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Published byRoger Bade Modified over 9 years ago
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Creating Your Power Point
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Things you should know: 1. Your presentation should be on an artist (living or dead) that you admire or find interesting. 2. You may work alone or with ONE other person. 3. You need to decide who you will work with and sign up for and artist TODAY. 4. You will have the next 2 class periods to research and create your PowerPoint presentation. 5. You will be presenting your PowerPoint to the class.
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Have a minimum of 10 slides. Contain relevant, correct information. Be in your own words except where correctly quoted. Have a visual element on each slide. Be creative, interesting and match the style of your artist. Have NO MORE than 2 or 3 sentences of text on each slide. Have a “Works Cited” slide at the end listing sources where you got your information. Contain a 5 question quiz at the end. The questions should be relevant and test to see if students were listening to your presentation.
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Finding an artist that doesn’t create the occasional offensive or even pornographic artwork is very difficult. I have tried but simple can NOT look at every piece of art that an artist ever created to make sure it is school appropriate. In your research you may come across artwork that is offensive. The school tries to block these images but sometimes they get through. If you run on to a work that offends you just click out quickly and move on. If it is really offensive let the computer lab person know so they can block the site. Good luck!
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Likes to use optical illusions in her art BRIDGET RILEY
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Focuses on very large portraits. Chuck Close
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Escher was famous for his math inspired art and tessellations. M.C. Escher
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Started painting at 71 and painted until she was over 100 years old. Grandma Moses
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Famous Mexican muralist. Diego Rivera
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Famous for using popular images. Andy Warhol
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BANKSY Unique street artist.
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Famous Fantasy artist. James Christensen
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Likes to hide images within her art work. Bev Dolittle
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Hearts, hearts, and more hearts. Jim Dine
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Likes the unusual. Max Ernst
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Bright, intense colors and “peace” messages. Peter Max
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Tries to make his paintings look like a photo. Ralph Goings
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Cartoon images. Roy Lichtenstein
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Lichtenstein again…
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Loved the unusual. Salvador Dali
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Master of light. Rembrandt Van Rijn
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Bizarre Installations. Sandy Skoglund
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Paintings that tell a story. Marc Chagall
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A new kind of “Pop Art”. Takashi Murakami
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Graffiti artist Lee Quinones
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Loved to paint small town America. Grant Wood
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Loved to paint stylized image of early American life. Thomas Hart Benton
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Painted haunting images of rural American life. Used egg tempura. Andrew Wyeth
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One of the best wildlife artists today. Carl Brenders
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Painted scenes of the settling of the American West. Fredrick Remington
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Loved to paint large close up pictures of flowers and bones. Georgia Okeefe
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Wanted to capture his “impression” of the world around him. Claude Monet
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A Japanese artist who had a distinctive style. Hokusai
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He was called “Jack the Dripper” because he liked to drip paint onto his canvases. Jackson Pollack
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Used nature to create art. Andy Goldsworthy
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Lonely Urban life. Edward Hopper
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Loved haunting, emotional images. Edvard Munch
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He loved to paint romantic images. John William Waterhouse
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Father of cubism. Pablo Picasso
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He was a master at painting light. Jan Vermeer
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Painted realistic scenes from American life. Norman Rockwell
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Realist – painted the common ordinary person doing common ordinary things. Jean Francois Millet
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