name
DESCRIPTION
Op Art 1960+. Pop Art 1960’s. Expressionism 1910-1935. Fauvism 1900-1935. Dada & Surrealism 1917-1950. Baroque 1600 - 1750. Mannerism 1527 - 1580. Abstract Expressionism 1940-1950. High Renaissance 1450 - 1550. Impressionism 1865-1910. Romanticism 1848-1900. Rococco - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
NAME
DATEThe Unit Organizer
LAST UNIT/Experience CURRENT UNIT NEXT UNIT
UN
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ELF
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QU
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TIO
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is about...
UN
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RELA
TIO
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HIP
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UNIT SCHEDULE UNIT MAP
CURRENT UNIT
Art of the Modern World
ART HISTORY
Ancient and Early Modern Art
Art 1400AD - 1960‘sAD
art history/styles
Impressionism1865-1910
Fauvism1900-1935
Cubism & Futurism1905-1920
Abstract Expressionism1940-1950
Wk 1
Wk 2
Wk 3
Wk 4
Wk 5
Wk 6
Wk 7
Wk 8
Wk 9
Wk 10
Wk 11
Wk 12
C. Patteson1st semester
By reviewing
By reviewing
Modern Art – 18th & 19th centuries
By studyingBy studying
By studying
Elements of art and principles of design using various media
Impressionism
FauvismRococco
1720-1790
Romanticism1848-1900
Post-Impressionism1885-1910
Expressionism1910-1935
Dada & Surrealism1917-1950
Pop Art1960’s
By studying
By studying
Wk 13
Wk 14
Wk 15
Wk 16
By studying
Op Art1960+
Rococo
Romanticism
continuation
Art Nouveau
1. What are basic visual characteristics that distinguish each style?
2. What historical/cultural events influenced each style?
3. Who were the main artists of each style?
continuation
continuation
continuation
continuation
continuation
Expressionism
continuation
continuation
review
By reviewing
By studying By studying
By studying
Wk 17
SOL: A2.2, A2.3, A2.4, A2.5, A2.8,A2.11, A2.13, A2.15
continuation
Art Nouveaucontinuation
Wk 18
continuation
continuation
FRAMES:
Rococo
Romanticism
Impressionism
Fauvism
Art Nouveau
Expressionism
Early Renaissanceearly 1400’s
High Renaissance1450 - 1550
Mannerism1527 - 1580
Baroque1600 - 1750
ART 2
2
DATEBIGGER PICTURE
LAST UNIT/Experience CURRENT UNIT NEXT UNIT
UNIT SCHEDULE UNIT MAP
CURRENT UNIT
Art of the Modern World
ART HISTORY
Early Modern Art Modern Art/19th & 20th Century
C. Patteson2nd semester
UN
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ELF
-TE
ST
QU
ES
TIO
NS U
NIT
RELA
TIO
NS
HIP
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UNIT SCHEDULE UNIT MAP
Art 1400AD - 1960‘sAD
art history/styles
Impressionism1865-1910
Fauvism1900-1935
Cubism & Futurism1905-1920
Abstract Expressionism1940-1950
Wk 1
Wk 2
Wk 3
Wk 4
Wk 5
Wk 6
Wk 7
Wk 8
Wk 9
Wk 10
Wk 11
Wk 12
By reviewing
By reviewing
By studyingBy studying
By studying
Elements of art and principles of design using various media
Baroque1600 - 1750
Rococco1720-1790
Romanticism1848-1900
Post-Impressionism1885-1910
Expressionism1910-1935
Dada & Surrealism1917-1950
Pop Art1960’s
By studying
By studying
Wk 13
Wk 14
Wk 15
Wk 16
By studying
Op Art1960+
continuation
Art Nouveau
1. What are basic visual characteristics that distinguish each style?
2. What historical/cultural events influenced each style?
3. Who were the main artists of each style?
continuation
continuation
continuation
continuation
independent
continuation
review
By reviewing
By studying By studying
By studying
Wk 17 Art history reviewSOL: A2.2, A2.3, A2.4, A2.5, A2.8,A2.11, A2.13, A2.15
Cubism
Dada
continuation
Surrealism
continuation
OP Art
continuation
POP Art
continuation
FRAMES:
Cubism
Dada
Surrealism
OP Art
POP Art
Early Renaissanceearly 1400’s
High Renaissance1450 - 1550
Mannerism1527 - 1580
Art Periods / Movements
Rococo (1715–1790)
Romanticism (1780–1850)
Realism (1848–1900)
Characteristics
art that please the senses,
curving lines and forms from nature,
and to decorate
polite society's homes
The triumph of imagination
and individuality, rise of patriotism,
awe and wonder of the power and
expanse of nature
Celebrating working class and
peasants; en plein air painting
Chief Artists and Major
Works
Palace of Versailles
Watteau, Boucher, Fragonnard
Friedrich Church, Albert Bierstadt,
Gericault, Delacroix,
J.M.W. Turner, Benjamin West
Corot, Courbet,
Daumier, Millet
Manet, Monet, Renoir,
Pissarro, Cassatt, Degas,
Van Gogh, Gauguin,
Cézanne, Seurat, Lautrec
Toulouse Lautrec,
Toulouse Lautrec
Tiffany, Mucha, Beardsley
Matisse, Vlaminck, Derain,
Kandinsky, Marc,
Edvard Munch, Kathe Kollvitz
Historical Events
Age of Enlightenment (18th century); search
for reason and scientific discovery instead of
tradition and faith
American Revolution (1775–1783); French
Revolution (1789–1799); Napoleon crowned
emperor of France (1803, Industrial
Revolution (1760–1850)
European democratic revolutions of 1848
Railroads, tin paint tubes, science of light
and color, invention of the camera
Impressionism (1865–1885)
Post-Impressionism
(1885–1910)
Art Nouveau (1890 - 1910)
Fauvism and Expressionism
(1900–1935)
Capturing fleeting moment
and effects of natural light
and atmosphere
Brighter colors and the
additionof emotion inspired by natural forms and structures, not only in flowers and plantsbut also in curved lines
Harsh colors and flatter surfaces;emotion distorting form
Franco-Prussian War (1870–1871);
Unification of Germany (1871)
Belle Époque (late-19th-century Golden
Age) in Denmark
Japan defeats Russia (1905)
industrial revolution in early 1900’s
(artists wanted a return to nature)
Boxer Rebellion in China (1900);
World War I (1914–1918)
Art Periods / Movements
Cubism, Futurism (1905–1920)
Dada and Surrealism (1917–
1950)
Abstract Expressionism
(1940s–1950s)
Pop Art (1960s)
Op Art (officially1964-1968)
Characteristics
Pre– and Post–World War 1 art:
new forms to express modern life
Ridiculous art; painting dreams
and exploring the unconscious
Post–World War II:
pure abstraction and
expression without form
popular art
absorbs consumerism and
mass-production
exploits the fallibility of the eye
through the use of optical illusions
Chief Artists and Major Works
Picasso, Braque, Gris
Leger,
Duchamp, Dalí,
Ernst, Magritte, de Chirico,
Kahlo
Gorky, Pollock,
de Kooning, Rothko,
Warhol, Lichtenstein, Indiana
M.C. Escher,
Victor Vasarely,
Bridget Riley
Historical Events
Russian Revolution (1917);
American women franchised (1920)
Disillusionment after World War I;
The Great Depression (1929–1938);
World War II (1939–1945) and Nazi horrors;
atomic bombs dropped on Japan (1945)
U.S.S.R. suppresses Hungarian revolt (1956
Cold War and Vietnam War (U.S. enters 1965);
Czechoslovakian revolt (1968)
assassination of U.S. President,
escalating the Civil Rights movement,
being "invaded" by British pop/rock music