Quiz 1 Put everything away and out of sight except a sheet of paper and pens. Write your name, today’s date, and Art 1C on top.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Quiz 1 Put everything away and out of sight except a sheet of paper and pens. Write your name, today’s date, and Art 1C on top.
Advertisements

Chapter Sixteen The Eighteen Century: From Rococo to Revolution.
David Test. David Test 1.What is the title of this piece? a.Death of Marat b.Tennis Court Oath c.The Lictors Bring to Brutus the Bodies of His Sons d.Oath.
Art of the Enlightenment. Genre Painting Jean-Baptiste-Simeon Chardin Soap Bubbles Oil on canvas 93 x 74.5 cm.
Rococo, Neoclassical and Romantic Art
Eighteenth Century Art in Europe and the Americas.
Art of the Enlightenment and Neoclassical Art William V. Ganis, PhD.
Absolutism: “The Sun King” Ruled for over 72 years
The 18 th century Vocabulary Rococo Académie Royale Hôtel Salon Fête Galante The Enlightenment Philosophes Empirical Exemplum Virtutis Neoclassical Reign.
Rococo / Enlightenment / Neoclassicism 18 th Century
Early Nineteenth Century Art Neoclassicism and Romanticism.
Chapter 12.1, 12.2, 12.3, 12.4 Neoclassicism and Romanticism Neoclassicism became the basis for academic art, while political and social revolutions contributed.
NEOCLASSICISM. Characteristics Celebrates/imitates classical style Desire to return to “purity” of Greek/Roman style Architecture, painting, sculpture.
Characteristics of Neo-Classicism $Art produced in Europe and North America from the mid-18c to the early 19c. $Return to the perceived “purity” of the.
Neoclassicism. Clodion (Claude Michel), Intoxication of Wine, 1775, terra- cotta.
Rococo / Enlightenment / Neoclassicism 18 th Century
The 1800’s was a time of upheaval. The Church is less of an influence Monarchies toppled Industrialization Urbanization Masses of dissatisfied poor Fast.
Quiz 1 Put everything away and out of sight except a sheet of paper and pens. Write your name, today’s date, and Art 1C on top.
ARCHITECTURE NOW What is its purpose to the society? How does the design express the meaning of that purpose? What technical innovations allow for.
Rococo & The Enlightenment
Neoclassicism Late 18 th Century. Richard Boyle and William Kent, Chiswick House, 1724–29, West London, England.
The Human Figure in Art History Vitruvian Man Leonardo da Vinci, c. 1487,Leonardo da Vinci Italian Rennaissance.
Neoclassicism “neo” means new – classical started around the mid 1700’s a revival of the antiquities Greek and Roman influences (clothing, architecture)
1 Rococo: The French Taste 1.Luxurious artistic expressions of salon culture which culminated in the style known as Rococo. 2.Completeness of the style,
Chapter 29 Rococo, Neoclassical, and Romanticism.
Black and White in America. John Lewis Krimmel (German-American, ), Quilting Frolic, 1813, oil on canvas, 17 x 22 in. “The American Hogarth”
Chapter Eleven Europe and America, Prepared by Kelly Donahue-Wallace Randal Wallace University of North Texas Gardner's Art through the Ages,
The Academy and the French Revolution. William Bell Scott, Iron and Coal on Tyneside in the Nineteenth Century, Monet, Gare St. Lazare, 1877.
The Rococo with comparison to Baroque and the bourgeoning Neoclassical (late 18 th and early 19th Centuries)
Quiz 1 Please put everything away and out of sight except pens and paper. Write your name, Art 1C, and today’s date on top.
The Neoclassical Period. The Neoclassical Period This period saw a return to the classical ideals of order, reason, and structural clarity.
1 Chapter 29 Europe and America, 1700 to 1800 Gardner’s Art Through the Ages, 13e.
Title: Palace of Versailles Artist: Louis Le Vau and Jules Hardouin-Mansart Date: Source/ Museum: n/a Medium: n/a Size: n/a.
Hyacinthe Rigaud, Louis XIV, Oil on canvas, 9’ 2” x 6’ 3”. Louvre, Paris.
Humanities 2113H: The Early Modern Period Fall 2006 Architecture Discussion Slides (Powerpoint presentation created by Professor Elizabeth Hornbeck)
Chapter 18 Focus: Rococo Art in France Enlightenment philosopher Diderot, artists, Watteau, Boucher, Fragonnard, Greuze, and Chardin.
A picture is worth a thousand words What we can learn from pictures of Napoleon.
Eighteenth Century Enlightenment Ideals and Neoclassicism Lecture 20.
Church of the Vierzenheiligen StaffelStein, Germany
Rococo.
The Later 18th Century: Neoclassicism
Eighteenth Century Europe
Baroque Art in Northern Europe pt.2 Holland France England
The 18th Century Rococo & Enlightenment
Absolutism and the Enlightenment
Week 3: Artistic Influences
Rococo / Enlightenment / Neoclassicism 18th Century
ROCOCO ART
Art of the Enlightenment and Neoclassical Art
Neoclassicism ca
Art of Scientific Revolution & Enlightenment
French Art Period
19th Century Art.
Hyacinthe Rigaud LOUIS XIV Oil on canvas, 9'2" × 7'10 3/4" (2
Title: Palace of Versailles
“Siecle de Lumiere” “The Century of Light”
Rococo Art & Architecture c
Gros to Delacroix Thomas Crow
Chapter 29 Europe & America
Romanticism and Genre Painting Image Quiz …includes Romantic images from chapters 26 and 27 as well as some Rococo and Neoclassical images for review.
Extra Credit Slide Identification Quiz Rococo, Neoclassical, Portraiture, Palladio, Canova, etcetera!
Chapter 29 Europe & America
Examination on Chapter 26 (and a little of 27)
Rococo Art & Architecture c
Chapter 29 Europe & America
OPERATION URGENT FURY II
The Styles of the Enlightenment
Types of Paintings religious images portraits history paintings
History Painting and Neoclassicism A Quiz
Slide Identification Quiz Genre Painting with Rococo, Neoclassicism (architecture, sculpture, and painting) and History Painting Review.
Presentation transcript:

Quiz 1 Put everything away and out of sight except a sheet of paper and pens. Write your name, today’s date, and Art 1C on top.

Question 1: You may use either bullet-point or essay format (10 minutes) Describe in detail all parts of the Points of View paper requirements.

Question 2: Short essay with two parts (10 minutes total) Explain Linda Nochlin’s thesis (argument) in her article, “Why Have Their Been No Great Women Artists?” Be as concise as possible and use your own words. Give at least two facts presented in the video WAR that support Nochlin’s argument.

Rococo to Neoclassicism 18th Century: A Century of Revolutions 1765 1766 Rococo to Neoclassicism 18th Century: A Century of Revolutions

Absolutism: “The Sun King” The death Louis XIV in 1715 Art in the service of Absolutism: “The Sun King” The death Louis XIV in 1715 after the longest reign in European history (1643-1715) marks the beginning of the end of the Baroque era: the ancien régime. HYACINTHE RIGAUD (French, 1659-1743) Louis XIV, 1701. Oil on canvas, approx. 9’ 2” x 6’ 3”. Louvre, Paris. French Baroque

Aerial view of palace at Versailles, France, begun 1669, and a portion of the gardens and surrounding area. French Baroque

JULES HARDOUIN-MANSART and CHARLES LE BRUN, Galerie des Glaces (Hall of Mirrors), palace of Versailles, Versailles, France, ca. 1680.

GERMAIN BOFFRAND (French Rococo architect, 1667-1754) Salon de la Princesse, Hôtel de Soubise, Paris, France, 1737–1740. Read “Femmes Savants and Salon Culture”

FRANÇOIS DE CUVILLIÉS, Hall of Mirrors, the Amalienburg, Nymphenburg Palace park, Munich, Germany, early 18th century. A hunting lodge for Maria Amalia, Archduchess of Austria, the wife of Charles VII (Karl Albrecht: Holy Roman Emperor)

FRANÇOIS DE CUVILLIÉS, Detail of the Hall of Mirrors, the Amalienburg, showing silver decorative elements in floral and hunting motifs

Exterior, The Amalienburg, Nymphenburg Palace park, Munich, Germany, early 18th century. A hunting lodge for Maria Amalia, Archduchess of Austria, the wife of Charles VII (Holy Roman Emperor)

A Rococo soup tureen created between 1735 and 1740 by craftsmen under the direction of Juste-Aurèle Meissonier (1695-1750) a French goldsmith, sculptor, painter, architect, and furniture designer, for Louis VX

ANTOINE WATTEAU (Flemish-French, 1684-1721 – 37 years) L’Indifférent, ca. 1716. Oil on canvas, approx. 10” x 7”. Louvre, Paris. Colorist – “Rubéniste”

ANTOINE WATTEAU, L’Indifférent, ca. 1716, 10 in high / French Rococo HYACINTHE RIGAUD (French) Louis XIV, 1701, over 9 ft high / Baroque

ANTOINE WATTEAU, Return from Cythera, 1717–1719. Oil on canvas, approx ANTOINE WATTEAU, Return from Cythera, 1717–1719. Oil on canvas, approx. 4’ 3” x 6’ 4”. Louvre, Paris. Rococo. Watteau created the genre of the fête galante: a theatrical idyll for aristocratic patrons.

JEAN-HONORÉ FRAGONARD (French, 1732-1806), The Swing, 1766 JEAN-HONORÉ FRAGONARD (French, 1732-1806), The Swing, 1766. Oil on canvas, approx. 2’ 11” x 2’ 8”. The Wallace Collection, London. An “intrigue” picture The French Revolution (1789) will deprive Fragonard of his private patrons.

ÉLISABETH VIGÉE-LEBRUN, (left) Marie Antoinette and Her Children, 1787; (right) Portrait of Marie Antoinette, 1783. The subject – the queen of France – was guillotined for treason in 1793

Enlightenment 18th century French Philosophes – the power of the pen Denis Diderot (1713-1784) created the first encyclopedia to promote democratization of knowledge. Voltaire (Francois Marie Arouet, 1694-1778) – attacked both state and church of the “old regime.”

William Hunter (English, 1718-1783) Child in Womb, from The Anatomy of the Human Gravid Uterus, Birmingham, 1774, Copperplate engraving, National Library of Medicine, London. “Doctrine of Empiricism”: John Locke (1632-1704) and Isaac Newton (1642-1727)

Leonardo da Vinci, Fetus and Lining of the Uterus, 1511-13, chalk with pen and ink. High Renaissance empiricism and mimesis, merger of art and science

JOSEPH WRIGHT OF DERBY (English painter, 1734-1797), A Philosopher Giving a Lecture at the Orrery (in which a lamp is put in place of the sun), ca. 1763–1765. Oil on canvas, 4’ 10” x 6’ 8”. Derby Museums and Art Gallery, Derby, Derbyshire, England. EMPIRICISM – ENLIGHTENMENT SCIENCE AND REASON

A small orrery from the mid-18th century. Solar system as a clock: emblematic of secular rationalism and empiricism. JOSEPH WRIGHT OF DERBY, A Philosopher Giving a Lecture at the Orrery ca. 1763–1765

ABRAHAM DARBY (English iron master, 1750-1789) and THOMAS PRITCHARD (English architect, 1723-1777), iron bridge at Coalbrookdale, England, 1776–1779. 100’ span, 800 cast iron parts. It is the first cast iron bridge in the world, a monument of the industrial revolution. “Doctrine of progress”

Neo-Classicism and Revolution From the Late 18th Century in Europe

ANGELICA KAUFFMANN (Swiss-Austrian active in London, 1741-1807) Cornelia Presenting Her Children as Her Treasures, or Mother of the Gracchi, ca. 1785. Oil on canvas, 3’ 4” x 4’ 2”. NEOCLASSICISM

Angelica Kauffman, Self Portrait, 1780-85

Johann Zoffany, The Academicians of the Royal Academy, 1771-72 (detail). The two women members of the British Royal Academy, Angelica Kauffman and Mary Moser are represented as paintings. After them no woman was admitted as a full member until 1936

JACQUES-LOUIS DAVID (French, 1748-1825), Oath of the Horatii, 1784 JACQUES-LOUIS DAVID (French, 1748-1825), Oath of the Horatii, 1784. Oil on canvas, approx. 11’ x 14’. Louvre, Paris. NEOCLASSICAL PAINTER-IDEOLOGIST of the French Revolution and the Napoleonic Empire

“Marks of heroism and civic virtue offered the eyes of the people [will] electrify its soul, and plant the seeds of glory and devotion to the fatherland.” - David JACQUES-LOUIS DAVID, The Death of Marat, 1793. Oil on canvas, approx. 5’ 3” x 4’ 1”. Musées Royaux des Beaux-Arts de Belgique, Brussels. CURRENT EVENT

Jacques-Louis David, Bonaparte Crossing the St Jacques-Louis David, Bonaparte Crossing the St. Bernard Pass, 1800, Oil on canvas, 260 x 221 cm. In 1800, Napoleon led his army of 60,000 men across the alps to gain control of Italy. (Napoleon was probably on a mule.)

Antoine-Jean Gros (French 1771-1835), Napoleon at the Plague House at Jaffa, 1804, oil on canvas, 17’5” x 23’ 7”, Louvre Neoclassical-Romantic

Napoleonic Europe 1800-1815

JACQUES-LOUIS DAVID, The Coronation of Napoleon, 1805–1808 JACQUES-LOUIS DAVID, The Coronation of Napoleon, 1805–1808. Oil on canvas, 20’ 4 1/2” x 32’ 1 3/4”. Louvre, Paris.

PIERRE VIGNON (French, 1763-1828) La Madeleine, Paris, France, 1807–1842. “Symbolic link” between Rome and the Napoleonic empire. Begun as a church, it became a “temple of glory” for Napoleon’s armies and victories until the fall of Napoleon in 1815. The 52 corinthian columns are each 66 feet high.

La Madeleine Maison Carrée Compare (right) (Roman temple) Maison Carrée, Nimes, France, 19-16 BCE with (left) PIERRE VIGNON, La Madeleine, Paris, France, 1807–1842, a Catholic church after 1815.  

Drawing of Washington, D. C Drawing of Washington, D.C., 1852, showing Capitol building designed by BENJAMIN LATROBE (English-American, 1764 -1820), 1803–1807; and urban design (created in 1791) by PIERRE CHARLES L’ENFANT (French-American, 1754-1825) Neoclassicism and the New Rome

Jean-Antoine Houdon (French, 1732-1799), George Washington, 1788-1792, marble, 6’2” high, State Capitol, Richmond, Virginia. Roman fasces - with 13 rods symbolizing the 13 states - and Cincinnatus’s plow = Roman citizen soldier. Above: bronze copy in front of the North Carolina State Capitol in Raleigh

EDMONIA LEWIS (African-Ojibway American, Neoclassical sculptor, ca EDMONIA LEWIS (African-Ojibway American, Neoclassical sculptor, ca.1845-1911) Colonel Edward Gould Shaw, carved marble bust, 1864

EDMONIA LEWIS, Forever Free, 1867. Marble, 3’ 5 1/4” x 11” x 7” EDMONIA LEWIS, Forever Free, 1867. Marble, 3’ 5 1/4” x 11” x 7”. Howard University, Washington, D.C. Celebration of the “Emancipation Proclamation” issued by Lincoln on January 1, 1863, which declared "that all persons held as slaves" within the rebellious states "are, and henceforward shall be free.“ The U.S. Civil War lasted from 1861- 1865

“That our tribes might be united That old feuds might be forgotten And old wounds be healed forever” Edmonia Lewis, Old Arrow Maker, modeled 1866, carved 1872, marble, 21 1/2 x 13 5/8 x 13 3/8 inches. Inspired by Longfellow’s epic 1855 poem, “The Song of Hiawatha,” Minnehaha (with European features) is shown "plaiting mats of flags and rushes" and her father "making arrowheads of jasper.“ Hiawatha was Chippewa (Ojibway) like Edmonia Lewis. Neoclassicism

Edmonia Lewis, The Death of Cleopatra, 1876, marble, 63 x 31 1/4 x 46 inches, National Museum of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. Drew huge crowds at the1876 Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia