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Visual Arts Study Notes
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Page 1: aceh.b-cdn.net Study Notes.docx  · Web viewVisual Arts Study Notes. PRACTICE. Practice in Artmaking, Art Criticism and Art History. Artmaking practice is the ‘doing’ of things

Visual Arts Study Notes

Page 2: aceh.b-cdn.net Study Notes.docx  · Web viewVisual Arts Study Notes. PRACTICE. Practice in Artmaking, Art Criticism and Art History. Artmaking practice is the ‘doing’ of things

PRACTICE

Practice in Artmaking, Art Criticism and Art History

Artmaking practice is the ‘doing’ of things in the art

world. It is made up of Material Practice and

Conceptual practice.

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Material Practice refers to the techniques and processes used in order to produce an artwork or artworks.

Conceptual Practice refers to the ideas and intentions explored through the artwork or artworks.

Art Criticism investigates the ways in which different meanings are represented in artworks. The aim of the critic is

to clarify and assess:● The qualities of an artwork● How an artist develops and produces art● How the audies may view, understand and appreciate the

artworkCriticism about art should:

● Involve more than personal judgements● Clearly describe the effectiveness of an artwork● Assess an artwork in relation to the world, not as an isolated

piece of work● Demonstrate your specialized knowledge of the visual arts

Art Historians map out the significance of artworks and artists in relation to their contexts: the periods of time and

places in which they worked

FRAMES

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The Frames

The FRAMES component of Visual Arts Study shows you how to understand artworks and artists by looking at and

analysing them through particular structures.

These structures give you “keys” or approaches to open up the meaning in artworks.

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SUBJECTIVE - this looks at the feelings and emotional responses we can get from artworks. It identifies the personal

responses of artists and audiences.

STRUCTURAL - this looks at the approach to form and the treatment of the materials in the artwork. It examines how the artwork is put together and what technology is used.

CULTURAL - this deals with the way the artist and/or atwork develops a particular identity or characteristic that

reflects the attitudes of a particular time or place.

POSTMODERN - this looks at artworks using contemporary knowledge and theories that challenge

traditional and modernist ideas. These include issues such as appropriation, a voice to minority groups (eg indigenous

groups), use of new technologies, conceptual or idea driven work

SUBJECTIVE FRAME

Personal and Psychological Experience

Through this frame, art may be thought to be about and represent deeply felt and sensory experience, human consciousness, intuition, imagination, originality, creative expression and aesthetic response.

Meaning is understood in relation to the intersubjective experiences afforded to the marker and viewer

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Since Visual Arts is an area in which personal and intimate qualities play vital roles, the subjective frame focuses on the personal relationships that both the artists and the audience have with an artwork and with writings about art. It looks at the way in which the audience will attempt to understand the personal ideas of the artist and the different ways people will respond to the artwork.

Using the Subjective Frame to look at an artwork involves asking:● How are feelings and experiences conveyed throughout the work?● What personal understanding of the subject is apparent and how is it

communicated?● Do you, as the audience, feel and understand the work?● What personal insights are offered by the artist/historian/critic?● Does the title of the work give a deeper insight to the work?● What emotional responses is the artist/historian/critic trying to get from

the audience?● How is the personality of the artist/historian/critic conveyed?● How crucial is imagination to the production of the artwork, and why?● In what ways does the audience empathise with the artist/historian/critic?● How are personal intentions conveyed through the artwork or writing?

STRUCTURAL FRAME

Communication and the systems of signs

Through this frame, art may be thought to be about and represent a visual language as a symbolic system: a system of relationships between signs and symbols that are read and understood by artists and audiences who are able to decode texts. From this view, meaning is understood in terms of the relationships of symbols that are used to refer to the world. Through this system ideas are circulated and exchanged.

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Interpreting an artwork from the viewpoint of the structural frame means reading the work as a text. Structural theorists presume that the meaning of the work resides in the work itself and is not altered by its context.

A structural analysis involves consideration of the following:

GENRE - recognized category regulated by conventions of form and content● Representation of a particular subject matter● Production in a particular medium ● Membership of a recognized traditional artmaking practice

VIRTUAL PROPERTIES - conceptual aspects● Subject matter - people, other living things, places, objects, events, issues ad

theories represented● Icon - a sign in which resembles the thing it stands for eg a silhouette of a

human figure, a photograph of a building● Index - a sign which is physically or casually related to what it signifies eg

footprint● Symbol - A sign in which does not resemble what is signifies; quite often used

to represent an abstract concept eg a dove (peace), red (passion), logo (corporate identity)

● Theme - overarching message about the subject matter eg the beauty of nature, the sacrifice of war, the endurance of love

AESTHETIC PROPERTIES - compositional aspects● Visual elements: direction, colour, line, shape, size, texture, tone● Principles of organization: scale, repetition, contrast

CULTURAL FRAME

Cultural and Social Meaning

Through this frame art may be thought to be about and represent the collective interests of cultural groups, ideology, class, politics, gender, economic conditions and the celebration of spiritual and secular beliefs, events and objects. From this view, meaning is understood in relation to the social perspective of the community from which it grows.

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The cultural frame highlights the fact that no artist works in a social vacuum and that all artworks reflect some aspect of the culture (beliefs, ideas, social structures) in which they were produced.

The times and place will greatly influence both the cultural significance of the artwork and the artist’s approach to artmaking.

The cultural frame alerts the audience to the artist’s philosophy and intention by looking at the culture which surrounds the artwork.

Using the cultural frame to look at an artwork involves asking questions like:● Are the signs and symbols used by the artist specific to a particular

culture? How might other cultures understand this?● Does the artist attempt to reflect the attitudes of a time and place? How is

this done?● Beliefs about race, gender, and social class can shape society. These

elements can be distilled in an artwork, giving an insight into the cultural values of the artist’s world. How are these conveyed in the artwork?

● Is there a political significance in the artwork? What is it? Why is it there? Are there obvious political issues in the writings of art critics and historians?

POSTMODERN FRAME

Ideas which challenge mainstream values of histories and ideas.

Through this frame, art may be thought to be about and represent ‘texts’ that reconfigure replicate and question previous texts and current narratives. These are woven together through such things as irony, parody, quotation. From this view, meaning is attained through critique that exposes the patterns of authority and the assumptions of mainstream values in the visual arts to reveal inconsistencies, uncertainties and ironies.

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POSTMODERNISM means after modernism and represents a change in attitudes, intentions and practices from the modern era.

The postmodern frame refers to the critical debates that are current in society and the artworld. Postmodernism is a way of thinking which suggests that everything can be explained and interpreted in a number of different ways due to the changing nature of what is true and how we accept facts. This can be the most difficult frame to understand as it tends to escape clear definition, yet it is highly significant in the contemporary world.

In postmodernism:● The idea of absolute rules, dominant styles and recognized

conventions is dismissed.● Accepted conventions - such as taste, culture and style - are critically

brought into question and their validity is challenged.● Representation is constructed by conditions between the artist, artwork

and audience that can change at any moment and cannot be governed by universal laws

● Artist reacting against the elitism of Modernist art practices make art referencing commercial art practices that are recognized and understood by the masses.

● Artists frequently use text as a visual and communicative device● There is a proposal that perhaps what is more important than the artwork

is the way we look at and understand the work, which even suggests that the audience is more important than the artist. Thus the role of the audience is crucial in interpreting the artwork

● Approaches to art making such as appropriation, irony, recontextualisation and eclecticism are not necessarily new, but they do challenge traditional modes of thinking.

● Postmodernism art also engages with the use of new technologies eg digital. Artists frequently use non conventional materials and techniques to produce their work.

● The postmodernism world offers a voice to marginalized groups. Women, indigenous people, homosexuals, are all offered a voice which they previously were denied. Postmodern art is often political in its content with artists openly critical of aspects in society. During the Modernist era the centre of the artworld was initially Paris and later New York, in the

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Postmodern era where worldwide communication is instantaneous, artists from all parts of the world have the opportunity to present their work in the public domain.

● Using the postmodern frame to look at an artwork involves asking questions such as:

○ How do the artworks challenge the authority of history?○ Are traditions in art disregarded by the artist? How?○ What conventions are being critiqued by the artist?○ How are signs and symbols being reinvented to create new

meanings?○ Are conventions such as parody, appropriation, irony and wit used

in the work?○ Does the artist recontextualise the source of the image to create a

different meaning?○ Can there be multiple interpretations of the work?○ Does the artwork seek to highlight the issues of marginalized

groups in society? ○ How does the artwork destabilize the audience’s expectations?○ How do some artists show an anti-authoritarian approach in their

artmaking?

CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK

The agencies in the Artworld

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CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK

AGENCIES IN THE ARTWORLD

The artworld is a diverse and difficult area to study and fully comprehend. To make it easier to discuss and examine the HSC Visual Arts Syllabus has broken down the artworld into four smaller components known as ‘agencies’ in the artworld. They are;

● Artist ● Artwork

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● World● Audience

Each of the components helps to illuminate the ‘cause and effect’ nature of the artworld. Art doesn’t exist within a social vacuum. The Conceptual Framework demonstrates how reliant each agent is on the other in the artworld.

*In the HSC examination, you will be required to explain, examine or discuss relationships between two or more agencies.*

Focus Artist

Yang Yongliang★ Chinese artist born in Shanghai in 1980.★ Has extensive training in traditional artforms

(calligraphy, traditional chinese painting)★ Influenced by traditional Chinese Shan Shui works.

INFINITE LANDSCAPE

Material - Created in 2011- Is a time-based media (DVD)- Around 7 minutes long- Emulates (mirrors) ZHAO Zuo’s “Landscape” (created

during the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644).- Depicts a dark and gloomy landscape.

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- Opens with chinese characters.- BLIMP!- At first glance, from a distance, you see the mountain ranges similar to those of

traditional Chinese works, but instead of the traditional ink, the composition is made up of hundreds of layers of photoshop.

- As you look at the work longer and closer up, it becomes apparent that the gloomy mountains, aren’t mountains, but towering, crowded buildings.

- The crowded buildings represent China’s current urbanised situation and overpopulation.

- The video is slow-building, with minimal movement and sound at the beginning. - As the video continues, the movement builds, with more and more cars joining the

busy roads, the sounds also builds, with more honking noises and the sound of cars driving on the road.

- The work is comprised of buildings, electrical poles/lines, and other features of urbanisation.

- Smokey tones - represents pollution. Contrasts from smokey tones in Shan Shui where they add to the sublimity of the works.

- Reconceptualising traditional Shan Shui works- Uses traditional Chinese techniques with contemporary ideas to appeal to

contemporary audiences.- An abrupt explosion brings the video to an end- Compositional arrangement and style of Shan Shui ink paintings. - Scroll like format- Its scroll like format, smokey tones and cascading mountains echo the traditional ink

paintings of the past, however with closer observations we notice that the landscape changes dramatically.

- Mountain paths, and huts have been replaced with power plants and freeways.- Imagery symbolising modern progress and development.- Subtle grey tones once used in traditional Chinese paintings form the smog clouds

demonstrating the effect of rapid development environmentally. - The serene, calm valley, once a place to escape one’s mind, a place of reflection

becomes a symbol of uncontrolled industrial and urban development.- Landscape engulfed by infinite development.

Conceptual- Works are heavily based on contemporary issues.- Works in a post-modern way, with post-modern devices. Challenges tradition in the

sense that he wants to modify the traditional works to communicate contemporary ideas.

- Explosion represents destruction of the land and new development. - China’s urbanisation, loss of rural areas and rural life.

- Combines (fuses) traditional Chinese culture with contemporary digital techniques. - The visual language employed clearly communicates the artist’s ideas of capturing the

conflict between nature and urbanity.

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- Length of video allows us to contemplate

PHANTOM LANDSCAPE

Material- made in 2010- blue-ray disk- 3 minutes and 23 seconds- time based work- mountains composed of

densely packed concrete buildings

- forest composed of construction cranes and electric towers

- misty streams flow from contaminated urban waste.- atmospheric haze of pollution replaces natural mists and clouds- in the form of hanging scrolls and fans- similar composition style to traditional chinese- chinese calligraphy and red stamps (carved seals) - similar to those of traditional

works- red stamps is a culturally significant colour and contrasts against the more subdued

colours of the photographs - similar to chinese scrolls which are read right to left, the video moves from right to

left.

Conceptual- artist has a connection with the traditional formats of ink paintings- similar stylistics choices to traditional works - calligraphy establishes a link to the past.- ethereal creations and ancient chinese works. -

-

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Focus Artist

Emily Kame KngwarreyeBorn in 1910, died on the 3rd September 1996. Was an Australian Aboriginal Artist from the

Utopia Community - NT

★ Her paintings are a response to her birth land - Alhalkere★ She holds a unique vision of the land, challenging the viewing of Aboriginal Art★ Many different styles as her painting style grew○ Firstly, her paintings featured many dots, sometimes

overlapping and stacking them on top of each other. They were various sizes and colours. This is seen in “Wild Potato Dreaming”.

Wild Potato Dreaming, 1990’s, synthetic polymer on linen ----------------

★ Within “Wild Potato dreaming”, Kngwarreye created a multilayered image of her country through a veil of dots, which further suggest lush desert flowers and vegetation covering a dry desert landscape (shown by the brown surface). Ultimately, the

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hidden lines suggest the journeys of creation, ancestors and the wild potato’s complex root system.

★ In 1982, Kngwarreye’s dots started to form lines with parallel, horizontal and vertical stripes which represented rivers and the contours of the land in may forms of colour. She utilised larger brushes and larger dots as well.

★ In 1993, she began painting patches of colour in combination with many large dots which were like rings that were clear in the middle.

★ In 1994, Kngwarreye developed a more aesthetic and contemporary style and representation of the land. She began painting stripes that crossed the canvas. They were thick and represented yam tracks, as seen in “Bush Yam”, and their strange growth patterns

Bush Yam, 1995, acrylic on canvas ----------------

★ Originally, her paintings started with specific subjects that depicted designs from traditional body paintings and dreaming maps demonstrating important sites.

★ There is a repetition of “Yam Tracks” within her work★ Her artwork had lots of meaning to do with all aspects of

her community’s life, including the yam plants.★ kngwarreye ‘s middle name is ‘Kame’. This is her

language’s name for yams.


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