name

4
NAME DATE The Unit Organizer LAST UNIT /Experience CURRENT UNIT NEXT UNIT UNIT SELF-TEST QUESTIONS is about... U N I T R E L A T I O N S H I P S 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 Impressionism 1865-1910 Fauvism 1900-1935 Cubism & Futurism 1905-1920 Abstract Expressionism 1940-1950 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. Patteson 1 st semester By reviewing By reviewing Modern Art – 18 th & 19 th centuries By studying By studying By studying Elements of art and principles of design using various media Impressionism Fauvism Rococco 1720-1790 Romanticism 1848-1900 Post-Impressionism 1885-1910 Expressionism 1910-1935 Dada & Surrealism 1917-1950 Pop Art 1960’s By studying By studying Wk 13 Wk 14 Wk 15 Wk 16 By studying Op Art 1960+ 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 Nouveau continuation Wk 18 continuation continuation FRAMES: Rococo Romanticism Impressionism Fauvism Art Nouveau Expressionism Early Renaissance early 1400’s High Renaissance 1450 - 1550 Mannerism 1527 - 1580 Baroque 1600 - 1750 ART 2

Upload: lieu

Post on 06-Jan-2016

32 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

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 Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: NAME

NAME

DATEThe Unit Organizer

LAST UNIT/Experience CURRENT UNIT NEXT UNIT

UN

IT S

ELF

-TE

ST

QU

ES

TIO

NS

is about...

UN

IT

RELA

TIO

NS

HIP

S

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

Page 2: NAME

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

IT S

ELF

-TE

ST

QU

ES

TIO

NS U

NIT

RELA

TIO

NS

HIP

S

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

Page 3: NAME

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)

Page 4: NAME

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