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European Art History Review

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Presentation on theme: "European Art History Review"— Presentation transcript:

1 European Art History Review

2 Classical (500 BC – 500 AD) Left: Roman copy of Myron’s Diskobolos, marble sculpture Above: Pantheon, Rome, ca. 120 AD

3 Classical (500 BC – 500 AD) sculpture, pottery, murals, mosaics
subjects: gods, goddesses, important leaders, everyday ppl. idealized figures nudity, togas active bodies, emotionless faces no perspective architecture: columns, arches, domes

4 Medieval (500 – 1400 AD) Left: Cimabue, Madonna and Child in Majesty, tempera paint on wooden panel, c. 1280 Above: Narthex Tympanum, sculpture, 1120

5 Medieval (500 – 1400 AD) stained-glass windows, sculptures, illuminated manuscripts, paintings, tapestries subject: Christianity fully clothed bright colors, gilding 2-dimensional, flat, stiff emotionless, no individualization

6 Medieval (500 – 1400 AD) GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE
Above: Salisbury Cathedral, England, Above: Notre Dame Cathedral, Paris,

7 Renaissance (1400 – 1650) Below: The High Renaissance: Leonardo da Vinci’s Last Supper, fresco, 1498 Above: Breaking ground: Giotto’s Last Supper, fresco,

8 Renaissance (1400 – 1650) Raphael, School of Athens, fresco, 1510
Leonardo, Lady with an Ermine, oil on wood,

9 Renaissance (1400 – 1650) Left: Donatello’s David, bronze sculpture, 5.2 feet tall, ca Right: Michelangelo’s David, marble sculpture, 13.5 feet tall, ca. 1504

10 Renaissance (1400 – 1650) Bramante, Tempietto, San Pietro in Montorio, Rome, 1508

11 Jan Van Eyck, The Betrothal of the Arnolfini, OIL on wood, 1434
Northern Renaissance Jan Van Eyck, The Betrothal of the Arnolfini, OIL on wood, 1434 Dürer, St. Anne with the Virgin and Child, oil and tempura on canvas, 1519

12 Renaissance (1400 – 1650) painting, sculpture classical revival
Christian + secular themes portraiture perspective scientific naturalism (ex. drawing studies) natural light

13 Baroque (17th c.) Above: Bernini, Ecstasy of St. Teresa, marble sculpture, Rome, Right: Rubens, Virgin and Child Enthroned with Saints, sketch for a large altar painting, ca

14 Baroque (17th c.) religious emotional dynamic movement
Product of Catholic Reformation & Counter-Reformation … rekindle faith propaganda – for CC and secular patrons (ex. Louis XIV)

15 French classicism (late 17th c.)
Poussin, The Rape of the Sabine Women, oil on canvas,

16 French classicism (late 17th c.)
official style of Louis XIV’s courtw subject/style: Greco-Roman / Renaissance discipline, balance, restraint

17 Rococo (18th c.) Above: Fragonard, The Swing, oil on canvas, 1766
Right: Fragonard, The Progress of Love: The Pursuit, oil on canvas, 1773

18 Rococo (18th c.) Left: Basilica at Ottobeuren, Bavaria
Above: Meissonnier, design for a table, Paris, ca. 1730

19 Rococo (18th c.) French … reaction against the much heavier French classicism subjects: ornate interiors, sentimental portraits, starry-eyed lovers protected by hovering cupids soft pastels decorative arts … used in urban townhouses, Enlightenment salons

20 David, The Death of Socrates, oil on canvas, 1787
Neoclassicism ( ) David, The Death of Socrates, oil on canvas, 1787

21 Neoclassicism ( ) David, The Lictors Bring to Brutus the Bodies of His Sons, oil on canvas, 1789

22 Neoclassicism (1750-1850) Enlightenment era: order, reason, discipline
“new” classical (Greco-Roman themes & style) smooth brushstrokes spotlight lighting

23 Romanticism ( s) Below: Joseph M.W. Turner, Shipwreck, oil on canvas, 1805 Above: Caspar David Friedrich, Moonrise over the Sea, oil on canvas, 1821

24 Delacroix, Liberty Leading the People, oil on canvas, 1830
Romanticism ( s) Delacroix, Liberty Leading the People, oil on canvas, 1830

25 Romanticism (1800-1850s) Reaction against Enlightenment: emotional
nature nature as peaceful or powerful huge skies man dwarfed by nature romanticizes the rural life (anti-IR) soft, muted colors, natural light other subjects: the macabre, the Gothic, nationalism, heroes, family life, religion

26 Realism (1830s-1900) Above: Millet, The Gleaners, oil on canvas, 1857
Right: Kollwitz, The March of the Weavers, etching, 1897

27 Realism (1830s-1900) IR-era hardships of daily life natural lighting

28 Monet, Bathing at La Grenouillere, oil on canvas, 1869
Impressionism (1870s-1880s) Monet, Bathing at La Grenouillere, oil on canvas, 1869

29 Renoir, Le Moulin de la Galette, oil on canvas, 1876
Impressionism (1870s-1880s) Renoir, Le Moulin de la Galette, oil on canvas, 1876

30 Pissarro, Boulevard Montmarte – at various times of day and in various types of weather, 1897

31 Impressionism (1870s-1880s) France
study of light – capture impression of light very obvious brushstrokes modern painting grew out of a revolt against French impressionism

32 Post-Impressionism & Expressionism (late 19th – early 20th c.)
Van Gogh in 1889 Above: Van Gogh's Room at Arles Right: Wheat Fields and Cypress

33 Post-Impressionism & Expressionism (late 19th – early 20th c.)
Gaugin Above: Tahitian Women OR On the Beach, 1891 Right: Self-Portrait with Halo, 1889

34 Post-Impressionism & Expressionism (late 19th – early 20th c.)
Cezanne, Mont Sainte-Victoire, paintings from late 1890s-early 1900s

35 Matisse, Portrait of Andre Derain, 1905

36 Matisse, The Jazz Series (cutouts), 1943-1944

37 Post-Impressionism & Expressionism (late 19th – early 20th c.)
followed the Impressionists and to some extent rejected their ideas. They: considered Impressionism too naturalistic sought to explore emotion in painting Artists include: van Gogh, Gauguin, Cezanne, Seurat, Signac, and Toulouse-Lautrec

38 Cubism: Works by Picasso
Self-Portrait with Palette, 1906 Guitar and Violin, ca. 1912

39 Cubism Compositions of shapes and forms “abstracted” from the conventionally perceived world Picasso

40 More Expressionism – Extreme Abstraction
Kandinsky: Left: Improvisation 7, 1910 Above: Black and Violet, 1923

41 More Expressionism – Extreme Abstraction
Kandinsky, Composition X, 1939

42 More Expressionism – Extreme Abstraction
elimination of representational elements Kandinsky saw abstractions as evolving blueprints for a more enlightened and liberated society emphasizing spirituality Kandinsky & German Expressionist group, Der Blaue Reiter (The Blue Rider)

43 Dada ( ) Duchamp, L.H.O.O.Q. (Mona Lisa with Moustache), 1919

44 Dada ( ) attacked all accepted standards of art and behavior … really anti-art “Dada” = “hobbyhorse” (nonsensical) turned into Surrealism, which is an actual art movement

45 Surrealism (1920s forward)
Joan Miró, Singing Fish

46 Surrealism (1920s forward)
Dali, The Persistence of Memory, 1931

47 Surrealism (1920s forward)
Dali, Lighted Giraffes,

48 Surrealism (1920s forward)
Magritte, L’art de vivre, 1967

49 Surrealism (1920s forward)
By 1924, most Dada artists joined the Surrealist movement expresses the world of dreams and the unconscious; wanted to bring outer and inner “reality” into single position inspired by psychologists Freud and Jung 2 groups: Biomorphic – abstract forms that suggest natural forms Naturalistic – recognizable scenes metamorphosed into dream image


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