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Modern Art and Architecture, 1850-1914
From Realism to Dada
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Key Questions, 2/19 Analyze the trends in art in the period, , and the extent to which they challenged traditional ideas of aesthetics. How do the artistic and cultural trends illustrate the “mood” prior to WWI?
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REALISM Response to Romanticism Dominant style circa 1850-1875
Focus on life as it is really lived—”warts and all” Connection to problems of industry, urbanization, mass politics Connection to literature, science, medicine Gross Clinic by Eakins
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The Sower by Millet
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REALISM: THE WORKING CLASS
Jean-Francois Millet ( ) Honore Daumier ( ) Gustave Courbet ( ) Third Class Carriage by Daumier
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The Stonebreakers by Courbet
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The Gleaners by Millet
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PHOTOGRAPHER – CHANGING REPRESENTATIONS
Photography developed in the middle of 19th c. Changed task of painter from chronicler and representation to imagination, abstraction Photojournalism to highlight social problems Jacob Riis—Dutch-American Riis – Tenement home
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Jacob Riis
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Jacob Riis
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Rebel Sharpshooter by Alexander Gardner
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Rodin – Man with Broken Nose
SCULPTURE Auguste Rodin ( ) Most famous for “The Thinker” Sought to imitate impressionists with effect of light and shade Rodin – Man with Broken Nose
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Rodin’s – The Thinker
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TRANSITION Eduard Manet and James Whistler Move toward abstraction
Ruskin case and role of critics Challenge to traditional aesthetic motifs Move away from shadowing Manet’s The Fifer
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Nocturne in Gold and Blue: Falling Rocket by Whistler
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IMPRESSIONISM Influence of photography Interest in light, shadow
Cassatt’s Mother and Child Influence of photography Interest in light, shadow Focus on everyday life—street scenes, still lives, parks, etc. Interest in how objects change in light over time Exhibited their works together
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CLAUDE MONET (1840-1926) Named the movement
Focus on subtle nuances of color and light Famous for haystacks, water lilies, Notre Dame Cathedral
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Monet’s Haystack
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Monet’s Water Lilies
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Monet’s Water Lilies
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Monet’s Boaters
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OTHER IMPRESSIONISTS Pierre Auguste Renoir (1841-1919)
Edgar Degas ( ) Mary Cassatt ( )—American
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Renoir’s The Boater’s Party
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Toulouse-Lautrec’s At the Moulin Rouge
POST-IMPRESSIONISM More interested in form and structure than Impressionists Focus on broad fields of color Beginnings of movement away from clear and distinct representation Van Gogh, Seurat ( ) Toulouse-Lautrec ( ) Pointillism—related Toulouse-Lautrec’s At the Moulin Rouge
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Saturday Afternoon by Seurat
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VINCENT VAN GOGH (1853-90) Began in realist style
Sold only 1 painting in his lifetime Famous for swirling, passionate brushstrokes Used yellow (ran out), influenced by Japanese art Difficulty with others Suicide (archetype of “tortured artist”) Billiards by Van Gogh
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Sunflowers by Van Gogh
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Self-Portrait by Van Gogh
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Starry Night by Van Gogh
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EXPRESSIONISM More interested in breaking bonds of previous traditions
Abstraction and subjective experiences 1905 Fauvist Exhibit Henri Matisse ( ), Paul Cezanne ( ), Paul Gauguin ( ), James Ensor ( ), Edvard Munch ) The Scream by Munch
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Woman with the Green Stripe by Matisse
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USE OF COLOR
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SUBJECTIVITY AND ABSTRACTION
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CUBISM Influence of relativity theory
Looking at objects from multiple perspectives Sense of time as not absolute Founders: Pablo Picasso ( ), Georges Braque ( ) Braque
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Braque Untitled
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Braque Untitled
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PICASSO (ONE OF TWO PAINTERS THE 100)
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Picasso’s Blue Dove
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Picasso’s Poet
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Picasso Self-Portrait
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Picasso’s Loki
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FUTURISM Interest in science and technology
Critical of traditional artistic motifs—religious scenes, nudes, history, etc. Issued manifestoes that called for change, by destruction if necessary Died out after World War I Umberto Boccioni
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Dynamism of a Cyclist by Boccioni
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DADAISM Anti-art movement on eve of WWI
Name refers to meaningless childish babble Questions traditional bases of art Marcel Duchamp ( ) founder Duchamp
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Sullivan’s Carson Pierre Scott Building
MODERN ARCHITECTURE “Form follows function” Focus less on ornamentation, more on building reflecting its use “A box with windows” New building materials—steel and reinforced concrete Louis Sullivan ( ) and Frank Lloyd Wright ( )—Prairie Style Sullivan’s Carson Pierre Scott Building
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Sullivan’s Wainwright Building
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Frank Lloyd Wright – Oak Park, Illinois
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Frank Lloyd Wright’s Roby House Hyde Park, Chicago
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