Annotated Mona Lisa
American Art: 1908-40
American realists focus on social concerns, daily life. Ash Can school, Sloan, Bellows, American Scene Painters, Benton, Wood, Hoppers, Social Realism, Bearden, Social Protest Art.
Architecture for the industrial age
Architects renounce past styles; buildings reflect new technology. Crystal Palace, Eiffel Tower, Arts and Crafts Movement
Prehistoric Art: the beginning
Art beings c. 25,000 BC with first surviving sculpture, cave paintings, huge stone monuments for rituals. Stonehenge
The Renaissance: The Beginning of Modern Painting
Classic art reborn due to breakthrough discoveries like anatomy and perspective; influence spreads from Italy throughout Europe. Four technical breakthroughs, early Renaissance Masters, Masaccio, Donatello, Botticelli.
Pop art
Consumer culture permeates art. Lichtenstein, Warhol, Oldenburg, Segal, Op art
Symbolism
Artists turn to subjective imagery, fantasy. Rousseau, Redon, Ryder.
Fauvism: Exploding Color
French painters warp color to express subjective response rather than object's appearance. Vlaminch, Derain, Dufy, Rouault.
Baroque: The Ornate Age
Grandiose art approaches theater with spotlight effect, emotional appeal.
Photography comes of age
Photography reflects trends with both surreal and geometric compositions. Man Ray, Atget, Cartier-Bresson, Stieglitz, Weston, Lange.
Cubism
Picasso, Braque overthrow Renaissance perspective, splinter form to show simultaneous views of object. Analytic Cubism, Synthetic Cubism: Gris, Leger
Contemporary Architecture
Post-Modern triumphs with return to historical references. Pei, Johnson, Beaubourg, Graves, Gehry, Venturi, Survey of Architecture.
Neo Expressionism
Powerful subject matter revived Beuys, Kiefer, Clemente, Baselitz, Basquiat
Twentieth Century and beyond: Contemporary Art
Experimentation continues as styles, materials, techniques change rapidly.
Neoclassicism: Roman Fever
Greek and Roman forms revived
Color field
Americans rely on fields of color to convey messages of art. Rothko, Newman, Frankenthaler, Louis
Conceptual Art: Invisible visual art
Idea rather than art object dominates Process Art, Environmental Art, Performance Art, Installations
Romanticism: The Power of Passion
Interest in exotic subjects born; goal of art to express emotion
Modernist architecture: Geometry to live in
International Style develops sleek, simple forms. Gropius, Mies van der Rohe, Le Corbusier, Wright
Rodin: First modern sculptor
Rodin brings sculpture into modern era.
The Birth of Art: Prehistoric through Medieval
Roots of paintings, sculpture, architecture, established.
Twentieth Century Sculpture: A new look
Sculpture simplified into abstract symbols.
The Middle Ages: The reign of religion
Spiritual art to inspire religious devotion replaces lifelike portrayal
Greece: They invented a lot more than the Olympics
Striving for ideal beauty results in sculpture, architecture, vase painting with balance, proportion, harmony; style called "Classical" because it set standard for technical perfection. Vase painting, sculpture, architecture, Greek art styles.
Contemporary Art
Styles multiply in global high-tech world before returning to high-touch tradition of studio craft.
Modernism outside of France
New concept of art spreads: less concerned with subject or outside world, more concerned with color, line, shape.
The Birth of Modern Architecture.
New functions demand new forms; skyscraper invented. Sullivan.
Realism
New view of art's function arises; artists show life of streets without retouching reality.
Goya: Man without an "ISM"
Nonconformist denounces human hypocrisy
Post-War sculpture
Nonrepresentational sculptures experiment with varied material and forms. Moore, Calder, Smith, Bourgeois, Nevelson.
Photo-Realism
Painting imitates the camera. Estes, Flack, Close, Hanson
Photography: What's new
Realism and fantasy both evident. Abbott, Bourke-White, Adams, Street Photography, Uelsmann, Baldessari
Pre-Pop art
Recognizable objects return to art. Rauschenberg, Johns
African Art: The first cubists
Religions shapes art of wooden masks, elongated sculpture; semiabstract forms influence modern art. Influence of Tribal Art
Mesopotamia: The Architects
First cities built with mammoth temples called ziggurats and palaces lined with bas-relief sculpture. The pyramid form through the ages
Early expressionism
Form and color distorted to convey feelings. Munch, Modersohn-Becker
The 19th century: Birth of the "ISMS"
France dominates art leadership for next 200 years as styles come and go
Abstract Expressionism
Action painters smash art tradition, create first U.S. movement to influence world art. Gorky, Pollock, de Kooning, Kline, Hofmann, Still, Motherwell.
The Twentieth Century: Modern Art
Art styles shift each decade; trend toward nonrepresentational art increases.
Rebirth of Art: Renaissance and Baroque
Artists rediscover how to represent human figure realistically, overcome technical limitations
Figural Expressionism: Not just a pretty face
Artists seek visceral effect by distorting figures. Dubuffet, Outsider Art, Bacon, Kahlo
Minimalism: The cool school
Artists strip sculpture to simplest elements, pure form without content. Judd, Andre, Flavin, LeWitt, Morris, Serra
Hard edge
Artists use large geometric shapes to show how colors interact. Albers Noland, Kelly, Stella
Post-Impressionism
French Painters blaze trails by using color to express emotion and simulate depth. Hallmarks of Post-Impressionist's Styles, Seurat, Toulouse-Lautrec, Cezanne, Gauguin, Van Gogh.
Impressionism: Let there be color and light
French artists paint outdoors to record changing effects of light, launch art revolution. Hallmarks of Impressionist's Styles, Landmark Paintings, Manet, Monet, Renoir, Degas, Cassatt, Morisot, Pissarro, Graphics Arts, Japanese Woodblocks Prints.
Dada and Surrealism: Art between the wars
Dada defies logic; surrealist artists explore world of dreams and unconscious. Duchamp, Arp, Schwitters, Miro, Chirico, Ernst, Chagall, Dali, Magritte
Art Nouveau
Decorative style of flowing lines opposes Machine Age. Beardsley, Tiffany
Rome: The Organizers
Empire produces realistic portrait sculpture, idealized busts of emperors, engineering wonders like aqueducts and arenas based on arch, vault, dome. Greek vs Roman styles, Architecture, Sculpture, Colosseum, Pompeii.
Twin Titans of the Twentieth Century: Matisse and Picasso
Matisse simplifies, Picasso fractures forms. Matisse, Picasso
Mondrian: Harmony of opposites
Mondrian devises purely geometric art.
The New Breed: Post-Modern Art
Multiple styles with social criticism common. Appropriation art: Schnabel: photography derived art: kruger, Sherman, Longo; Narrative Art: Fischl; Graffiti Art: Haring; Political art, Post-Modern Sculpture, End of the Millenium.
Pre-Colombian Art of the Americas: New World art when it was still an old world
Native Americans create stylized human and animal forms in ceremonial objects. Mound-Builders, 20th-century adaptations.
Birth of Photography
New art form born; captures world with unmatched accuracy. Inventors: Niepce, Daguerre, Talbot, Types of Photography, Impact on Painting
Egypt: The art of Immortality
Tomb art developed with wall paintings; statues conforming to rigid conventions for 3,000 years; colossal architecture (pyramids) constructed. Paintings, sculptures, mummies, pyramids, Tutankhamen's Tomb