In the News Affordable Care Act Death of Adrienne Rich Link to Rich reading a poem.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
AMERICAN ART
Advertisements

1920 to Harlem Renaissance Defined Harlem Renaissance (HR) is the name given to the period from the end of World War I and through the middle of.
T HE J AZZ A GE ! African American Culture. L EARNING T ARGETS : At the end of this lesson you will be able to… Identify Oscar DePriest, Claude McKay,
The Harlem Renaissance By: Joe Howard. The Harlem Renaissance After the Civil War, African-Americans found a safe place to explore their new identities.
The Harlem Renaissance ( Timeline) By: Amber Johnson US History
A Creative Era Chapter 13, Section 3. Topic: A Creative Era Objective: Students will be able to identify and describe how artists and writers of the Harlem.
“Modern Art” A Movement Towards Abstraction. Remember “Realism”? Thomas Eakins, “The Gross Clinic” (1875) John Singer Sargent, “Mrs. Louise E. Raphael”
The Harlem Renaissance was an explosion of African- American creativity in the 1920’s and 30’s. Many black writers published poems, novels, and dramas.
Langston Hughes Langston Hughes Early Life §was born February 1, 1902 §parents divorced when he was young §raised by his grandmother until age of 13.
Precisionism And The Machine Age. Precisionism The American version of “call to order that swept Europe after WWI Tendency to look to the future and new.
Harlem Renaissance Themes for Analysis. The Harlem Renaissance Why is integration and assimilation different for African-Americans as compared to European.
AMERICAN ART VISIONS PRESENTATION 2 by Dr. David Ludley.
Langston Hughes and The Harlem Renaissance Presented By: Lizbeth Ortega Javier Magallanes Shian Adams.
Cultural Innovations and African American Culture
The Harlem Renaissance The cultural, artistic, and social revival that exploded in New York City during the 1920’s.
Art of the Progressive Era
 Kq6Ms Kq6Ms.
Harlem Renaissance BY:. In the renaissance time period the way a woman dresses showed her status in society. Bombast was the stuffing used in doublets.
Genesis Rosario Harlem Renaissance.
CULTURAL DEVELOPMENTS AND INDIVIDUAL CONTRIBUTIONS DURING THE 1920S SS5H4 The student will describe U.S. involvement in World War I and post- World War.
The Harlem Renaissance Harlem, NY – 1920’s An upsurge in African American cultural expression.
 Harlem Renaissance. What is it? The Harlem Renaissance was a flowering of African American culture which was expressed through –Paintings –Music –Dance.
The Harlem Renaissance. Warm-Up What was the Great Migration? What is a renaissance?
Ch. 23 Section III A Creative Era.
6c: Cultural climate of the 1920s and 1930s Art: – Georgia O’Keeffe, an artist known for urban scenes and, later, paintings of the Southwest.
Harlem Renaissance. Harlem Renaissance, pg. 29 Harlem Renaissance African-American Writers “Jazz Age” African-American Goals.
The Harlem Renaissance
Literary Period: Harlem Renaissance By: Madison Minor.
L5&6: The Harlem Renaissance Equality and Hierarchy: The African American Experience Agenda Objective: 1.To understand what the Harlem Renaissance was.
T HE H ARLEM R ENAISSANCE. T HE G REAT M IGRATION – 100,000s of African Americans moved North in search of jobs By the end of the decade, 40%
{ The Harlem Renaissance The Harlem Renaissance.   A movement of artists and activists who focused on African American culture and political issues.
Harlem Renaissance. Definition African American Art Movement Stimulated artistic development, racial pride, a sense of community and promoted political.
Joseph Stella, " The Brooklyn Bridge," from "The Voice of the City of New York Interpreted," Oil and tempera on canvas. 88 x 54 “ Human and machine.
The Harlem Renaissance An Overview. The Harlem Renaissance Period – End of WWI-Mid 1930’s Period – End of WWI-Mid 1930’s Harlem, New York Harlem, New.
The Great Migration  Between 1910 and 1920, the Great Migration saw hundreds of thousands of African Americans move north to big cities  By 1920 over.
The Jazz Age Cultural Climate of the 1920’s and 1930’s.
Bessie Smith’s Downhearted Blues Duke Ellington’s Sophisticated Lady
Section 4 Harlem Renaissance
Harlem Renaissance Is the United States of America a place where all can be free to pursue their self-identity?
The Harlem Renaissance An African American Cultural Movement.
Langston Hughes and the American Dream Let America be America again. Let it be the dream it used to be. Let it be the pioneer on the plain Seeking a home.
Roaring Twenties The Culture USII.5c. Review USII.5a: Technology USII.5a: Technology USII.5b: Society USII.5b: Society.
Harlem Renaissance music, art, literature,. Overview The Great Migration to Harlem The Great Migration to Harlem College – educated African Americans.
“Hold fast to your dreams, for without them life is a broken winged bird that cannot fly.”
Unit 4: WWI and the “Roaring 20’s” 4-3: The Roaring Twenties Culture Wars.
The Harlem Renaissance MR. MARINELLO * US HISTORY.
How was it started? The Harlem Renaissance laid its roots right after the civil war. Thousands of African Americans moved from the economically unstable.
Section 3-GTR 1 In the previous section, you learned about the changes in cultural trends and entertainment that occurred during the 1920s. In this section,
What was it? A cultural movement – The New Negro Movement Social, economical & political empowerment of black Americans.  Redefining black cultural identity.
1920’s Women  Women wanted to break away from tradition.  Flapper- new, assertive woman who challenged the view of traditional women.  Double standard-
The Harlem Renaissance
AFRICAN AMERICAN CULTURE
The Harlem Renaissance
The Harlem Renaissance
The Harlem Renaissance: What was it?
And the Harlem Renaissance
Unit 6: The Jazz Age The 1920’s Culture & Influential African Americans By: Mrs. Laren Carlton SS5H4: The student will describe U.S. involvement in World.
The Jazz Age: Cultural Innovations Modern American Art
The Harlem Renaissance
SS5H4: The student will describe U. S
Chapter 13-Section 4-The Harlem Renaissance
Harlem Renaissance By: Kainen DuBose.
Langston Hughes ( ).
Harlem Renaissance American Literature. Harlem Renaissance American Literature.
An Age of Uncertainty.
9.3 : American Culture The Big Idea
Section 4-The Harlem Renaissance
The Harlem Renaissance
Intro to The Harlem Renaissance
The Harlem Renaissance
Presentation transcript:

In the News Affordable Care Act Death of Adrienne Rich Link to Rich reading a poem

Survey: Affordable Care Act Should the Supreme Court A. Leave the Affordable Car Act As It Is (Take No Action) B. Strike down the individual health care mandate but keep the rest of the Affordable Care Act C. Stike down the whole law

a.Robert Henries b.Jacob Riis c.George Bellows d.Frank Lloyd Wright Identify the artist: Jacob Riis Five Cents a Spot 1890

a.European Modernism b.Precisionism c.Ash Can School d.Hudson River School Identify the movement / period: George Bellows Excavation of Pennsylvania Station 1909

George Bellows Both Members of This Club 1909

a.Early American Modernism b.Precisionism c.The Ash Can School d.Hudson River School Hughes would describe these paintings as examples of: Joseph Stella. The Voice of the City of New York Interpreted: The Bridge, 1920 Georgia OKeefe, The Radiator Building Night, New York, 1927

Paintings by John Marin Brooklyn Bridge, 1910 Movement Fifth Avenue, 1912

a.Early American Modernism b.Precisionism c.The Ash Can School d.Hudson River School Hughes would describe these paintings as examples of: Charles Sheeler, American Landscape, 1930

Defining Renaissance For my part I was deeply stirred by the idea of a real Negro renaissance…My idea of a renaissance was one of talented persons of an ethnic or national group working individually or collectively in a common purpose and creating things that would be typical of their group. I was surprised when I discovered that many of the talented Negroes regarded their renaissance more as an uplift organization and a vehicle to accelerate the pace and progress of smart Negro society. a.Langston Hughes b.Alain Locke c.Claude McKay d.Joel A Rodgers

American Identity America, seeking a new spiritual expansion and artistic maturity, trying to found an American literature, a national art, and national music implies a Negro-American culture seeking the same satisfactions and objectives. Separate as it may be in color and substance, the culture of the Negro is of a pattern integral with the times and with its cultural setting. a.Langston Hughes b.Alain Locke c.Claude McKay d.Joel A Rodgers

Jazz and What It Means Jazz isnt music merely, it is a spirit that can express itself in almost anything. The true spirit of jazz is a joyous revolt from convention, custom, authority, boredom, even sorrowfrom everything that would confine the soul of man and hinder its riding free on the air. The Negroes who invented it called their songs the Blues, and they werent capable of satire or deception. Jazz was their explosive attempt to cast off the blues and be happy, carefree happy, even in the midst of sordidness and sorrow. And that is why it has been such a balm for modern ennui, and has become a safety valve for modern machine- ridden and convention-bound society. It is the revolt of the emotions against repression. a.Langston Hughes b.Alain Locke c.Claude McKay d.Joel A Rodgers