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Year 11 Fast Track Mini Project – Cubism

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Year 11 Fast Track. Mini Project – Cubism. How to use this PowerPoint. Use this PP to plan and produce development work for your Cubism mini project. You can always access it via the art website: www.lbsart.weebly.com Green slides signal the start of a new stage in your work. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Year 11 Fast Track

Year 11 Fast TrackMini Project – Cubism

Page 2: Year 11 Fast Track

How to use this PowerPoint

• Use this PP to plan and produce development work for your Cubism mini project.

• You can always access it via the art website: www.lbsart.weebly.com

• Green slides signal the start of a new stage in your work

Page 3: Year 11 Fast Track

Project stages (green slides)There are 3 stages to the project:

The first stage must be done before the mock exam on Friday 14th DecemberThe final 2 stages will be done in the exam

All project work must be handed in on Monday 17th December

1. Cubism Research Board/s (AO1)2. Cubist Still Life Drawing (AO3)3. Cubist Still Life Painting (AO2 / AO4)

Page 4: Year 11 Fast Track

TimelineThis timeline assumes that you attend both after school sessions.

These sessions are essential for you to produce the required work.

• Week starting Monday 3rd December• Introduction to Cubism• Analysing Cubist artwork• Starting Cubist Research board• HW:

• Week starting Monday 10th December• Completing Cubist Research Boards • Mini practical – Cubist processes – Multiple viewpoints• HW:

• Friday 14th December – Mock Exam Day 1• Cubist Still Life Drawing

• Monday 17th December – Mock exam Day 2• Cubist Still Life Painting• Hand in all portfolio work

Page 5: Year 11 Fast Track

Stage 1 – Cubism Research Board/s

• You will have to show that you can: investigate a range of sources showing analytical and critical understanding (AO1)

• To do this you will create one or more A2 research boards about Cubist artwork and processes

• Look carefully through the following examples of boards and use the Cubism information slides to help create your boards

Page 6: Year 11 Fast Track

General introduction to Cubism, how / why did it start and by who?

Detailed copy of the main artwork using materials

Artwork 2Example of

Synthetic Cubism

Notes about Artwork 1

What is analytical cubism, how do we recognise it?

CUBISM

Cubism Research Board – Minimum one board to gain COMPETENT – Grade C

Use the PowerPoint and OTHER sources (books / internet / museum)Make notes using the 4 headings

Artwork 1Example of

Analytical Cubism

Main Artwork (Braque,

Picasso or Gris)

Notes about Artwork 2

What is synthetic cubism, how do we recognise it?

Notes about the section you copied, why that section? What materials?

Page 7: Year 11 Fast Track

Extended Boards – To provide evidence for COHERENT & CONFIDENT bandsThis could be one or more boards organised however you like. It is expected that you would use other sources as well as this PowerPoint. The board/s should include at least two of the following.

1. A more detailed definition of the differences between SYNTHETIC & ANALYTICAL CUBISM, using examples of artwork and evidence of research from other sources

2. Evidence of a visit to the BMAG to seek out Cubist art! See this link for some clues: http://www.bbc.co.uk/bbcone/modernmasters/art-walks/birmingham/step6.shtml

3. Examples of artwork that inspired Picasso and Braque to create the Cubist style. This could be ancient art or the work of previous artists such as Paul Cezanne. Use visual examples to show the links and inspirations.

4. Contemporary uses of the Cubist style in artwork and architecture , e.g. David Hockney, David Mach, The Hyatt!

Page 8: Year 11 Fast Track

Help with annotation…

• It is very important that you write about the art in your own words

• We don’t need an essay, simple bullet points can be fine

• The following slides can really help, they can also be found on the website:

• http://lbsart.weebly.com/annotation-helpsheets.html

Page 9: Year 11 Fast Track

ANALYSING AND EVALUATING ARTWORK

POINT – EVIDENCE - EXPLAIN

Page 10: Year 11 Fast Track
Page 11: Year 11 Fast Track

CUBISM

Page 12: Year 11 Fast Track

• The Cubist movement in painting was developed by Picasso and Braque around 1907-1914, and became a major influence on Western art.

Georges Braque01 Jan 1955

Pablo Picasso30 Sep 1955

Page 13: Year 11 Fast Track

Abstracted form• The artists chose to

break down the subjects, and re-assembled in an abstracted form — instead of depicting objects from one viewpoint, the artist depicts the subject from a multitude of viewpoints to represent the subject in a greater context.

Picasso, Aficionado (1912)

Page 14: Year 11 Fast Track

Inspirations…• They were greatly inspired by African sculpture, and by painters Paul Cézanne

(French, 1839-1906) and Georges Seurat (French, 1859-1891),

Picasso, Les Demoiselles d'Avignon (1907)

Page 15: Year 11 Fast Track

Broken up

• In Cubism the subject matter is broken up, analyzed, and reassembled in an abstracted form. Picasso and Braque followed the advice of Paul Cézanne, who in 1904 said artists should treat nature "in terms of the cylinder, the sphere and the cone."

Gris, Juan, Teacups,1914

Page 16: Year 11 Fast Track

The Cubist style• emphasized the

flat, two-dimensional surface of the picture plane, rejecting the traditional techniques of perspective, foreshortening, modelling.

Braque, GeorgesViolin and CandlestickParis, [spring 1910]

Page 17: Year 11 Fast Track

New realities• Cubist painters were

not bound to copying form, texture, colour, and space; instead, they presented a new reality in paintings that depicted fragmented objects, whose several sides were seen simultaneously.

Gris, JuanLandscape at Ceret, 1913oil on canvas

Page 18: Year 11 Fast Track

Types of Cubism • There are two main types

of cubism, analytical cubism and synthetic cubism. The work up to 1912 is known as Analytical Cubism, concentrating on geometrical forms using subdued colours. Analytic cubism was mainly practiced by Braque, and is very simple, with dark, almost monochromatic colours.

Braque, GeorgesViolin and PitcherParis, [early 1910]Oil on canvas

Page 19: Year 11 Fast Track

Analytical Cubism• The main elements of Cubism

were to show a simplified subject from several different points of view,

• Analytical Cubism was concerned with the breaking down, or analysis, of forms

• Colour schemes were simplified, to nearly monochromatic

(hues of tan, brown, gray, cream, green, or blue preferred)

in order not to distract the viewer from the artist's primary interest--the structure of form itself

Page 20: Year 11 Fast Track

Synthetic Cubism• The second phase after

1912, known as Synthetic Cubism, used more decorative shapes, stencilling, collage, and brighter colours. It was then that artists such as Picasso and Braque started to use pieces of cut-up newspaper in their paintings.

Braque, GeorgesFruit Dish, Ace of Clubs, [Paris, early 1913]Oil, gouache, and charcoal on canvas.

Page 21: Year 11 Fast Track

What is Synthetic Cubism????Grew out of analytical cubism

Real pieces of paper, scores of music replaced drawn musical notation.

Fragments of newspaper, playing cards, cigarette packs, and advertisements that were either real or painted

were added to paintings.

Artist such as Picasso and Braque began to add found objects and textures into their paintings that

surrounded them in their everyday environments

They were bringing their real life objects and their paintings together

They were inventing……COLLAGEOr as they called it PAPIER COLLE

(French: pasted paper)

Page 22: Year 11 Fast Track

David Hockney

Portrait of the Artist's Mother. 1985, photocollage.

This is called a photocollage rather than a photomontage, because it is more three-dimensional than a montage tends to be. Hockney reflected extensively on his process of collaging prints taken from a camera as connecting to the Cubist sense of multiple angles and especially of movement. These "multiples" (as he called them) convey a strong sense of movement,

Cubism influences in Contemporary Art

Page 23: Year 11 Fast Track

David Mach

Post Card Collage, made up of multiple images to buildA single portrait.

Page 24: Year 11 Fast Track

Cubism Influencing Design

Buildings

Household

Fashion

Toys

Page 25: Year 11 Fast Track

Can you identify the following?

Braque, GeorgesStill Life with Harp and Violin1912Oil on canvas

Page 26: Year 11 Fast Track

Answer:

•Analytical Cubism• Why?

Page 27: Year 11 Fast Track

Braque, GeorgesStill Life on a Table: "Gillette."[Paris, early 1914]Charcoal, pasted paper, and gouache

Page 28: Year 11 Fast Track

Answer:

• Synthetic Cubism•Why?

Page 29: Year 11 Fast Track

Picasso "Still Life with Chair Caning"1912 Oil and oilcloth on canvas, with rope frame

Page 30: Year 11 Fast Track

Georges BraqueCandlestick and Playing Cards

on a Table1910

Page 31: Year 11 Fast Track

Portrait of Josette Gris

1916, Oil on panel

Juan Gris

Page 32: Year 11 Fast Track

Juan Gris ‘the Breakfast’ 1915

Page 33: Year 11 Fast Track

Georges Braque ‘ Guitar and Clarinet’ 1918

Page 34: Year 11 Fast Track

Create a mind map of all the words you would use to describe Cubism… Here are a few to get you started…

Abstract, Picasso, Braque, African Masks,

Cezanne, 1907-1914, Gris, re-assembled,

Viewpoint, broken , Cylinder , Sphere , David Mach, Cone

David Hockney, Basic Shapes, Still Life, Portraits, Collage,

Flat, two-dimensional, rejecting the traditional techniques ,

innovative, Photomontage, perspective, multiple view points, foreshortening, modelling,

form, texture, colour, space , Synthetic Analytical