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Subject Matter – What Is It Saying?

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Presentation on theme: "Subject Matter – What Is It Saying?"— Presentation transcript:

1 Subject Matter – What Is It Saying?
Define subject matter, media, craftsmanship and design. Describe each type of artistic subject matter listed below: Landscape / cityscape Portrait / figure / self-portrait Still Life Abstraction Non – objective

2 Subject Matter – What Is It Saying?
Define subject matter, media, craftsmanship and design. Name and describe each type of artistic subject matter listed below: Landscape / cityscape Portrait / figure / self-portrait Still Life Abstraction Non – objective

3 Categorize the following works, according to subject matter:
Explain genre painting, social comment and narrative subjects. Provide examples of each from the text. Categorize the following works, according to subject matter: P. 40 – Degas (The Star) P. 510 – Wood (Stone City, Iowa) P. 555 – Diebenkorn (Cityscape 1) P. 554 – Kline (Meryon) P. 469 – Duchamp (Nude Descending Staircase) P. 452 – Matisse (Red Studio)

4 Subject Matter – What Is It Saying?
Define subject matter, media, craftsmanship and design. Subject matter – what the artist is conveying Media – the tools and materials the artist has used Craftsmanship – the ability to make useful objects attractive Design – the structure of visual language

5 2. Name and describe each type of artistic subject matter listed below:
Landscape / cityscape – Landscapes are representations of natural environments and cityscapes represent urban environments. Portrait / figure / self-portrait – A portrait is a representation of a person. Figurative work often represents nudes. This is a way of appreciating the human body as an aesthetic form. A self-portrait is an artist’s representation of him or herself. Still Life – A representation of inanimate objects, things that do not move. Abstraction – The subject matter may be recognized, but is changed or altered in some way (colour, shape, etc…). Non – objective – These works contain no recognizable objects and are composed only of colour, shape, line, etc…

6 Explain genre painting, social comment and narrative subjects
Explain genre painting, social comment and narrative subjects. Provide examples of each from the text. A genre painting represents a scene from everyday life, including the everyday activities of ordinary people. Social commentary is used to make a visual statement about society or the world. Narrative subjects tell a story.

7 4. Categorize the following works, according to subject matter:
P. 40 – Degas (The Star) P. 510 – Wood (Stone City, Iowa) P. 555 – Diebenkorn (Cityscape 1) P. 554 – Kline (Meryon) P. 469 – Duchamp (Nude Descending Staircase) P. 452 – Matisse (Red Studio)


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