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The test is Friday! Some warm and fuzzy words written by British WWI veteran A.A. Milne (author of Winnie the Pooh) Christopher Robin to Winnie the Pooh.

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Presentation on theme: "The test is Friday! Some warm and fuzzy words written by British WWI veteran A.A. Milne (author of Winnie the Pooh) Christopher Robin to Winnie the Pooh."— Presentation transcript:

1 The test is Friday! Some warm and fuzzy words written by British WWI veteran A.A. Milne (author of Winnie the Pooh) Christopher Robin to Winnie the Pooh “If ever there is tomorrow when we're not together... there is something you must always remember. You are braver than you believe, stronger than you seem, and smarter than you think.”

2 Now study, get rest, eat breakfast and (maybe) have fun!

3 Announcements – - AP announcements - Review sheet and HW collected Monday. DO IT BEFORE THE TEST - Review your textbook, your class work - Also – Learnerator, Mr. Brown’s site with review stuff, Tom Richey videos etc.

4 1450 – The beginning of the Renaissance 1517 – Reformation 1598 –Edict of Nantes 1648 – Treaty of Westphalia/End of Religious Wars 1688 – Glorious Revolution 1789 – French Rev 1815 – End of Napoleon/COV 1848 – Revolutions 1870 –Unification/Realpolitik 1914 – WWI 1939 – WWII 1991 – Ends the CW

5 16 th Century – End of the Renaissance, Beginning of Ref 17 th : Relgious Wars, Absolutism 18 th C: child-rearing, agricultural revolution, cottage industry, urbanization, illegitimacy explosion, higher population, a healthier population, Atlantic Economy Revolution, Enlightenment End 19 th C: Romanticism, mass politics, mass society/culture, mass transit, positivism, Nietzche and Freud

6 Age of Anxiety: Nietzche, Freud, Dadaism, Surrealism, radio, ‘20s, the movies Post 1945: Growth of Feminism, Existentialism, decolonization

7 Let’s warm up with some jokes – not just a time waster…these might help jog your memory on the test Adapted from the website “How To Recognise Famous Painters According To The Internet” (As you know…the “internet” is a good source)

8 If everyone has great abs, it’s Michelangelo

9 If the paintings have tons of little people in them but otherwise seem normal, it’s Bruegel.

10 If the paintings have lots of little people in them but also have a ton of crazyness, it’s Bosch.

11 If everyone in the painting looks like Vladimir Putin (women included), then it’s van Eyck.

12 If a girl is pouring something –it’s Vermeer

13 Dappled Light and Happy Party people – it’s Renoir

14 Dappled light and unhappy party people, then it’s Manet.

15 Art Through The Ages My job: review the styles and subject matter of the art movement Your job: Connect that to the historical context.

16 Medieval Art Items in pictures are not in proportion Mostly religious themes 2-D Rounded arches (buildings)

17 Medieval Art

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19 Medieval Architecture

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22 Renaissance Art and Architecture Much more realistic Items pictured are in proportion Perspective and horizon Both secular and religious themes Northern vs Southern Blended colors, due to the use of tempera paints Pointed arches Artists sign their name Influence of the -isms

23 Renaissance Art

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27 Renaissance Architecture

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30 Northern Renaissance: Everyday life N.REN is more religious but the art is more secular

31 ….with occasional end of the world paintings (DURER – 4 Horsemen of the Apocolypse)

32 Baroque: Ecstacy of St Theresa – Bernini HOW MIGHT THIS BE ART OF THE “COUNTER- REFORMATION”

33 Baroque Art Emotional, dramatic grandeur, sensuous richness, drama, vitality, movement, tension, emotional exuberance, and often a natural background. Art of counter-reformation (Italy and France) and everyday life (Dutch Republic)

34 Baroque Art

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36 Northern Baroque

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38 Baroque Architecture

39 Rococo Art Characteristics of the Rococo style: Fussy detail “pink marshmallow” effect More ornateness Sweetness Light Playfulness Cherubs The Rococo style in painting is decorative and non-functional, like the declining aristocracy it represented.

40 Rococo Art

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43 Rococo Architecture

44 Neoclassical Art Neoclassical Art is a severe, unemotional Greece and Rome Its rigidity was a reaction to the overbred Rococo style and the emotional Baroque style. RococoBaroque The rise of Neoclassical Art was part of a general revival of classical thought, which was of some importance in the American and French revolutions.

45 Neoclassical Art

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48 Neoclassical Architecture

49 Romanticism

50 Rejection of the order and scientific thinking of Enlightenment and IR Romanticism emphasized the individual, the subjective, the irrational, the imaginative, the personal, the spontaneous, the emotional, the visionary, and the transcendental. Also a literary movement

51 Romanticism

52 Realism Precise images of reality - Also a literary movement –realistic novels that mirrored harshness of reality - Gods and goddesses are out - Peasants and working class are in

53 Pre-Raphaelite Art Detailed observation of flora. The use of clear, bright, sharp-focus technique. Their moral seriousness is seen in their choice of religious or other uplifting themes. A Brotherhood of artists formed in 1848 to recreate the Renaissance style.

54 Pre- Raphaelite Style

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56 Impressionism The impressionist style of painting is characterized chiefly by concentration on the general impression produced by a scene or object and the use of unmixed primary colors and small strokes to simulate actual reflected light. Light, color Associated with Belle Epoque – end of 19 th C. The art of the late 19 th /Early 20 th century did not need to be realistic/rational

57 Impressionism

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60 Pointillism Pointillism was a form of art that created pictures by combining a series of small dots. Seurat was one of the major artists of this school of painting. Seurat rejected the soft, irregular brushstrokes of impressionism in favor of pointillism, a technique he developed whereby solid forms are constructed by applying small, close-packed dots of unmixed color to a white background.

61 Pointillism

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63 Expressionism Expressionism is a style of art in which the intention is not to reproduce a subject accurately, but instead to portray it in such a way as to express the inner state of the artist. Many expressionist artists reflected their disillusion with modern society, especially in light of the two world wars.

64 Expressionism

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66 Cubism In Cubism the subject matter is broken up, analyzed, and reassembled in an abstracted formsubject analyzed abstractedform Cubists treat nature in terms of the cylinder, the sphere and the cone.nature cylinderspherecone Subjects in Cubists paintings are often hard to recognize.

67 Cubism

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70 Surrealism style focuses on psychological states which resemble dreams and fantasy. artists were influenced by psychological research of Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung, who sought to explain the workings of the mind through analysis of the symbols of dreams saw the unconscious as a wellspring of untapped creative ideas

71 Surrealism

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