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Chapter 28 – Art, Architecture, and Media. French Monastery: Before & After.

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Chapter 28 – Art, Architecture, and Media
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Page 1: Chapter 28 – Art, Architecture, and Media. French Monastery: Before & After.

Chapter 28 – Art, Architecture, and Media

Page 2: Chapter 28 – Art, Architecture, and Media. French Monastery: Before & After.

French Monastery: Before & After

Page 3: Chapter 28 – Art, Architecture, and Media. French Monastery: Before & After.

Art movements as part of Modernism

Dadaism (1916 – 1924)

Surrealism [early] (1920 - 1935)

Bauhaus (1919 – 1933)

Art Deco / Architecture (1920 – 1935)

Post-Impressionism/Expressionism/

Cubism – (begun in 1907)

Page 4: Chapter 28 – Art, Architecture, and Media. French Monastery: Before & After.

Began in neutral Switzerland in WWI

Also big in Paris.

Reached its peak between 1916 – 1924

“Anti – Art”

A movement against rigidity of society and art, and the barbarity of war – the public didn’t deserve art after the war.

Dadaism

Page 5: Chapter 28 – Art, Architecture, and Media. French Monastery: Before & After.

Characteristics of Dada Art

Nonsensical drawings

Pastel and faded colors

Used collages and layers – to confuse the “unworthy beholder.”

“The beginnings of surrealism” – many Dada artists went on to become members of the Surrealist movement.

Subjects sometimes mundane, called art as irony. (e.g.– bicycle wheel, flyer.)

Page 6: Chapter 28 – Art, Architecture, and Media. French Monastery: Before & After.

Marcel Duchamp

You Me (Tu-M)

1918

Page 7: Chapter 28 – Art, Architecture, and Media. French Monastery: Before & After.

SurrealismThe “art of dreams”: disconnection

from reality

Divided into two groups based on different interpretations of Freud and Jung – the Automatists and the Veristic Surrealists.

Automatists - suppress conscious in order to free the subconscious, inspired by more “Dadaist” ideals, shouldn’t be overly analyzed.

Veristic Surrealists - follow the images of the subconscious so they can be interpreted; art is a way to freeze ideas of the subconscious.

Page 8: Chapter 28 – Art, Architecture, and Media. French Monastery: Before & After.

SurrealismLead by Andre Brenton, a French doctor who had served in the trenches during WWI.

Subject matter was varied: – some pieces show a

complete dislocation from any sort of literal “reality” (for example, Max Ernst’s works)

-- other pieces show “normal” situations with a spark of absurdity (for example, Rene Magritte's works.)

Bright colors among sometimes dull backgrounds.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1GFkN4deuZU (Destino)

Page 9: Chapter 28 – Art, Architecture, and Media. French Monastery: Before & After.

Salvador Dali, Persistence of Memory, 1931

Page 10: Chapter 28 – Art, Architecture, and Media. French Monastery: Before & After.

Bauhaus/Functionalism/

International StyleBegan in 1919 with Bauhaus School in Weimar, Germany.

Lead by Walter Gropius, Hannes Meyer, & Ludwig Mies Van Der Rohe.

Wanted to create new art to reflect the new times they were living in after WWI.

Artist should be trained to work in the industry.

Page 11: Chapter 28 – Art, Architecture, and Media. French Monastery: Before & After.

Characteristics of BauhausA lack of recognizable objects – wanted

to find the true meaning of art through disassembling it.

Clean lines, geometric shapes layered.

In architecture: clean, functional.

Stylistic patterns altered as leaders of the school changed – earlier Bauhaus is different to later Bauhaus.

Page 12: Chapter 28 – Art, Architecture, and Media. French Monastery: Before & After.

Bauhaus School in Dessau, Germany

Page 13: Chapter 28 – Art, Architecture, and Media. French Monastery: Before & After.

Characteristics of Prairie Style

“Form should follow Function”

Clean lines (use of horizontals)

Minimal, elaborate décor is absent (the function is the décor)

Set in nature / blends in

Page 14: Chapter 28 – Art, Architecture, and Media. French Monastery: Before & After.

Art DecoCenter: Paris.

Gained the title “Art Deco” from Exposition Internationale des Arts Decoratifs et Industriels Modernes in 1925

A new kind of decorative and elegant art.

Reached its high point in the mid ’20s – mid 30’s.

Reaction to the forced austerity caused by WWI.

Page 15: Chapter 28 – Art, Architecture, and Media. French Monastery: Before & After.

Characteristics of Art DecoGeometric shapes

Although not the flowing swirls of Art Nouveau, had bolder curves and less “fussy” designs.

Bold colors, and new ways of shading pictures.

Idealistic images of the “flaming youth” of the “roaring twenties”.

Carried a theme through pieces, especially in interiors and architecture.

Page 16: Chapter 28 – Art, Architecture, and Media. French Monastery: Before & After.

• Reaction to Impressionism, became more nonrepresentationalWith Cubism, Artists reduced and fractured objects into geometric forms. They also used multiple or contrasting vantage points.Emphasized individual style or expression Frequently represents abstract or unconscious thought or feeling

Post Impressionism /Expressionism/ Cubism

Page 17: Chapter 28 – Art, Architecture, and Media. French Monastery: Before & After.

Undergrowth with a Couple, Vincent Van Gogh

Page 18: Chapter 28 – Art, Architecture, and Media. French Monastery: Before & After.

Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte, Georges Seurat (Pointilism)

Page 19: Chapter 28 – Art, Architecture, and Media. French Monastery: Before & After.

Riders on the Beach, Paul Gauguin

Page 20: Chapter 28 – Art, Architecture, and Media. French Monastery: Before & After.

Red Room, Henri Matisse (Fauvism)

Page 21: Chapter 28 – Art, Architecture, and Media. French Monastery: Before & After.

On White II, Wassily Kandinsky (expressionism)

Page 22: Chapter 28 – Art, Architecture, and Media. French Monastery: Before & After.

Pablo Picasso

Guernica, 1937(Cubism)

Page 23: Chapter 28 – Art, Architecture, and Media. French Monastery: Before & After.

Radio & Movies• New inventions in the late 19th century led the way for a revolution in mass Communications. (Transatlantic wireless developed by Guglielmo Marconi)

• Radio broadcasting and motion pictures became more prevalent in the early 20th Century. • Hitler said, “Without motor-cars, sound films, and wireless [there would be] no Victories of Nazism”

Charlie Chaplin, early silent film star

Page 24: Chapter 28 – Art, Architecture, and Media. French Monastery: Before & After.

Film as Propaganda

The Triumph of the Will https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GHs2coAzLJ8 (1:34:50)

• Film was used as propaganda: Leni Riefenstahl directs and films “Triumph of the Will” and Joseph Goebbels acts the Propaganda minister of Nazi Germany. He believed that film was the “most modern and scientific means of influencing the masses”

• Hitler commissioned a filmmaker named Leni Riefenstahl to direct and film, “The Triumph of the Will,” the most influential propaganda film ever created.


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