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AWQ4MI – Mrs. Kalinowski  PRE-HISTORY: Portraiture.

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Presentation on theme: "AWQ4MI – Mrs. Kalinowski  PRE-HISTORY: Portraiture."— Presentation transcript:

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2 AWQ4MI – Mrs. Kalinowski

3  PRE-HISTORY: Portraiture

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5  CLASSICAL: Portraiture

6  MEDIEVAL: Portraiture

7  1500s: Portraiture

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9  1600s: Portraiture

10  1700s: Portraiture

11  1800s: Portraiture

12  1910s: Portraiture

13  1920s: Portraiture

14  1930s: Portraiture

15  MODERN: Portraiture  1800S & 1900S…

16  Etienne-Jules Marey, Schenkel, High Jump, 1886 A scientist, physiologist seeking concrete/measurable facts to analyze human/animal movement A mechanical device attached the subject to a wire with a pen. Subject’s movement activated the pen to draw on paper how the subject moved. Quest: to picture a body’s “all at oneness”  to display all moving parts of the body

17  Social Realist Painting vs. Photography Peter Henry Emerson,, Furze-Cutting on the Suffolk Common, 1886 Gustave Courbet, The Stone Breakers, 1849-50

18  Photojournalism Jacob A. Riis, 5 Cents a Spot (How the Other Half Lives), 1890.  A journalist - used photography to better convey conditions of immigrants http://www. youtube.com /watch?v=87 SCTEsIufY Muckracking : Exposing political/social corruption to the public. Communicating news with photographs instead of text Flash powder

19  Social Reform http://www. youtube.com /watch?v=RL WM6M8__X4 Lewis W. Hine, Steelworker, 85 Stories up (left – looking north to Central Park/right – above Rockefeller Centre ), 1931. A sociologist- used photography to reveal dismal labour conditions and how people became insignificant in the urban/city landscape Making changes in society and its perception

20  Dorothea Lange, Migrant Mother 1936. Walker Evans, Allie Mae 1935

21  Ethnography http://www. youtube.com /watch?v=KX RwEenveRI A ‘scientific’/visual description of individuals/cultures/peoples Photographers took photos according to their own view and controlled the Other’s visual identity Edward S. Curtis, Bear Bull-Blackfoot, 1926. A self-taught photographer- documented Native Americans in a non-object/subject way (he used a ‘white, European culture filter’ that made natives appear romantic, pictorial, soft-focused, nostalgic, not assimilated, emotional & used props to stage scenes/people)

22  Ethnography as Social Consciousness A ‘scientific’/visual description of individuals/cultures/peoples Dorothea Lange, Migrant Mother, 1936 (left) & White Angel Breadline, 1931 (right) A photographer – photographed people impacted by WW1 during The Great Depression who became an “Other.” Her work called attention to poverty and directed aid to those in desperate need.

23  Romance & spectacle 1945 & 2012

24   Barbara Krugar

25  Cindy Sherman - Judith

26  Gregory Crewdson

27  Jill Greenberg

28  TODAY: The #selfie Obama #selfie – etiquette?

29  Plane Crash Victim Avatar Astronaut hovering in space Dog shoots his own #selfie “I woke up like this…”

30  Earliest #Selfies? Van Gogh – proto #selfie? (19 th C) Parmigianino’s – Self Portrait in a Convex Mirror (16 th C) – the earliest #selfie?

31   Is the #selfie making us all narcissistic? Or are these today’s self- portraits?  Infographic: http://www.medi abistro.com/alltwi tter/selfie- syndrome_b52337 http://www.medi abistro.com/alltwi tter/selfie- syndrome_b52337 Portraiture VS. Narcissism


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