Friday, May 8, 2009

Realism

Winslow Homer, Artists Sketching in the White Mountains


Realism represents everyday scenes and events as they actually look. I admire this style of art for its realistic beauty. The artists created these paintings as they found them. They didn’t arrange anything in the scene or tell anyone to pose. Winslow Homer and Edouard Manet are two artists that painted in this style. I particularly like Homer's Artists Sketching in the White Mountains.


Edouard Manet, The Railway

Thursday, May 7, 2009

Impressionism and Post-Impressionism

Monet Haystacks




I've found Impressionism to be the most enjoyable art period we've gone over so far. This style consists of engaging and attractive scenes painted with more light and brighter colors. It also portrays a sense of change and movement in the scene. Nature is shown in its favorable side too. The defining characteristic of this style, however, is unmistakenly the way the paintings are made up of tiny dabs or spots of color. I prefer Monet's work the most due to his use of bright colors and open form. Other artists of this period, like Renoir and Degas, also are popular.


Van Gogh Starry Night

From this style, Post-Impressionism developed. Younger artists such as Vincent van Gogh, Paul Gauguin, Georges Seurat, and Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec defined this era, using color, pattern, form, and line in new ways based off of Impressionism. Camille Pissarro and Seurat both used the pointillism technique. Paul Cézanne is also considered a Post-Impressionist artist.

Georges Seurat Le Bec du Hoc



Degas The Glass of Absinthe


NYC Field Trip Reflection



I really enjoyed our field trip to NYC to tour the Whitney Museum and MoMA. Our tour of the museums, especially with the tour guides, got us think about what makes art art. The true definition of art varies from person to person. There's no denying art is subjective. People deem whether art is art based on their personal beliefs and experiences. Take Jenny Holzer's Protect Project-Redaction Paintings for instance. Although the redaction paintings are copied documents from the internet, they are blown up to emphasize a point--that as Americans we have access to these facts through the Freedom of Information Act, yet hardly anyone knows anythin about this war in the Middle East. Instead, we rely on the biased media ato tell us what's going on. Also, Holzer puts her own take on these "redaction paintings" (redaction meaning to edit and make ready for publication). I think art is different for each person. It is how individuals express their ideas and communicate their beleifs. Jenny Holzer just does this in a way that some people disagree with. If this isn't art, than what is it? Just an aesthetic opinion? It's up to us to decide.

Neoclassicism

Jacques-Louis David, The Death of Marat

Jacques-Louis David, often considered the "official" painter of the revolution, was the leading figure of Neoclassicism. Neoclassical art developed in the mid-18th to early-19th centuries. It is a solemn form of art, referring back to the style of ancient Rome and Greece. One of his paintings, The Death of Marat, was created in 1793. I like how the subject is illuminated, while the background is dark. Neoclassicism borrows this technique from the Baroque period.




Romanticism

Eugene Delacroix, The Lion Hunt

Romanticism is the style that portrays dramatic and exotic subjects perceived with strong feelings. Eugene Delacroix’s romantic paintings include stylistic traits such as glowing colors and swirling action. The Lion Hunt (above) depicts these elements of style. Personally, I don’t like this style that much. However, I do think its interesting how this artist began to paint using blurred colors to represent motion. I prefer the work of John Constable in The Traveller as he uses tiny dabs of pure color with bits of white to capture the changing face of nature.

John Constable, The Traveller

Monday, April 20, 2009

Rococo Art


Rococo art replaced Baroque Art at the beginning of the 18th century. With this new period of art came new subject matter. Artistic techniques, however, as well as style, remained the same for the most part. Instead of painting pictures relating to religion, artists now placed emphasis on the frivolity of life. The Swing (above) is an example of such work. It pictures a well-dressed woman in a carefree mood being pushed by a man assumed to be her husband. Another man who appears to be staring into her eyes (or looking up her dress) is assumed to be her lover. This portrays the themes of love and romance in these works of art. They were thought to be better subjects than history anf religion in this time. Personally, I don't care for this style much, but I think it's cool that the artists had the guts to break away from a strictly religious subject matter.




Baroque Art



Baroque art originated in the beginning of the 17th century in Italy. Many works of art in the Baroque era were either dances, music, sculptures, literary works, or paintings. This art generally had religious undertones such as Bernini's Ecstacy of St. Theresa (pictured above). Other elements characteristic of this style is portrayal of movement, energy, and contrast. Often, images of the commonplace portrayed as something beautiful made an appearance in paintings, like in Girl with a Pearl Earring by Vermeer (below). I enjoyed watching the movie Girl with a Pearl Earring in class. I thought it was very interesting. People seem to hold as much fascination for it as with the Mona Lisa. The mystery of the painting is what captivates us.