THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS A MORAL OR IMMORAL BOOK

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
                                                         Andy Warhol Adapted From Presentations Created by Rock Ledge Elementary Fine Art Program, Seymour,
Advertisements

What is Art?. The same? Insured for $100 million Hung in the Louvre Gallery, Paris Print bought for 20 Euros Found in Louvre gift shop They look the.
Guiding Question How can we appreciate and interpret an artwork effectively?
John Doe Art 4 Portfolio. Artwork 1  Description: Artist, Title, Date, Size, Location, Medium  Analysis: Elements and principles I used to create a.
Gr. 5 Pop Art & Andy Warhol Grade 5. Gr. 5 Grade 5 Andy Warhol was a popular American print artist. He helped create a style of art called Pop Art. Warhol.
Aesthetics Part 3 The Andy Warhol Museum Carnegie Museum of Art FOR EDUCATION USE ONLY © 2008 The Andy Warhol Museum, a museum of Carnegie Institute. All.
" Aestheticism is a search after the signs of the beautiful. It is the science of the beautiful through which men seek the correlation of the arts.
The arts Illuminating the human condition. Aims Art and knowledge Comparisons between the arts and science.
The Arts (also known as “aesthetics”). What does art do? Imagine we get an impromptu visit from some kind, peaceful aliens, who have flown from galaxies.
Arts Areas of Knowledge: Art 01. Areas of Knowledge: Art 02.
Galaxy – Jackson Pollock. Art Art is the notion and intention of generating original ideas Art is very subjective As long as the artist has intentions.
Visual Art and Design INTRODUCTION OVERVIEW INTRODUCTION OVERVIEW.
Unreal, can’t be seen Not real Can not be touched because it is not real FREEDOM is an abstract concept. Is it not real? Difficult to understand Hard.
Academic Choice Project: Write a letter to the author and explain why this book interests or appeals to you. Tell the author at least three reasons the.
Art An area of knowledge.
Is this a primary or secondary source?
Areas of knowledge – The arts
Pop Art Andy Warhol. Gr. 5 Andy Warhol was a popular American print artist. He helped create a style of art called Pop Art. Warhol printed pictures of.
Art An area of knowledge. Intro Exercise Take minutes to construct a piece of art that is pleasing to you. Become an art critic. Rank the top three.
Art: referencing & bibliography Di Giovanna, Salvatore 2007, dise.JPG.
 New Seating Chart  Review Pop Art & Warhol  Review and Demo how to Alter & Transfer Images  Trace Pop Art Designs  Hand Back all Work  Discuss Sketches.
Aestheticism “Art for art's sake”.
The Arts- Scope • What is the area of knowledge about?
How to use an Artist To explore an idea. These two images were created by the German artist Gehard Richter. One is a photograph, and one is a painting.
Areas of Knowledge: Art. This is what happenedThis is significant.
Historical Sources A historical source is something that tells us about history. It may be a document, a picture, a sound recording, a book, a cinema film,
Pop Art Andy Warhol. Gr. 5 Andy Warhol was a popular American print artist. He helped create a style of art called Pop Art. Warhol printed pictures of.
INSTRUCTIONS. READ ME FIRST
You will create your own work based on one exam question.
Ensuring outstanding teaching in art & design
How to Critique Art 101.
CULTURE and art Different kinds of art Cultural facilities
The goldfish was bought by me.
Out and About Literacy Numeracy Geography Science Art Music WOW Days
Pop Art Andy Warhol
Developing a Quality Critique
Replicating Art and Poetry Project
COLLECTIVE NOUNS AND OTHER SPECIAL SUBJECTS
_________________________2.28
The Picture of Dorian Gray
Grade 5 Pop Art & Andy Warhol Gr. 5.
Chinese Three Perfections Assignment
Pop Art & Andy Warhol Gr. 5.
Some Key Questions for Poems
You will create your own work based on one exam question.
Table Captains: Please collect any work and put in period tray.
THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS A MORAL OR IMMORAL BOOK
Aesthetics Part 3 The Andy Warhol Museum Carnegie Museum of Art
Erwin Panofsky Highlights from Meaning in the Visual Arts
Am I art? What makes me art? How do I know if it’s art?
Biography of an Artist  Use your computer to research about a particular artist. Complete the questions on the next slides. Try to reproduce one of your.
Art Criticism & Aesthetics
Aesthetics and Value What is it all about?.
How to write awesome introductions and conclusions
But is it ART? Possible “purposes” or characteristics of “ART”.
I don’t understand… Why some people have so much and other have so little Why dogs don’t live as long as people Why some people cheat and get away with.
How to write a blog.
1/22/15 Write a poem about a journey you’d like to take. Where would you go? Whom would you want to travel with? What sorts of things would you pack? Don’t.
                                                         Andy Warhol Adapted From Presentations Created by Rock Ledge Elementary Fine Art Program, Seymour,
The Arts ?? Some statements.
Value Theory Ethics: moral goodness, obligations, principles, justification; why be moral? Social-Political Philosophy: justice, rights, responsibilities,
(gaining a deeper understanding of art materials and techniques)
Art as an Area of Knowledge
Van Gogh’s Most Famous Work
Art Criticism.
Bellwork 3/2/15 Pick up a handout from Miss Buccola
Raise your hand if… You have ever looked at a sunset that took your breath away? Ever seen a flower that makes you smile? Admired an animal for its beauty?
Year 3- WINTER COLOUR + ATMOSPHERE.
IB - a better way to learn?
Artist Presentation and Reproduction
Presentation transcript:

THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS A MORAL OR IMMORAL BOOK THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS A MORAL OR IMMORAL BOOK. Books are well written or badly written. That is all. Oscar Wilde

WITHOUT MUSIC, LIFE WOULD BE A MISTAKE. Friedrich Nietzsche

REMEMBER THAT THE MOST BEAUTIFUL THINGS IN THE WORLD ARE THE MOST USELESS; PEACOCKS AND LILLIES FOR EXAMPLE John Ruskin

Art is what you can get away with. Andy Warhol

Works of art? On the next slide you will see some descriptions of works of art. Try and impose some sort of ranking between those most likely to be considered works of art, and those least likely. Be prepared to justify your choice.

Sunflowers Van Gogh A copy of Sunflowers bought in Slough A sheep cut in two and preserved in a glass case Untitled white canvas White canvas titled “A foggy day” White canvas titled “Hiroshima” A superb sportsman at their peak of achievement A beautiful mountain Einstein’s theory of relativity Mozart’s Clarinet concerto King Lear by Shakespeare A poem generated by a computer.

WHY? If art is the pursuit of the aesthetically pleasing, why do the reproductions come beneath the original paintings? How do we explain that the Mozart is different in every performance in terms of speeds, volume and overall sounds, yet is still “great art”? Are our aesthetic judgements subjective or objective? Does a work of art need to be man-made?

We need to consider The intentions of the artist. (Though does intending something to be art mean that it is?). The intrinsic quality of the work. ( What about forgeries though?). Spectator response? ( Do we need an expert opinion though… can we trust ourselves to be objective?).