistic (recognizable scenes of nightmare or dream images)-Magritte, Dali

26 De Chirico, Melancholy and Mystery of a Street, 1914 Precursor to Surrealism Disquieting sense of forboding and creepiness As if another world exists beneath the one that is visible- influenced by Nietzsche who said “foreboding tha underneath this reality in which we live and have our being, another altogether different reality lies concealed”

27 Max Ernst, La Toilette de la Mariee, 1940 Interested in Collage and “decalcomania”- transferring oil paint from another surface Used rubbings called “Frottage”- joined fragmented images from newspapers and magazines to create a disjointed image

28 Salvidore Dali, Illuminated Pleasures, 1929 The celebrity of the group Dreamlike, disquieting combination of images- sexual in nature, convincingly real

29 Miro, Le Petit Rose, 1933 Joan Miro- organic forms that expand and contract visually Used automatism- planned accidents Element of hallucination Began paintings as collages so that he could move elements around at will Combination of unconscious and conscious image-making

30 Klee, Golden Fish, 1922 Used fantasy images to represent the non-visible world Thought that humanity’s deeper nature could be found in primitive shapes and symbols Studied nature and science, especially the processes of growth and change

31 Oppenheim, Luncheon in Fur, 1936 Humor and eroticism of Surrealism translated into sculpture Magical transformation of forms and textures to show the absurdness of everyday objects


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