ARH202 Test 3 Flashcards

1
Q
A
  • ANTOINE WATTEAU, Return from Cythera, 1717.
  • outdoor celebration scene– lover’s utopia
  • looks slightly like a genre scene of very upper class people
  • stylistically rococo: light, feathery feeling to it; water receding into the background appearing to melt into the sky
  • group of lovers hanging out in the park
    • on their way to the island of Aphrodite
    • everyone is enamored and in love
    • waiting to get on the golden ship
  • appear to be dancing and not as affected by gravity
  • intentional composition in regards to the figures
    • artist is showing off: look at all these different postures i can paint
  • pays attention to the use of color
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2
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  • JEAN-BAPTISTE-SIMÉON CHARDIN, Saying Grace, 1740
  • antithesis of rococo
    • poverty, less vibrant colors
  • depiction of saying grace before meal
  • tranquil and humble scene
  • praises the simple goodness of domestic life
  • very realistic
  • lower middle class can relate to this better than to pieces from the rococo
  • space corresponds to gender roles
  • simplicity to the composition as well as the narrative details that underscore the humble message of the piece
  • embrace of the so called natural in art return to simpler humbler subject matter that appealed to different patrons than the rococo
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3
Q
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  • WILLIAM HOGARTH, Breakfast Scene, from Marriage à la Mode, ca. 1745.
  • Hogarth was interested in the newly prosperous middle class in Britain who were struggling with class issues
  • out of a series of six
  • lively vivacious colors relates to rococo art in Paris
  • humorless tone is distinctly British
  • very narrative in their orientation
  • enormously popular because they resonated with the changes taking place in the time period
  • Hogarth series were designed to appear as prints
  • husband is more promiscuous in what he’s doing
    • dog pulling out a woman’s night cap from his pocket

insinuates that he’s not the most faithful

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4
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  • JACQUES-LOUIS DAVID, Oath of the Horatii, 1784
  • official painter of France during Napoleonic France
  • spectacularly articulate example of neoclassicism
    • mindset as well as an artistic style— appreciation for all things classical
      • neoclassicism is defined by the crisp articulation of figures in space
      • believed art had to have a moral purpose
        • message of self sacrifice in this piece— example of virtue
  • this piece represents a historical moment– historical genre painting
  • representing a heroic moment
    • masculinity being emphasized
  • predictable use of space
    • looks like a stage set that the figures are standing on
    • background fades off because we don’t need to know what’s back there
  • idealized bodies of the males
  • grief stricken woman comforting children
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5
Q
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  • JACQUES-LOUIS DAVID, Napoleon Crossing the Saint-Bernard Pass, 1800–1801.
  • recreates Europe
  • this little man without any royal blood is able to overcome these mountains made by God
  • Napoleon is depicted much larger than he is in real life
  • equestrian portrait
  • David is reaching back into a ready made iconography
    • neoclassical
    • Napoleon is crossing the Alps to further France’s power
  • fantastic manipulation of what constitutes size and scale
  • David is representing Napoleon in motion
    • France is on the move
    • the horse is galloping with the wind of God on his side
      • fixed and static painting
  • Napoleon recognized the importance of art and used it in a propagandistic way
  • elements of realism and romanticism
  • David was the first painter of the empire
    • romanticism
      • uses qualities of Romanticism to make contemporary commentary
      • excites emotions and draws you into the narrative
    • neoclassical
      • clarity of form, arranged parallel to picture plane
      • coherence, anatomically correct
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6
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  • ANTOINE-JEAN GROS, Napoleon at the Pesthouse at Jaffa, 1804.
  • relationship between Napoleon propaganda and Romanticism is important
  • Gros was a pupil of David
  • Syrian campaign in 1799
  • bubonic plague broke out during this time period
    • not discriminate
    • in order to quell panic and hysteria Napoleon traveled to Jaffa
      • turned a religious sacred site into a hospital
  • 3 major qualities to the painting
    • setting
    • seen as very exotic to the French
    • ring of dead and dying pressed right up against the picture plane (cast in shadow)
      Napoleon and his entourage placed in the light
  • one of Napoleon’s men has a handkerchief held up to his face to cover the smell
    • graphic detail
  • Napoleon is completely in control
    • has his glove off and is touching one of the sick
    • didn’t think he could get sick
    • almost as if he is Jesus able to cure someone with his touch
  • disconnect between the meaningfulness of the body in neoclassical art and romantic art
    • the body has become diseased in this piece
    • very different conception of the body
  • colonialism suggests the belief that whoever has the power has the right to colonize someone else
  • context is important
  • massive canvas
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7
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  • JEAN-AUGUSTE-DOMINIQUE INGRES, Grande Odalisque, 1814
  • Ingres passed through David’s studio
  • his work demonstrates just how far David’s students could depart from David’s style
  • Romantic and Neoclassical elements
    • neoclassicism: figure is brightly lit pressed up against the picture plane, three dimensionality
    • no moral lesson to make this subject neoclassical
    • story all has to do with Romanticism
  • mix of exoticism and eroticism
  • working girl not Venus
  • this is complete fabrication
  • depiction of a fantasy
  • shallow space
  • black backdrop pushes her to the front of the picture plane
  • Ingres loved Raphael
  • body doesn’t make sense
    • drawn into the sensual evocation that the extension of line could give
  • commissioned by Napoleon’s sister
  • many felt angered by this piece
    • form and subject caused this
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8
Q
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  • THÉODORE GÉRICAULT, Raft of the Medusa, 1818–1819
  • Gericault embodied romanticism
  • huge piece
  • contemporary subject and political hot potato
    • depicts an event that actually happens
      • when the ship Medusa sank off the coast of Africa
      • not enough life rafts
  • jumble of writhing bodies, dramatic contrast of lights and darks, garish qualities to the dying bodies that are meant to evoke despair and suffering
  • moment he depicts is the most intensely Romantic moment
    • gruesome subject that doesn’t have a moral lesson (hope is fleating?)
  • dead and decaying bodies right up against the picture plane capture your attention right away
  • suffering & despair are the overwhelming feelings taken away from this piece
  • a painting this large should have a message of heroism but it doesn’t
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9
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  • EUGÈNE DELACROIX, Scenes from the Massacre at Chios, 1822–1824
  • art history battle was between Delacroix (artist who broke the traditions and depicted Romanticism) as opposed to Ingres (artist’s academicism and classicism)
  • Delacroix didn’t use line but rather used color first to define forms
    • created a sketchy look that was identifiable with Romantic art
  • depiction of the war for Greek independence
  • he borrows from traditions that we recognize and yet departs from them at the same time
    • there’s a ring of death in the forefront of the scene
  • scorched background
    • disconnect from the foreground
  • chooses not to create a foreground, middle ground, and background
    • brings attention back to gruesome foreground
  • intimately related to contemporary politics
  • blend of Romantic style, allegory, and realism
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10
Q
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  • GUSTAVE COURBET, Burial at Ornans, 1849
  • huge piece
  • irrelevant burial scene
  • emphasizes facts of death
  • the hole for the coffin is in the foreground
  • supposed to feel relief by the cross
  • outraged the public
    • too crass and unsuitable for a painting
  • no heroism
  • realism
    • movement in art
    • characterized French art in the 19th century
    • speaks to the political moment
  • Courbet was interested in portraying the moment he was living in
    • interested in painting what the real world looks like
      • has a sort of scientific underpinning
  • why people didn’t like it
    • broke expectations
    • scale didn’t make sense to them
    • people couldn’t read it - it was illegible to them
      • seeing is a technology that we learn
      • not everyone sees things in the same way
      • there are ways of reading information in paintings
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11
Q
A
  • ÉDOUARD MANET, Olympia, 1863
  • realist who wasn’t interested in depicting the working poor
  • prostitute being depicted
  • appalled by her plain card flatness
    • why wouldn’t he at least paint her correctly
      • he wasn’t interested in that
      • all of these conventions are layered upon artists and Manet wasn’t playing the game
  • detail in the shoes irritated people
  • she’s staring out at us
  • time period in which artist’s were engaging with the dynamism of urban life and were calling attention to a work of art and its formal elements rather than just the narrative elements
  • black woman
    • naked woman’s worker
    • offering her flowers
      • from us?
  • confronts people’s expectations of what art should be
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12
Q
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  • Edward Manet, Claude Monet in his Studio Boat, 1874
  • worked alongside the impressionists but never participated in their exhibitions (8 of them)
  • impressionism is the most widely known style of art
    • they weren’t interested in painting in normal styles
    • they were interested in challenging traditional ways of constructing art
  • impressionism wasn’t popular when it was first invented
  • impressionists decided that working together would get their work to be more accepted
    • this willingness to stand outside the confines of the Academy was meteoric
      • suggests a kind of independence that characterizes modern art
  • painting of Monet painting
    • reminding us that what these artists do isn’t simple and transparent with lessons of virtue or moments in Christian history
    • about engaging with the world
  • doesn’t look finished
    • sketch like manner reminds us of the process of painting
  • Monet is painting in a particular place
    • this is Argento- right outside Paris
    • Monet couldn’t afford to live in Paris
  • one way that impressionists completely changed art is that they began painting outdoors
    • oversimplification
  • not all impressionists painted outdoors
  • those who did often went back to the studio to touch up their works
  • impressionism was influenced by a number of other sources: Japanese prints as well as photography and the work of Mary Cassat who got impressionism popular in America
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13
Q
A
  • GEORGES SEURAT, A Sunday on La Grande Jatte, 1884–1886
  • post impressionists were looking for something more enduring
  • turned to a variety of different sources to do that
  • this has impressionist subject matter
  • turned to the sides of color theory of the time as a way of rendering his subjects with a kind of scientific precision
  • creates a fleeting moment with a meticulousness
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14
Q
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  • VINCENT VAN GOGH, Starry Night, 1889
  • in contrast to color theory Van Gogh explored the possibilities of color and the distortion of form to heighten emotions and create a subjective expression
  • symbolism
  • rejection of the window of the world
  • has a relationship to what the world looks like
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15
Q
A
  • PAUL CÉZANNE, Mont Sainte-Victoire, 1902–1904
  • post impressionism
  • traditional subjects
  • didn’t explore them in search of the transitory but looked to understand the basic forms
  • breaking down into basic structural images with lines, shapes, and colors
  • rearrange those forms to create logic
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