Thursday, May 14, 2020

Module 15

When I signed up for an online art class my first thoughts were" How do you take and art class online." I actually enjoyed myself though because people who take art classes past the 100 level are most likely art majors and know how to draw very well I believe not being the classroom with my other peers stopped me from being discouraged.Art is a way in expressing yourself even though it may not be appeasing to everyone some people may appreciate it and see it for the work of art that it actually is.  I didn't have a favorite artist but I think it may be Picasso my blog is named after him and I feel like he paved the way for most artist. I enjoyed this course before the whole pandemic happened I was on top of all my work because I always had it a set day to the work for this class.  I enjoy online classes and will be taking 1 or 2 in the future. Thank you for making this such an enjoyable class.

Sunday, May 10, 2020

Guernica by Pablo Picasso art



Guernica, 1937 by Pablo Picasso


Guernica was once done in color and then redone again in black and white to show the hardships that was happening during that time. During this time period the Spanish war was taking place Picasso was paid to depict what was happening during the time. Two of the artist's signature images, the Minotaur and the Harlequin, figure in Guernica. The Minotaur, which symbolizes irrational power, dominates the left side of the work. The harlequin, a partially hidden component just off-center to the left, cries a diamond-shaped tear. The harlequin traditionally symbolizes duality. In the iconography of Picasso's art, it is a mystical symbol with power over life and death. Perhaps the artist inserted the harlequin to counterbalance the deaths he depicted in the mural. Looking at the piece of art I wouldn't know exactly what it represented until I googled the time period that it was created and why Picasso was asked to create this piece of art. 

https://www.pablopicasso.org/guernica.jsp

Module 14

 Self-Portrait1911Egon Schiele 

ABCD

                                                     Leonora Carrington 





1. Why did you select the inspiration pieces?
I selected these inspirational pieces because all of them are abstract in a way and not just a picture.
2. Why did you select the media to create your self-portrait?
I selected this sort of media because I felt like it was easier to work with when coming right from the head.
3. What challenges did you face in creating your self-portrait and h
ow did you overcome them?
I can't draw to save my life so I tried very hard creating the image was hard.
4. How does this piece represent you?
Even though the piece isn't ''Good" I feel like it represents my corky personality
5. What elements and principles of art did you apply in this work?
The elements and principles of art that I used is color to make my art pop.
6. Did you enjoy working on this project?
I didn't enjoy working on this project because it required drawing out of me.
7. What do you think of your final artwork?
My final artwork belongs in a museum .


















Sunday, April 26, 2020

Module 11 Video Reviews

Dada and Surrealism

  • Hoch’s art was angry, it “tore into society like an angry dog”, her work had chaotic energy. In her piece “Cut With the Kitchen Knife,” no one was spared, different materials collaged together like books, newspapers, and adverts.
  • Hoch’s art judges and surveys a changing world, she uses the techniques of mockery and caricature to represent her hatred for society in scandalous ways.
  • For the Berlin Dadaists, as for the Italian futurists, it was important that the world of art should be combined with the world of technology.” This meant photomontages were introduced in Dada, in Hannah Hoch’s “Net of Stars” she used scraps of material and paper.
  • George Grosz, born in Berlin, created clown-like white painted faces, he invented characters. His work found an excellent market in Berlin and went through several periods of uncertainty with his work.
  • Before and during the First World War some artists showed rebellion. In 1926, Grosz re-emerged with his new works with colors, and “energy of bitterness”
  • Grosz found subjects from the low-life of Berlin
This topic was picked because I didn't know what Dada or Surrealism is at all
The video taught me that Dadaism is war related.I hope to one day travel and see some of the pieces.



Abstract Expressionism and Pop: Art of the 50s and 60s

  • Helen Frankenthaler’s “Mountains and Seas” put her on the map in America
  • The colors in the painting are described as “soft and pale”
  • The elements of art like color and form are largely represented in “Mountains and Seas” Frankenthaler manages to make the figures come out of the surface of the painting
  • Frankenthaler early in her career learned about the importance of the independence of an artist’s language, the language of line and shape.
  • Pollock's method was to let the paint drip directly out of the tin onto the canvas, which was laid flat while he worked. Jackson Pollock is an action painter.
  • “Mountains and Sea” is a landscape, the blue is meant to create a contemplative mood.
  • Willem de Kooning’s “Morning, the Springs” creates a light, airy, and fresh feeling as nothing in the painting is recognizable straight away. A lot of the painting is monochrome, and it is like the featheriness of a Chinese scroll.
    I know the 50s and 60s was a Funtime period people weren't afraid to express themselves. When I hear of the 60s I think rainbow

Sunday, April 12, 2020

Module 10

Olmec Mask

The Olmec Mask was made of a polished stone. These mask were from a culture that was older than the Aztecs called the Olmecs. When the Aztecs found these mask they would bury them in their offerings as a sign of appreciation to the historical pieces of work.

Feathered Headdress
      
The Feathered Headdress was made of many different feathers and also gold. Headdress were part of the costume that Aztecs wore during their many ceremonies so it holds a significance in their beliefs. 

Bundu/ Sowei Helmet Mask:
This mask was worn on the top of the head. Women wore the mask instead of men. The mask helped transition young girls into womanhood. When the mask was not being worn it was displayed in the house when worn it was seen as spiritual.

Female (pwo) Mask: 
Made by the Chokew people in the Republic of the Congo. The female mask would have been used and danced by a male dancer and carved by a man. The mask was used to honor women, particular young and fertile women who had given birth.Rather than a traditional dance, the dancer would walk in a very graceful and stately way, since the women really did dance gracefully as this The whiteness around the eyes are connected to the spiritual realm, so they are the most important feature of the mask
Mask (Buk), Torres Strait, Mabuiag Island:
Made by people who lived on an island in the Torres Strait Made of turtle shell divided into three registers there are many pieces to the mask stitched together, including turtle shell, other shell, feathers, and raffia.

2- I Have many different mask in my house but they were brought here from Africa. So it was cool to see different mask from different cultures. They also helped to teach what went into creating each of these masks.
    

Module 9

Key Concept of Each Video


  Death of Marat:
- David was part of one of the most extreme groups in favor of the French revolution,  he was even one of the people to vote for the beheading of King Louis XVI
  -The Death of Marat was a image that he created to depict the revolution.  The painting made the martyrs of the revolution look heroic. Marat is made to look beautiful and is in a pose similar to an image of Christ is order to help achieve this.
-- This painting was revolutionary in two ways, since it was painted during the French Revolution and that it depicted a contemporary event. Before this, he had painted classical scenes.

Cassatt:
 - Pictures of mothers and children were created  many times, but often times as religious figures. Cassatts painting brings a new closeness between mother and child in a painting of a mother bathing her child.
 - The mother and daughter seem very focused on each other, which also helps the viewer get drawn into this moment they share. It is  shown in unexpected angles to make it seem more like a real life moment

 Monet:
 - The atmosphere and suns light helped to contribute to the images he was painting
 - Monet sometimes only had about 7 minutes to work on a canvas before the lighting changed too much and the effect he was painting was gone, so he would have to return day after day to capture the same effect
-  he returned to a scene many times to try and capture it perfectly. 

  Early Photography: Making Daguerreotypes 
- Louis Jacques-Mande Daguerre created the technique to make Daguerreotypes and sold it to the French government, so that it could be made freely to the public without dealing with copyright restrictions - Daguerreotypes were expensive to make and took a lengthy time to prepare the camera, take a photo, then develop the photo
- Daguerreotype mania swept across France, then the world. It became most popular in America, as it was an affordable way to get your portrait done that was very true to life
 
Beyond The Great Wave:
 - Hokusai wanted to live to be 110, because he believed that by then he would be so skilled that every line he painted "would come to life" 
- The two paintings are thought to be a reflective self portrait of Hokusai towards the end of his life
  Delacroix:
-Delacroix made this painting very large to depict a contemporary event, when paintings of this size were often reserved for historical events
- The painting depicts a battle of people of all classes coming together to fight in the revolution against the monarchy
  -This painting defies many of the rules of the Art Academy at the time


2-Both the reading and the videos go into the depth of why the art were made the way that they were. But the text gives more detail overall than the videos do.

3-I enjoyed the films I liked the 'Cassat one the most because I am use to seeing such paintings when I go to church so its nice to have a sense of familiarity. 

Saturday, April 4, 2020

Module 8 pt 2

1~My hand has alot of details on it so was hard to capture every line and looking at my hand while drawing was also quite difficult.
2~I used a pencil to draw my hand because charcoal is a little too messy.
3~I can't even write my name neat with my non dominant hand so drawing with it was even worse.
4~I do believe I was successful in completing my left hand but my right hand looks a little messed up.
5~I will not use my non dominant hand in the future to create artwork.

Module 15

When I signed up for an online art class my first thoughts were" How do you take and art class online." I actually enjoyed myself ...