Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Modern Art & Music Movies & Radio. Objectives Recognize the characteristics of modernism in architecture, art, and music. Trace the development and explain.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Modern Art & Music Movies & Radio. Objectives Recognize the characteristics of modernism in architecture, art, and music. Trace the development and explain."— Presentation transcript:

1 Modern Art & Music Movies & Radio

2 Objectives Recognize the characteristics of modernism in architecture, art, and music. Trace the development and explain the significance of movies and radio between ca. 1900 and the 1930s.

3 Modernism rejection of old forms/values constant experimentation modern art = 1860s-1970s

4 ARCHITECTURE

5 Architecture functionalism: idea that bldgs should be useful, “functional”  Le Corbusier: “a house is a machine for living in” Louis H. Sullivan’s Schlesinger & Mayer Dept. Store, Chicago, 1899- 1904

6 Louis H. Sullivan’s Wainwright Building, St. Louis, 1890-1891, all steel frame

7 Le Corbusier’s Carpenter Center, Cambridge, MA, 1961-1964

8 Frank Lloyd Wright’s Hanna Residence, Stanford, CA, 1936

9 Walter Gropius’s Fagus shoe factory, Alfeld, Germany, 1911-1913

10 Ludwig Mies van der Rohe’s Lake Shore Apartments, Chicago, 1948-1951

11 Architecture Bauhaus: German school of design that combined the study of crafts and fine arts  1919-1933  Founded by Walter Gropius

12 PAINTING

13 Impressionism (late 19 th / early 20 th c.) Modern painting grew out of a revolt against French impressionism. French impressionism was characterized by the study of light – the attempt to capture the impression of light.

14 Monet, Bathing at La Grenouillere, 1869

15 Renoir, Le Moulin de la Galette, 1876

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

17 Postimpressionism / Expressionism Sought to portray the “unseen”: emotion & imagination Emphasis on form rather than light Artists include: van Gogh, Gauguin, Cezanne, Seurat, Signac, and Toulouse- Lautrec

18 Van Gogh, La chambre de Van Gogh a Arles (Van Gogh's Room at Arles), 1889

19 Van Gogh, Wheat Field with Cypresses, 1889

20 Gauguin, Self-Portrait with Halo, 1889

21 Gauguin, Tahitian Women OR On the Beach, 1891

22 “You must see in nature the cylinder, the sphere, and the cone.” - Paul Cézanne (1839-1906)

23 Cezanne, Mont Sainte-Victoire – (1) c. 1897- 1898, (2) 1902, (3) 1904-1906

24 Matisse, Portrait of Andre Derain, 1905

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

26 Cubism Compositions of shapes and forms “abstracted” from the conventionally perceived world Founded by Picasso

27 Picasso, Self-Portrait with Palette, 1906

28 Picasso, Guitar and Violin, ca. 1912

29 Picasso, Guernica, 1937 Woman falling from a burning house Woman holding a dead child Fragments of a warrior and a horse pierced by a spear

30 More expressionism – extreme abstraction Kandinsky & German Expressionist group, Der Blaue Reiter (The Blue Rider) “The observer must learn to look at [my] pictures … as form and color combinations … as a representation of mood and not as a representation of objects.” - Wassily Kandinsky (1866-1944)

31 Kandinsky, Improvisation 7, 1910

32 Kandinsky, Black and Violet, 1923

33 Kandinsky, Composition X, 1939

34 Dadaism Attacked all accepted standards of art and behavior “Dada” = “hobbyhorse” (nonsensical)

35 Start of The Dada Manifesto (1918, Tristan Tzara) “The magic of a word – DADA – which has placed the Newsmen before the Gate of an unexpected world Has for us no Importance whatsoever.”

36 More from The Dada Manifesto “Thus was DADA born of a need for independence, of suspicion for the community. Those who belong to us keep their freedom. We recognize no theory. We have enough of the cubist and futuristic academies: laboratories of formalistic ideas. Does one engage in art to earn money and stroke the pretty bourgeois?”

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

38 Surrealism (1920s/30s) By 1924, most Dada artists joined the Surrealist movement Art that expresses the world of dreams and the unconscious Inspired by psychologists Freud and Jung 2 groups:  Biomorphic – abstract forms that suggest natural forms  Naturalistic – recognizable scenes metamorphosed into dream image

39 Joan Miró, Singing Fish

40 Dali, The Persistence of Memory, 1931

41 Dali, Lighted Giraffes, 1936-1937

42 Magritte, L’art de vivre

43 MUSIC

44 Modern Music emotional intensity experimentation atonal = without a central key/tone; lacks expected pattern Ex. Stravinsky’s The Rite of Spring (1913)

45 MOVIES AND RADIO

46 Movies Movies appeared in the 1890s. 1 st movie houses came out of LA in early 20 th c. First films were silents. “Talkies” came out in late 1920s. US dominated the industry Charlie Chaplin

47 Movies = huge entertainment. Offered a form of escape.

48 Radio Early 1920s – inventions 1920 – first major public broadcasts of special events Every major country quickly set up broadcasting networks – most were gov’t- owned (ex. BBC)

49 Movies and radio became propaganda tools Sergei Eisenstein – October (1927) Leni Riefenstahl – The Triumph of the Will (1935)


Download ppt "Modern Art & Music Movies & Radio. Objectives Recognize the characteristics of modernism in architecture, art, and music. Trace the development and explain."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google