Portraits and Self-Portraits

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Albrecht Dürer ( ) German Renaissance Artist
Advertisements

LT: I CAN: ANALYZE MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE ART COMPARE ARTISTIC STYLES AND THEMES IN MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE ART ANALYZE HOW ART IMITATES LIFE Renaissance.
Art I Portrait Art Kyffin Williams– ‘Fusilier Dean’
Art History as a Reflection of Ourselves Explored
Graphic Design & Illustration Self Portraits Historical PowerPoint (Drawing the Human Head in Pencil) 1Copyright © Texas Education Agency, All rights.
Do these look like they were painted by the same person?
Pre-Raphaelites, Impressionism and Post Impressionism Moreno Valley High School AP Art History Erica Ness.
Artist Sell Which one appeals to you?. As we go through, make note of at least 3 you are interested in. When we are done, you can choose the one that.
Leonardo Da Vinci Art Masterpiece
Visual Art. What is a self-portrait? Sofonisba Anguissola (c ) She served as court painter to the Queen of Spain. She also painted several.
Chapter Ten Examples Renaissance in the North Art timeline images for study and discussion.
The Northern Renaissance
Mary Cassatt (cah SAT) American Impressionist.
Portraits A Look into Artists Throughout History.
Mary Cassatt The American Impressionist Created for Patterson Art Awareness By Liz Beutel Self Portrait, 1878.
Art History Review #5 Drawing Mrs. Fox
The Human Figure in Art History Vitruvian Man Leonardo da Vinci, c. 1487,Leonardo da Vinci Italian Rennaissance.
15 TH - 16 TH CENTURIES NORTHERN & ITALIAN RENAISSANCE.
Renaissance Art and Architecture
Art History Review. Leonardo da Vinci Born in Vinci, Italy Painted during the Renaissance Considered a “Renaissance Man” Mona Lisa. c.1503.
Identity “The set of behavioural or personal characteristics by which an individual is recognizable. The distinct personality of an individual regarded.
Berthe Morisot Megan Henry & Chelsea McCormack. Painting Techniques Berthe Morisot is mostly a portrait painter & landscapes. Most of her portraits are.
Hans Holbein the Younger
Self-Portraits A Look into Artists Throughout History.
Late Renaissance in Northern Europe & Spain
Portraits and Self- portraits you should know.. Jan Van Eyck The Arnolfini Marriage 1434.
Impressionism. Photography in the nineteenth century both challenged painters to be true to nature and encouraged them to exploit aspects of the painting.
Artist Mock Project. Artists to Choose From Pablo Picasso Kandinsky Edvard Munch Salvador Dali Chuck Close Andy Warhol Vincent Van Gogh Frida Kahlo Francis.
Renaissance Art & Architecture Humanism– Interest in Greek and Roman Classics Secularism– Interest in the Material World more than the Afterlife Individualism–
Welcome to Art History Next Directions For each question click on the options below to find the correct answer. Begin!
Symbolic Portraits Meaningful representations. What is a Portrait? A visual representation of a person Obama portrait by Shepard Fairey, 2008.
The expressive self- portraits of Frida Kahlo Self-Portrait with Cropped Hair Frida Kahlo Oil on canvas, 15 3/4 x 11" (40 x 27.9 cm). "I paint self.
Mary Cassatt Self Portrait 1880.
Welcome to Created by Jennifer Impey, Spring 2012.
Through out the semester, when we are looking and talking about art we might discuss…
ARTISTS and their ENVIRONMENTS “Art has been here from very early times. Although art has changed much since then, there are many similarities between.
Impressionism & Post Impressionism Van Gogh. Origins of Impressionism Art movement starting in the 1860s. Originating in France. Monet’s “Impressions.
Show Me Your Style Art Appreciation JANUARY - NATURALISM.
RENAISSANCE NORTHERN RENAISSANCE. Italian Renaissance Ideal beauty Measured proportions Religious and mythological scenes Heroic male nudes Portraiture-
PORTRAITURE Style: Impressionism Artist: Vincent Van Gogh
Portraiture What is portraiture?!?!?!? Portrait Self-Portrait.
The Renaissance: Art & Architecture DayTimeDateProfessor Lady with an Ermine (Portrait of Cecilia Gallerani) Leonardo da Vinci, Oil on wood,
Portraiture “Here’s Looking at you kid” A look at portraiture throughout history and what some people are doing with it today. Ms Durheim.
FOUNDATIONS OF ART JESSICA DAVIS AHS What is Art?.
Looking at Art – Formal Analysis paper 1.go to a museum; spend time looking at the art and choose one work that especially interests you -- something you.
Art Artistic Time Periods *Classical Art *Renaissance Art *Romanticism *Realism *Impressionism *Modern : Abstract and Non-Objective.
A BRIEF HISTORY OF WESTERN ART CAVE MAN TO 21 ST CENTURY.
Honore Daumier ( ) The Market Black Crayon and wash 9 7/8 x 6 3/4.
Mary Cassatt Mary Stevenson Cassatt American, born in Pennsylvania Born May 22, 1844 Lived to be 82 (June 14, 1926) Self Portrait, 1878 Metropolitan Museum.
+ Art Movements. + + Realism 1850’s Realists rejected Romanticism, which had dominated French literature and art since the late 18th century. Realism.
A Look into Artists Throughout History
Art History Review Drawing 2014
Post Impressionism Cubism Pop Art
WHO? Titian (ca ) Guidobaldo della Rovere Sofonisba Anguissola (ca )
An Expression of Who you Are
Academic Team Art Show 1 Art is not presented in the order of date created, but in the order of frequency asked at games. Additional art is presented for.
Welcome to Who Wants to be a Millionaire
A History of Portraiture
How to Read a Painting “Painting is poetry that is seen rather than felt, and poetry is painting that is felt rather than seen.”  ― Leonardo da Vinci.
Artist: Vincent Van Gogh
Portraits A portrait is a painting, photograph, sculpture, or other artistic representation of a person, in which the face and its expression is predominant.
Post Impressionism
Modern Art Influences and Origin.
Analyzing Renaissance Art
Pablo Picasso ( ) --painter, sculptor --from Spain
How would you describe this painting: the style, subject, color palette, mood? What is a picture of? How was it made? How would you describe this painting:
The Evolution of Portraiture Drawing and Painting I.
Portraits and Self-Portraits Timeline
Louvre Museum Facts. Louvre Museum is Paris ’s most visited attractions which welcomes approximately 9.3 million visitors early. The reason for its popularity.
The history of art movements and prominent artists
Presentation transcript:

Portraits and Self-Portraits ….Grab your Notebooks  be prepared to take notes

Objectives… What we’ll learn! Students will understand that…  Portraits and Self-Portraits have been a popular subject matter for artists throughout the history of art.  Portraits and Self-Portraits have all been created for different reasons ranging from commissioned to studies.  Sometimes portraits are meant to represent the subject realistically, other times they can be more of an expression

Essential Questions… Think about it! 1. How have the ways portraits have been created changed in style over the years? 2. Does an artist portray themselves differently in a self-portrait than they would someone else in a portrait? 3. Why would an artist create a self-portrait other than for study? 4. How is it different for an artist to create a self-portrait rather than a portrait of someone else? 5. Why might someone commission a portrait of themselves? 6. Why would someone want to look at, or even own, a portrait of someone they do not know?

Chuck Close Chuck Close “Self-Portrait” 1997 oil on canvas Museum of Modern Art, NYC 8' 6" x 7' (259.1 x 213.4 cm) Contemporary artist / photorealism

Mary Cassatt Mary Cassatt “Self-Portrait” 1878 gouache on paper Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC 23 5/8 x 16 3/16 in. (60 x 41.1 cm) Impressionism

Frida Kahlo Frida Kahlo “Self-Portrait with thorn necklace and hummingbird” 1940 Oil on canvas 24.11 in × 18.5 in (61.25 cm × 47 cm) Magic realism/surrealism

Vincent Van Gogh Vincent Van Gogh “Self-Portrait” 1889 oil on canvas Musee d’Orsay, Paris, France 2′ 2″ x 1′ 9″ Post-impressionism

Dorothea Lange Dorothea lange “Migrant mother” 1936 Photograph 11 1/8 x 8 9/16" (28.3 x 21.8 cm) Social realism

Leonardo da Vinci Leonardo da vinci “Mona lisa” 1503-1504 Oil on wood The Louvre museum, Paris, France 2′ 6″ x 1′ 9″ High renaissance

Leonardo da Vinci Leonardo da vinci “self-Portrait” 1512-1515 Chalk Bibliotheca Reale, Turin 1′ 1″ x 0′ 9″ High renaissance

Albrecht Dürer Albrecht dürer “self-Portrait” 1500 Oil on wood panel Alte pinakothek, munich 2′ 2″ x 1′ 7″ High renaissance

Bronzino (Agnolo di Cosimo de Mariano) “Portrait of a Young Man” 1530 Oil on wood The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 609 37 5/8” x 29 ½” (95.6 cm x 74.9 cm) mannerism

Hans Holbein the Younger “Portrait of Henry viii” 1540 Oil on panel Walker art gallery 34.8 in x 29.3 in (88.5 cm x 74.5 cm) Northern renaissance

Chuck Close Chuck close “Fanny/fingerpainting” 1985 Oil on canvas National gallery of art, Washington, dc 102 x 84 in. (259.1 x 213.4 cm) Contemporary artist

Thomas Gainsborough Thomas gainsborough “the blue boy” 1770 Oil paint The huntington library art collections & Botanical gardens, san marino, ca 5′ 10″ x 3′ 8″ Romanticism A professional rivalry with Reynolds resulted in this painting. Reynolds stated that “blue, a cool color, should always be used in the background. It should never be used in the main part of a portrait.” When Gainsborough heard this, he accepted it as a challenge and began planning a blue portrait.

Rogier van der Weyden Rogier van der weyden “Portrait of a Lady” 1460 Oil on panel National gallery of art, Washington, Dc 1′ 3″ x 0′ 11″ Northern renaissance

Edgar Degas Edgar degas “little dancer of fourteen years: 1879-1880 Wax and bronze sculpture Tate Liverpool, England 38 15/16” x 13 11/16” x 13 7/8” (98.9 x 34.7 x 35.2 cm) Impressionism

Andy Warhol Andy Warhol “self-Portrait” 1986 Acrylic paint and screen print on canvas 106” x 106”(269.24 x 269.24 cm) Pop artist

Queen Nefertiti Queen Nefertiti 1360 Bc Limestone Agyptisches museum, staaliche museum, berlin, Germany 19” (48 CM) Egyptian art