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VISUAL ARTISTS. Black History Month African American Artists VOCABULARY expressionism, narrative, collage, migration, Jim Crow laws, graffiti, Antebellum,

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Presentation on theme: "VISUAL ARTISTS. Black History Month African American Artists VOCABULARY expressionism, narrative, collage, migration, Jim Crow laws, graffiti, Antebellum,"— Presentation transcript:

1 VISUAL ARTISTS

2 Black History Month African American Artists VOCABULARY expressionism, narrative, collage, migration, Jim Crow laws, graffiti, Antebellum, silhouette, racial identity, gender issues, elements of art, principles of art: balance, rhythm, pattern, proportionJim Crow lawsAntebellumracial identitygender issues ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS Why can we learn from focusing on the African American experience? What can we learn from African American artists? How is their experience similar and different from our own? Of the examples shown, which artist do you find the most interesting? Why?

3 Black History Month African American Artists VOCABULARY expressionism, narrative, collage, migration, Jim Crow laws, graffiti, Antebellum, silhouette, racial identity, gender issues, elements of art, principles of art: balance, rhythm, pattern, proportionJim Crow laws Antebellumracial identitygender issues Jacob LawrenceIdeas: Vocabulary : o Traditional o Expressionistic o Modern o ________ WORKSHEET

4 Black History Month African American Artists Jacob LawrenceRomare Bearden Jean-Michel Basquiat Kara Walker

5 Black History Month African American Artists One of the most important artists of the 20th century, was born in 1917 and is best known for his series of narrative paintings depicting important moments in African American history. Lawrence was introduced to art when in his early teens, Lawrence's mother enrolled him in Utopia Children's Center, which provided an after-school art program in Harlem. By the mid-1930s, he was regularly participating in art programs at the Harlem Art Workshop and the Harlem Community Art Center where he was exposed to leading African American artists of the time.narrative Jacob Lawrence

6 Black History Month African American Artists On the Migration Series: “I did plenty of research in books and pamphlets written during the migration, and afterward…I took notes. Sometimes I would make ten or twenty sketches for one incident…By the time I started work on the (Migration Series), I was more conscious of what I wanted to do. I was looking consciously at things and for things.” Jacob Lawrence Online video What elements and principles of art terms would you use to describe these works?

7 Black History Month Romare Bearden African American Artists Many artists and art historians consider Romare Bearden one of America's most important and inventive artists. But he's hardly a household name. Bearden is the subject of the National Gallery of Art’s first major retrospective of an African-American artist. About 1914, his family joined the Great Migration of southern blacks to points north and west. In the early twentieth century, Jim Crow laws kept many blacks from voting and from equal access to jobs, education, health care, business, land, and more. Like many southern black families, the Bearden's settled in the Harlem section of New York City. Romare would call New York home for the rest of his life.Jim Crow laws

8 Black History Month Romare Bearden Online video African American Artists Bearden's primary medium was the collage, fusing painting, magazine clippings, old paper and fabric, like a jigsaw puzzle in upheaval. But unlike a puzzle, each piece of a Bearden collage has a meaning and history all its own. Bearden said working with fragments of the past brought them into the now. What elements and principles of art terms would you use to describe these works?

9 Black History Month Jean-Michel Basquiat African American Artists The son of middle-class Brooklyn parents, he had a precocious success with his paintings from the start. The key was not that they were "primitive," but that they were so arty. Having no art training, he never tried to deal with the real world through drawing; he could only scribble and jot, rehearsing his own stereotypes, his pictorial nouns for "face" or "body" over and over again. Basquiat's career was incubated by the short- lived graffiti movement, which started on the streets and subway cars in New York City in the early 1970s, peaked, fell out of view, began all over again in the 1980s, peaked again, and finally receded, leaving Basquiat and Keith Haring as its only memorable exponents. Unlike Haring, however, Basquiat never tagged the subways

10 Black History Month Jean-Michel Basquiat Online video African American Artists A major reference source used by Basquiat throughout his career was the book Gray's Anatomy, which his mother gave to him. It remained influential in his depictions of internal human anatomy, and in its mixture of image and text. Other major sources were Dreyfuss' Symbol Sourcebook, Leonardo Da Vinci’s notebooks, and Brentjes African Rock Art. Basquiat often incorporated words into his paintings. Early he produced punk-inspired postcards for sale on the street, and become known for the political – poetical graffiti. What elements and principles of art terms would you use to describe these works?

11 Black History Month Kara Walker African American Artists Kara Walker was born in Stockton, California. She received a BFA from the Atlanta College of Art in 1991 and an MFA from the Rhode Island School of Design in 1994. The artist is best known for exploring the raw intersection of race, gender, and sexuality through her iconic, silhouetted figures. Walker unleashes the traditionally proper Victorian medium of the silhouette directly onto the walls of the gallery, creating a theatrical space in which her unruly cut-paper characters interact, often inflicting violence on one another.

12 Black History Month Kara Walker Online video Walker's silhouette images work to bridge unfinished folklore in the Antebellum South, raising racial identity and gender issues for African American women. racial identity gender issues African American Artists Because of her direct approach to the topic, Walker's artwork is reminiscent of Andy Warhol's Pop Art during the 1960s (she adored Warhol growing up as a child). Her nightmarish and fantastical images incorporate a cinematic feel. Walker uses images from historical textbooks to show how African American slaves were depicted during the Antebellum South.Antebellum What elements and principles of art terms would you use to describe these works?

13 Black History Month African American Artists VOCABULARY expressionism, narrative, collage, migration, Jim Crow laws, graffiti, Antebellum, silhouette, racial identity, gender issues, elements of art, principles of art: balance, rhythm, pattern, proportionJim Crow lawsAntebellumracial identitygender issues ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS Why can we learn from focusing on the African American experience? What can we learn from African American artists? How is their experience similar and different from our own? Of the examples shown, which artist do you find the most interesting? Why?

14 Black History Month African American Artists What words and ideas do you associate with each artist?

15 Black History Month African American Artists Jacob LawrenceRomare Bearden Jean-Michel Basquiat Kara Walker Why should we focus on the African American experience? What can we learn from African American artists? How is their experience similar and different from our own? Of the examples shown, which African American artist do you find the most interesting? Why?

16 Black History Month African American Artists Which African American artist do you find the most interesting? Why? Use vocabulary terms when you write about your artist.


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