ART 1001- Spiel
Idea came along when Isaac Newton discovered that a prism can break down white light into its component parts
Color spectrum
Orange=blue, Red=green, Violet=yellow
Complementary colors
-granted Christians tolerance, moved capital of (reunified) Roman Empire to Constantinople
Constantine the Great (End of Roman Empire)
work's subject matter, or what is being depicted
Content
blue, green, violet
Cool colors
defining feature: acanthus leaves- the third Greek order not discussed so far
Corinthian order
huge stones arranged in a circle -believed to have a religious association: cult of the dead or sun worship -the most famous such structure is that of Stonehenge GB
Cromlech
assumed almost religious dimensions in ancient Rome; each house had niches or shrines to receive the busts of ancestors
Cult of the ancestors
wedge-shaped; advent of writing in Sumerian culture
Cuneiform
Greek Islands
Cycladic Culture
rolled in soft clay to reveal positive imprint
Cylinder seals
Unique images produced by photography before photographic negatives
Daguerreotypes
All men and women are born with equal rights
Declaration of Human Rights
made of marble slabs, plaster, or ornamental brick- or stonework outside (opus incertum, opus reticulatum, etc.)
Decorative sheathing
During Persian wars of 480BCE Athens runs an alliance of Greek city-and island states
Delian League
An alternative dating method based on the tree rings found in timber, bristle cone pines in CA dating back as far as 4,000 BCEE serve as reference
Dendrochronology
typically involves stone or wood (unique works of art)
Direct carving of a sculpture
discus thrower
Discobolos
tomb structures consisting of rows of stones, planted vertically in the ground, covered with a slab
Dolmen
associated with mainland Greece, simpler, massive, older, rustic; distinctive features: plain, cushion like capitals, triglyph and metope on frieze(reminders of early wooden temples; triglyphs=ends of wooden crossbeams)
Doric Order
Figure groups organized in bands canonical
Egyptian formula for rendering of nature (esp. human figure) include:
"Hot wax painting"
Encaustic
Powered pigment, binder=beeswax, HEAT used as thinner. Used since ancient times (eg. mummy portraits of ancient Egypt)
Encaustic
ca700-510 BCE
Etruscan Art
-predates that of ancient rome -uses Greek colonies as models -cities are underneath modern cities of central Italy
Etruscan Culture
rare in traditional figures (and typically clothed), appear with increasing frequency during the Hellenistic Period
Female figures
Flemish painter Jan van Eyck, but the Italians perfected it and used it extensively
First to explore technique of oil on canvas
Work's style, technique and media used, and how elements of design are implemented
Form
Spatial division, colors, horizontal/vertical emphasis, no interest content (but: aids the orientation of the viewer/helps clarity of description), figurative work of art
Formal Analysis
the center of Roman political, business & social life
Forum Romanum
Romulus and Remus
Founding myth of Rome
founded in 1648; was influential in defining the modern identity of the artist as an independent intellectual
French Academy of Painting and Sculpture
codified values of the enlightenment; abolition of aristocratic privileges, declaration of human rights, republicanism
French Revolution of 1789
Powdered pigment, Binder=lime in PLASTER, thinner=water MUST be painted on fresh, wet plaster
Fresco
Drawings allow artists to collect and record ideas (sketchbooks), to try out proportions and to visualize ideas (preparatory drawings); sometimes, however, drawings can be an end in themselves
Functions of Drawings
France factory that became famous for its tapestries
Gobelin factories
Babylon's most powerful king; first ruler to establish codified (written) laws for his realm recorded on the "Stele of Hammurabi"
Hammurabi
Greek mainland
Helladic culture
-saw a decline of the ideals espoused by the age of Perikles and Phidias -Athenian dominance ended with defeat during Peloponnesian War in 404 BCE -Alexander the Great conquers Sumer, Babylon, Egypt, Assyria, Persia and parts of India -influx and absorption of Eastern (oriental) influences -departure from classical canon of idealized human beauty:drama suffering, age and physical decay become focus =>emergence of nude female figures
Hellenistic Period
323-30BC
Hellenistic Period
-barbarians, old-folk and children -objective: stir emotion of observer -disharmonious, unsettling and eccentric content
Hellenstic Art
Historical>Portraits>Genre>Landscape>Still Life Art Academies promoted art that was inspired by themes of classical antiquity and maintained ____________
Hierarchy of genres
king's body represented much larger than anybody else's to signify rank
Hieratic scale
translated by Rosetta stone; found to be phonetic, not pictographs
Hieroglyphic Writing
on top of hierarchy of genres
History painting
first works in the canon of Western literature, birth of mythology and poetry
Homer's Iliad and Odyssey
world view centers on human, not divine perspective; became popular during renaissance
Humanisms
predominates (mammoth, bison, reindeer, horses, boar, etc.); spears and traps; occasional hand prints
Hunting Iconography
-roof supported by columns using post and lintel system -Commonly had a clerestory or raised, central rows of columns (allowed light to filter in)
Hypostyle
Study of the content of images eg: Who was Marat? Who was David? What event is depicted?
Iconography
The visual images and symbols used in a work of art or the study or interpretation of these
Iconography (Form vs. Content)
first artist/architect of recorded history
Imhotp
Italian expression meaning thick (literally paste like) application of paint. Creates texture using diaphanous paint. Relief like, 3D quality of paint that sits on the surface
Impasto
-emphasis on public works, architecture, infrastructure
Imperial Rome
27BCE-337>Constantine the Great
Imperial Rome
launched incursions that damaged economic and administrative structure -problem magnified by introduction of Chrisitanity -Empire on verge of collapse; division of Roman empire and beginning of Byzantine
Imperial Rome
Texture of canvas and consistency of paint
Influences the character of oil on canvas paintings
Printmaking technique where crevice in the plate (engraved or etched with acid) hold the ink, the untouched part is wiped and does not hold ink eg: engravings and etchings
Intaglio techniques
associated with Asia Minor, decorative, recent, seems lighter, sophisticated; distinctive feature: volutes mimicking acanthus leaves
Ionic order
English expression "design" is a distant relative
Italian: disegno
Deciphered hieroglyphic writing in the early 1820s using the rosetta stone
Jean Francois Champollion
Printmaking technique using litho crayons on fine-grained Bavarian limestone; gum Arabic and acid as fixative, stone is wetted and greasy ink is applied which is repelled by water in the blank areas
Lithography
Techniques invented in the 19th century as commercial processes
Lithography and Photography
Method specific to cast metal, especially bronze, 3D positive figure is modeled in wax, then immersed in clay investment mould. Upon firing, wax melts
Lost Wax (Cire Perdu) Casting method
art is produced for the market place, artists no longer know their clients on a personal basis most of the time
Market place system
Greece, Mesopotamia, and Egypt are all a part of:
Mediterranean basin
The construction of the great pyramids are believed to be a consequence of moving a royal residence where during the third dynast?
Memphis
Middle stone age (from about 8000 BCE to 6000 BCE for Mediterranean; extends up to 4000 BCE for Spain and Northern Europe)
Mesolithic Period
a loose association of indep, cities, was one of the earliest great Mesopotamian civilizations: began early 4th millennium BCE
Mesopotamia-Sumer
defined by: -political organization in city-states, surrounded by nomadic people and interlinked by trade; cities were religious and administrative centers enjoying economic prosperity -building of temple structures (difference to Egypt: preoccupation with royal tombs)
Mesopotamian civilizations
2500-1400 BCE
Minoan
first instance of highly developed, urban culture in Western hemisphere
Minoan Architecture
located on the island of crete ca 2800-14550 BCE
Minoan culture
The cultural aspect of the modern experience expressed mainly in art and literature. Eg: individuality, alienation, psychological states, danyism, introspection, anesthetization of everyday experience
Moderism
The civilizational aspect of the modern experience, eg: scientific discoveries, technological advances, railroads, industrialization, mechanization, urbanization, rationalization, etc.
Modernity
a single, large stone
Monolith n. (adj.: monolithic)
small pieces of colored glass, stone or ceramic tile called tessera, are embedded in a background material such as plaster or mortar
Mosaic
1400-1200 BCE
Mycenaean Culture
culture of Greek mainland associated with Mycenae (on the Peloponnesus) ca.1550-1100 BCE
Mycenaean Culture
1200 BCE
Mycenaen culture collapsed
may be portrayed in "Head of Akkadian Ruler", culture blossoming under his rule -ruled and conquered by military force; called governors of subordinate cities his "slaves," himself "King of the Four Quarters" Ithe universe
Naram-Sin
under his rule there was a revival of Babylonian culture: hanging gardens, ziggurat temple of Bel (Bible:Babel)
Nebuchadezzar
Allows for an unlimited number of identical prints in photography, began being used by the middle of the 19th century
Negatives
Giant stride forward in human development: fixed abodes and domestication of plants and animals; village cultures surrounded by fields; change from hunter to herdsmen may have started in the Near East as early as 7000 BCE and in Europe about 4000 BCE
Neolithic Age
Late Stone Age (Eastern Mediterranean: 6000 BCE to 3500 BCE; Spain and Northern Europe: 4000 to 1500 BCE)
Neolithic Period
incursioins from Syrian and Mesopotamian uplands, new type of weaponry, conquests, new capital (thebes)
New Kingdom
1570-1070 BCE
New Kingdom of Ancient Egypt
Greek goddess of Victory
Nike
Cult of Emperor- Emperors were seen as god-like
Official Religion of Imperial Rome
Glazes: thin transparent layers of paint that build up on surface. Creates jewel like surface quality and smooth surfaces. Extremely time consuming. Flemish tradition of painting. eg. van Eyck
Oil glazes
First used in the 15th century (the renaissance)
Oil on canvas
Great pyramids, & Great Sphinx
Old Kingdom
ca.2686-2155 BCE
Old Kingdom of Ancient Egypt
Chalk dust
Opaque watercolor (Gouache) adds......
built by Darius I and Xerxes I; destroyed by Greek conquerer Alexander the Great
Palace of Persepolis
Early stone age from about 35000 BCE to 8000 BCE
Paleolithic Period
takes place every four years: citizen of Athens carried in a ceremonial procession the peplos (or robe) to archaic statue of Athena
Panathenaic procession
Oldest and largest of the buildings on the Acropolis
Parthenon
artist produce for patrons, common since Renaissance; demised during the 18th/19th century
Patronage system
statesman who rebuilt Athens; including reconstruction of the Acropolis on grander scale
Pericle
538-331 BCE
Persian Empire
all hellenes joined forces against invasion of Greece by the Persians; Athen emerged as leading Greek power
Persian War (497-479BCE)
leaders/kings of ancient Eygpt
Pharaohs
Produced initially as unique images (Daquerreotypes) but by the middle of the century, photographic negatives came to be used that allowed for unlimited number of identical prints
Photography
"painting in the open, painting in nature" pioneered by Barbizon group of painters in France (Charles-Francois Daubigny). was made possible by the invention of tin tubes
Plein Air Painting
Great rival of Phidas in Athens
Polykleitos
- helped gain a lot of knowledge of daily life in Republic Rome - major volcanic eruption of Mt. Vesuvius =>79CE -Rediscovered in mid 18th century
Pompeii and neighboring Herculaneum
Stone Cromlech
Post-and-Lintel
Minoan culture and Mycenaean culture
Pre-Classical Greece
Red, Yellow, and Blue
Primary colors
Engravings, etching, lithographs, silkscreen prints, etc.
Prints
Multiples, distinct from original (one of a kind) works of art eg: cast sculptures, prints, potographs, etc.
Prints
entry gate (path of Panathenaic procession)
Propylaea
contemporary architecture in Greece by this time (ca.460BCE) had already entered classical period
Provincial conservation
Greek domination
Ptolemaic Period of Egypt
Invented in 1955, it is based on the fact that living organisms continually absorb carbon isotopes, including radioactive carbon-14, which disintegrates into nonradioactive nitrogen-14; upon death of an organism, absorption ceases, but disintegration continues. Since the rate of disintegration is known, deductions about age can be made based on the amount of carbon-14 remaining
Radiocarbon Dating
Egypt's great warrior pharaoh; his temple built far up the Nile
Ramses II
symbol was a pyramidal stone (the ben ben) by the fourth dynasty, the pharohs considered themselves the sons of him cult was nearby Helipolis
Re, the sun god
Front of oil on canvas
Recto
Assyrians excelled at this kind of sculpture; which is carved out of only one side of a block stone and was used to decorate their places
Relief sculpture
Printing technique that occurs with the raised parts of the plates; those parts that have not been cut away eg: linoleum cutes (linocuts), woodcuts (woodengravings)
Relieg processes
re-birth of classical antiquity
Renaissancce
509-27 BCE> Augustus proclaimed Emperor
Republican Rome
-skills in administration, building of infrastructure, and law and government; calendar, language - admiration of Greek culture and art => start reproducing on large scale
Republican rome
res publica=common good ex. right to pursue happiness > political advent of modernism
Republicanism
Tigris and Euphrates in Mesopotamia (today: parts of Syria and Iraq), the Nile Delta of Egypt; move from the grassy uplands (beginning of agriculture) to the river valleys and deltas rich in fertile soils due to river deposits
River Valley cultures
Instead of pyramids, mortuary temples carved directly out of the cliffs were made during the New Kingdom
Rock-Cut Temples
Concrete (lime mortar, water, and volcanic dust) combined with use of arches and vaults
Roman innovations in building techniques
Depended on aqueducts; played very important role in Roman civilization
Running water and sewer system
Large or smaller copied
Scaled copies
where many Hellenistic sculptures originated
School of Rhodes
Green, violet, and orange
Secondary colors
obtained by mixing primary colors
Secondary colors
shoes warlike aspects of his rule: king with horned helmet near the pinnacle of the composition, treading on the bodies of the fallen enemies; below, the files of soldiers in his army
Stele
Refers to the formal qualities of a work of art that can typically be associated with a historical period and/or a specific geographical region, and which are shared across individual creators
Style
Art deco style characterized by angular shapes and dark colors; it celebrated the dynamism of the machine age and was prevalent during the 1920 and 1930s especially in the US and France
Style of "The Brooklyn Bride" and "Self-Portrait"
statues with clasped hands and large rendering of the eyes
Sumerian Art
ca2300 BCE: unified under ruler Sargon of Akkad of the Semitic Akkadian people
Sumerian Cities
Anu(god of the sky), En-lil/Bel (creator and ruler of earth and "lord of the storm")
Sumerian innovations: a system of gods
Seals, record keeping task of temple priests
Sumerian innovations: art of writing
Hawk (head)
Symbol for the sun
Term describing characteristics pertaining to the surface of a painting, sculpture, etc.
Texture
earliest form of democracy; body of citizens in a Greek city-state with voting rights
The Athenian polis
transition to high classical sculpture, so called sever style
The Riace Warriors
-care of dead/ afterlife was important to Egyptian culture -religious belief: Ka lived on after death and needed to be provided for (preservation of body, food, drink, art, etc) -Mastabas (Arabic:bench): rectangular with sloping sides and made of brick are the earliest type of funery monuments
Tomb architecture
discovered in 1922; took the attire/attributes of Osiris; lingering trace of naturalism
Tomb of tutankhamen
Fool the eye
Trompe l'oeil
type of tomb from Etruscan culture; interior excavated from tufa rock (soft stone originally formed in through volcanic eruptions), rock cut tomb, niches which would hold the sarcophagi of the deceased
Tumulus
became cradle of the oil on canvas technique due to problem of salinity and humidity affecting frescoes
Venice
Back of oil on canvas, shows stretcher, canvas, inscriptions (signature, title, date), and labels
Verso
Red, yellow, orange
Warm color
Drawings, Collages, Prints, Most prints from photographic negatives/ digital prints
Works on paper
Stepped temple structure made of sun-dried brick; it is typical for Mesopotamian civilizations (Sumer, Babylon, etc.)
Ziggurat
Elevation
a separate part of something
alternative model for artistic training; art schools today are distant relatives of this academic model
academy
training under a recognized master
apprenticeship system
several arches are placed next to eachother
arcade
advance guard: art as an agent for change in society, Utopias, Socialism/Communism, art needs to be radical, needs to be ahead of its time
avant-garde
decorating the metope panels set between triglyphs in outer faced
bas-relief sculture
consubstantial with the wall on which it is painted
buon fresco or True Fresco technique
follows a fixed set of rules from which artists rarely deviate and which turn into a standard
canonical (n: canon)
Gr. naos, or enclosed chamber inside temple
cellae
-most forums had them -often with temple dedicated to the protective deity of the titular emperor
colonnaded courts
inspired by scientific discoveries, many late 19th century artists tried to develop styles and painting methods that would incorporate color theory
complementary colors in pointillism
Ancient Eygptians had ______ taste in matters of art
conservative
the opposite of oil glaze
diaphanous paint
Binder of tempera
egg yolk
confraternities or craft associations
guilds
colors of the spectrum
hues
sculpture in the round of a male youth depicted nude
kuros figure
composite creatures between humans and animals standard feature of Mesopotamian art
lamassu
Binder for fresco
lime in plaster
Mycenaean Architecture on Peloponnesian penisula
palaces of Tiryns and Mycenae
chalk-like, friable medium; requires colored paper as support
pastel
aristocratic leadership class
patricians
household gods
penates
common people
plebians
severity
severitas
Lotus and papyrus decorations
symbol for unified Egypt
fertility and strength, revered through the New East and the Mediterranean (cf Picasso)
symbolism of the bull
Characteristic of pylon temples:
symetrical around central axis
designs were frequently woven after the design of famous artists/artwork; served as insulation from the cold
tapestry
Aesthetics defined....
the nature of beauty
ways of using the line to imply volumes of solid masses
tonal variations/shading or hatching/cross-hatching
Five lintel-topped pairs of the largest sarsen stones, each weighing 45 to 50 tons
trilithons
several arches are stacked up one behind the other
vault
literalness
veritas
________ colors seem to advance while ________ colors seem to recede
warm, cool
mass-transportation, railway system, consumer goods more accessible, leisure time, large metropolitan centers expand, Haussmannization in Paris, photography replaces painting, radical breaks with tradition, conventions of representation> modernism in art:Impressionism, Post-Impressionism, ultimately Cubism after 1907
1860s and 1870s
Perspective rendering
A two-dimensional picture of what the three-dimensional venue is going to look like.
Form of communication that uses visual vocabulary
ART
term stands in opposition of figurative art DESCRIBES WORKS THAT HAVE NO REFERENCE AT ALL TO NATURAL OBJECTS (Picasso never painted __________)
Abstract art
doctrine derived from the French Academy of Painting and Sculpture
Academicism
Invented machine that allowed for scaled copies of sculptures in 1839
Achille Colas
High Classical Architecture
Acropolis
an ensemble of structures built during the classical period
Acropolis
Relatively recent invention (second half of 20th century), transparent "films of color", dries fast, and allows for high degree of color intensity
Acrylics
Sub-displine of philosophy concerned with the nature of how we process and assess what we percieve; originally tried to define the nature of beauty
Aesthtics
-marked break with traditional canon of Egyptian art during rule of Amenhotep IV or Akhenton -religion of Aton and abolished native cult Amen -moved capital from Thebes downriver to Tel-el-Amarna
Amarna Period
preservation of the ka beyond death -define type of monuments, works of art: tombs and temples dominate
Ancient Eygpt: Preoccupation with the afterlife
individuality
Ancient Greece emphasized:
Invention of money (coins); scientific discoveries, mathematics, natural science; mastery of ship building and facilitating commercial exchanges
Ancient Greece is know for...
human-centered
Anthropocentric World View
Greek goddess of love and beauty
Aphrodite
700-480 BCE
Archaic Period
Academic discipline concerned with the historical contexts of works of art
Art History
Materiality of art; what the artist uses to make it
Artistic medium (media)
roughly 1000 year interval between Babylonian and neo-Babylonian empire, during which they were under __________ dominance The people came from way up north of the great river valley, from what is today northern Iraq
Assyrian
Tomb approached by a long passage (dromos), leading into a round tomb chamber (tholos)
Beehive tomb
Binder for encaustic paintings
Beeswax
Characteristics: farming and domestication of animals instead of food gathering; permanent human shelters/settlements; onset of village culture; earliest traces of urban settlements (Jericho 7000 BCE; Catal Huyuk 7000 to 5000 BCE)
Beginnings of Civilization
papyrus scrolls that were left with mummies after burial ceremonies; contained spelled, prayers, formulas, and counsels
Book of the dead
the materials of choice of Etruscan artists
Bronze and Terracotta
Remnants of classical ideal continue to live on in......
Byzantine Art
was defeated by Rome, thus paving the way for Roman dominance in the mediterranean
Carthage
Figural columns
Caryatid figures
centaurs (half-man, half-horse) and lapiths, gods and giants, Greeks and Amazons engaged in battle
Centauromachy
Fired clay
Ceramics
-massive ("cyclopean") walls -megaron (chief or throne room of the place)
Citadel of Tyrins
Archaic Period, Classical Period, Hellenistic Period
Classical Greece
480-230 BCE Ride of Alexander the Great concludes transition
Classical Period
Ancient Greece, Rome, tradition
Classicism
Cut and glued pieces of paper (French coller=to glue)
Collage
One of the most famous representatives is Rembrandt van Rijn; great interest in the visual representation of emotion: confidence, fear, anger, pain
"Golden Age" of Dutch Painting (17th Century)
Emperor Augustus defeated Anthony and Cleopatra, bringing an end to the civil wars at the end of the Republican Rome; "Roman Peace"
"Pax Romana"