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Lesson 1 Arts

This document discusses major art movements between 1870 and 1914 including Realism, Impressionism, Post-Impressionism, Fauvism, Art Nouveau, Expressionism, Cubism, and Futurism. It provides examples of key artists and their works for each movement, describing their characteristic styles and techniques. The movements reflected changes in technology and society at the time as well as new ideas about representing visual perception and symbolic meaning in art.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
51 views28 pages

Lesson 1 Arts

This document discusses major art movements between 1870 and 1914 including Realism, Impressionism, Post-Impressionism, Fauvism, Art Nouveau, Expressionism, Cubism, and Futurism. It provides examples of key artists and their works for each movement, describing their characteristic styles and techniques. The movements reflected changes in technology and society at the time as well as new ideas about representing visual perception and symbolic meaning in art.

Uploaded by

Kalabit Penge
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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He has made

everything beautiful
in its time.
Ecclesiastes 3:11
ESV -
Learning Objectives
• Analyze arts elements and principles in the
production of work following a specific art
style from the various art movements that
flourished from 1870s to 1914
• Reflect on the derive the mood, idea, or
message from selected artworks
• Create an artwork that shows the
characteristic elements of an art movement
Lesson 1 Arts:

Artistic Movements
from the industrial
Revolution to WW1
Starry night (1889) Vincent (1971)
Vincent Van Gogh Don Mcleans
Modern Art
• Arts created from 1870-1970
• Edouard Manet “Le dẻjeuner sur
l’herbe” 1862
• Gustave Courtbet “The Painter’s
Studio” 1855
• Industrial Revolution 1760 to 1820
“Le dẻjeuner sur l’herbe” 1862
“The Painter’s Studio” 1855
Arts Movements
• Collective Titles
• Same or certain period time
• Similar Styles or Techniques
• Guided by Shared Idea
Arts Movements
Realism 1840s-1880s
Impressionism 1872-1892
Postimpressionism 1880s-1940
Fauvism 1899-1908
Art Nouveau 1890-1905
Expressionism 1905-1933
Cubism 1902-1922
Futurism 1909-1920s
In its specific sense realism refers to a
mid nineteenth century artistic movement
characterized by subjects painted from
Everyday life in a naturalistic manner;
however the term is also generally used
to describe artworks painted in a realistic
almost photographic way.
GUSTAVE COURBET EDWARD HOPPER ROSA BONHEUR
June 10, 1819 July 22, 1882 March 16, 1822
December 31, 1877 May 15, 1967 May 25, 1899
A Burial At Ornans (1850) Nighthawks (1942) The Horse Fair (1855)
Impressionism
Impressionist artists were not
trying to paint a reflection of
real life, but an ‘impression’ of
what the person, light,
atmosphere, object or landscape
looked like to them.
Édouard Manet CLAUDE MONET EDGAR DEGAS
(1832–1883) (1840–1926) (1834–1917)
“Le dẻjeuner sur l’herbe” SUNRISE The Absinthe Drinker
1862 1873 (1876)
Postimpressionism
The Post-Impressionists rejected
Impressionism’s concern with the
spontaneous and naturalistic
rendering of light and color. Instead
they favored an emphasis on more
symbolic content, formal order and
structure.
Georges Seurat
Vincent Van Gogh (1859-1891) Paul Cezanne
A Sunday Afternoon on the (1839–1906)
“Starry Night” Island of La Grande Jatte The Card Players Series
1889 (1884-1886) (1876)
Fauvism
A group of early 20th-century
modern artists whose works
emphasized painterly qualities and
strong color over the
representational or realistic values
retained by Impressionism
Henri Matisse André Derain Maurice Vlaminck
(1869-1954) (1880-1054) (1876–1958)
“Woman with a Hat” L'EstaqueJatte Autumn Landscape(1905)
1905 (1906)
Art Nouveau
Ornamental style of art that flourished
between about 1890 and 1910
throughout Europe and the United
States. Art Nouveau is characterized
by its use of a long, sinuous, organic
line and was employed most often in
architecture, interior design, jewelry and
glass design, posters, and illustration.
Aubrey Beardsley. Gustav Klimt. Alphonse Mucha.
1872–1898 1862–1918. 1860–1939
“Peacock Skirt” “The Kiss” The Slav Epic
1872-1898 (1908) 1910-1928
Expressionism
Is a modernist movement, initially in
poetry and painting, originating in
Northern Europe around the beginning
of the 20th century. Its typical trait is to
present the world solely from a subjective
perspective, distorting it radically for
emotional effect in order to evoke moods
or ideas..
Edvard Munch Wassily Kandinsky. Franz Marc.
(1863–1944) 1866–1944 1860–1939
“The Scream” “The Blue Rider” “The Large Blue Horses”
1893 (1903) 1911
Cubism
Is a style of art which aims to show all
of the possible viewpoints of a person or
an object all at once. It is called Cubism
because the items represented in the
artworks look like they are made out of
cubes and other geometrical shapes.
Cubism was first started by Pablo
Picasso and Georges Braque
Pablo Picasso Georges Braque Jean Metzinger
(1881–1973) 1882–1963 1883–1956
“The old Blind Guitarist” “Fruit Dish and Glass” “The Cat”
1903 (1912) 1920
Futurism
Was an artistic and social movement
that originated in Italy in the early
20th century which later also
developed in Russia. It emphasized
dynamism, speed, technology, youth,
violence, and objects such as the car,
the airplane, and the industrial city..
Umberto Boccioni Giacomo Balla Carlo Carrá
(1882–1916) 1871–1958 1883–1956
“The City Rises” “Abstract Speed + Sound” “The Funeral of the Anar”
1910 (1914) (1921)

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