Form and Meaning Flashcards
Study cards covering Hegel, Impressionism, Schopenhauer, Nietzche, German Expressionism, and Dada
What philosopher thought that reality was the product of a Universal Spirit (or ‘Geist’)?
Hegel
What was Hegel’s concept of ‘Geist’?
Hegel felt that ‘Geist’ is a Universal Spirit and that reality is a product of the ‘Geist’
What philosopher felt that there was an ideal blueprint for the world (when the Universal Spirit comes to full self-awareness).
Hegel
Hegel said that historical changes are the way that the ‘Geist’ works towards ___________.
self-awareness / self-knowledge
What are the three stages of Hegel’s dialectic?
Thesis, Antithesis, Synthesis
What philosopher used the ideas of Thesis, Antithesis, and synthesis to explain historical change?
Hegel
What did Hegel feel about one person and their power to individually change history?
Hegel believed that historical change is the product of historical forces and that the individual has no real power to direct it. The individual is swept along in historical changes.
Hegel had a name for the unique spirit of a time. For example, the spirit of the middle ages was different than the spirit of the Renaissance. What was his name for this unique spirit of the times?
Zeitgeist
What is ‘Zeitgeist’ and what philosopher came up with the idea?
‘Zeitgeist’ was Hegel’s word for the unique spirit of the times.
What were some of Hegel’s ideas about art and its relation to human mind and progress?
Hegel felt that Art was how the human mind made a portrait of itself. It expressed in visual format, how people thought about the world and their beliefs. Art shows how the mind tries to master the material world. Movements in artistic style are evidence of progress as the mind tries to come to self-knowledge.
Why did Hegel say it was important to study events of the past (history)?
Since everything is an outcome of what came before, we can only understand present reality if we understand how it came to be. Hegel introduced the idea that the history of the world has a rational structure. To understand this structure, we must understand the dialectic of history.
Photography was invented in 1839. What are some ways that this technology challenged traditional notions of art?
- ) Painting for the sole purpose of imitating visual reality is not as necessary.
- ) The ‘genius’ of the artist used to rely on their skill in imitating visual reality. Now anyone who could press a button could do it.
- ) There can be several copies of a photograph, where there is only one painted original.
- ) The camera actually saw some things (like how a horse runs) better than the artist.
How did Japanese Prints influence European art in the 1850’s?
European artists were inspired by how artists like Hokusai referenced the real world without simply imitating it. They were excited by the Japanese artists’ use of pure design elements, angled views, flat pattern design, and bold cropping.
How did capitalism and modernism influence modern art ideas?
In capitalism, riches went to the keen innovator of new products and production techniques. Modernism is characterized by rapid changes and advancements. The ideas of change and innovation are ones that artists will embrace and will encourage many artists to abandon the staid Official Academy training which told artists to all do the same thing – copy the masters.
What artist is known as THE Impressionist?
Claude Monet
What artistic style did Claude Monet ‘invent’?
Impressionism
Multiple-choice: Impressionsm focuses on: A) historical subjects of battles and wars B) capturing the effects of changing light with dabs of painted color C) using line and dramatic shadows to show an object’s seeming permance in the world
B
Schopenhauer agreed with Kant about the nature of time, space, and causal connections. What did they both believe about these three phenomena?
Schopenhauer and Kant both felt that time, space, and causal connections were human constructions and we cannot know that they actually exist. They are all just ways in which we make sense of data received by our apparatus.
Did Schopenhauer believe that Human A is separate from Human B or that Human A, Human B, and everything that exists are all part of one entity?
Schopenhauer believed that all objects (including humans) are part of one entity. We see objects as being separate only because humans find it convenient to believe in things like space and time.
What philosopher believed that all objects (including humans) are part of one entity; we see objects as being separate only because humans find it convenient to believe in things like space and time.
Schopenhauer