Art And Artists essay topics
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Artists Of Abstract Paintings
1,750 wordsAlmost all artwork in the western world has depicted a subject easily recognizable to the viewer up until the beginning of this century. Art without a recognizable subject matter, known as abstract art, is unique to this period. Abstract art hasnt been analyzed on its own in as much detail as other styles of art more easily defined. Instead it often times gets placed in a more general category called Modernism. This, perhaps, is a result of its diversity. Artists working in the abstract genre do...
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Pop Art As Andy Warhol
1,580 wordsI am going to do my personal study on Andy Warhol one of the most influential artist on the Pop Art movement. I hope to produce a realistic and correct account of his life and will be investigating his obsession with fame and money and whether he was in the art world for the money. No other artist is as much identified with Pop Art as Andy Warhol. The media called him the Prince of Pop. Warhol made his way from a Pittsburgh working class family to an American legend. Andy Warhol the American art...
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Characteristic Of The Visual Arts
595 words19th Century Art The Romantic Movement (1800-1850) Art as Emotion The goal of self-determination that Napoleon imported to Holland, Italy, Germany and Austria affected not only nations but also individuals. England's metamorphosis during the Industrial Revolution was also reflected in the outlook of the individual, and therefore in the art produced during the first half of this century. Heightened sensibility and intensified feeling became characteristic of the visual arts as well as musical art...
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Important Aspect Of Islamic Art
1,369 wordsIslamic Art Islamic art is perhaps the most accessible manifestation of a complex civilization that often seems enigmatic to outsiders. Through its brilliant use of color and its superb balance between design and form, Islamic art creates an immediate visual impact. Its strong aesthetic appeal transcends distances in time and space, as well as differences in language, culture, and creed. Islamic art not only invites a closer look but also beckons the viewer to learn more. "The term Islamic art m...
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African American Artist
439 wordsWho was Faith Ringold? Born in New York, Faith Ringold was an African American artist who started school in 2nd grade. While she was at home, her mother taught her the basic skills. She knew how to read before she went to school. In her early childhood she use to be sick every so often, she could not attend school regularly; however, her mother use to bring her drawing books and pencils. Therefore, she spent most of her time drawing. So, as she grew older and began to go to school, one day her t...
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Renaissance Art The Term
581 wordsRenaissance Art The term renaissance, describing the period of European history from the early 14th to the late 16th century, is derived from the French word "rebirth". This period is described as the revival of the classical forms originally developed by the ancient Greeks and Romans, and an intensified concern with the secular life -- interest in humanism and assertion of the importance of the individual. The renaissance period in art history corresponds to the beginning of the great western a...
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Martial Arts
549 wordsHello and welcome to the annual martial arts convention of 1974. As accomplished martial artists, we have traveled worldwide here to learn from eachother for the advancement of martial arts as an art form and lifestyle. As an actor, martial artist, and father, Mr. Bruce Lee was to speak to us today on martial arts and the impact it had had on his life. Bruce Lee could kick three power kicks in a second. He could punch as fast you blink your eye. He trained for 12 hours a day. He did push-ups on ...
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Subject Matter Of Art In The Renaissance
1,386 wordsThe Renaissance was an era of beautiful artwork and structures that flourished all over Western Europe. The artists began to be more expressive and creative in their designs. Art evolved by way of subject matter, technique, influences, and of course the artists. Some of the most noted artists, architects, and sculptors of the High Renaissance include Giotto, Donato Bramante, Leonardo Da Vinci, Michelangelo, and Raphael. It was one of the high points of humanism and the expression of creativity a...
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Their New Type Of Art Impressionism
611 wordsThe Victorian era was a beautiful time. It was full of highly sophisticated people, not including the artists. The artists of the Victorian era were more to the common people that stood out. Most of the artists back then weren't as big as they are now. They differed in so many ways trying to be individuals. In this, the works would all be outlining subjects but they differed a great deal. Artists in the Victorian era were expressing themselves with extravagant portraits of daily life in ways of ...
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Paintings Of Jean Michel Basquiat
500 wordsIn the 1980's art punk movement, the only thing the market liked better than a hot young artist was a dead hot young artist, and it got one in Jean-Michel Basquiat, whose working life of about nine years was truncated by a heroin overdose at the age of twenty-seven. His career, both actual and posthumous, appealed to a cluster of toxic vulgarities. The artist was " instinctual", someone outside "mainstream" culture and therefore not to be rated in its terms: a wild pet for the recently cultivate...
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Whitney Museum Of American Art
1,197 wordsThe Whitney Museum of American Art has often been referred to a citadel of American Art, partially due to the museums facade, a striking granite building (Figure 1), designed by Bauhaus trained architect Marcel Breuer. The museum perpetuates this reference through its biennial review of contemporary American Art, which the Whitney has become most famous for. The biennial has become since its inception a measure of the state of contemporary art in America today. Since the Museum's opening in 1931...
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Real Love For Renaissance Art
754 wordsI have a real love for Renaissance art. The reason I chose this topic is because I took a class on art a freshman, and really enjoyed it. The book I read was 'The Art of the Renaissance. ' After the fall of the Western Roman Empire in about the 5th century A.D., Europe remained poor and in poverty until the 11th century. By then, Europe began to grow and flourish. While surrounding countries of Italy, such as France, Spain, and England were powerful centralized nations, Italy was still full of c...
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Post Impressionistic Style Of Painting
604 wordsDuring the Modern Era of the late 19th century and the early 20th century, many artists were turning away from the idea of painting realistic images. Photography, having just been developed for public use a few decades earlier, made artists of the day focus less on painting as an precise copy of what is seen, as had been done for centuries. Since the Middle Ages, most artists painted exact representations of life. Starting in the late 1800's, though, many artists were starting to embrace the the...
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Female Artist St Catherine Of Bologna
1,172 wordsPrior to the fifteenth century, very few works of art were signed and virtually no information on their artists, male or female, was recorded. However, beginning in the early Renaissance, the identities of artists and their stories begin to be preserved. Any study of the art of this period will undoubtedly include the study of the lives and works of the great masters such as Raphael, Donatello, Michelangelo, and Leonardo da Vinci, but rarely is there any mention of their female contemporaries. W...
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Part Of Japanese Art
686 wordsJapanese sculptures served as fertility figures, but sexual characteristics are usually absent. Japanese sculptures create a sense of life and movement. They are usually of someone in a meditative position. Buddhism is a strong factor throughout Japanese art. The portrayals of Buddha in different forms as well as Bodhisattvas are also a part of Japanese art. Demons and devils are shown in Buddhist images not only to warn against the dangers of evil conduct, but also to give a sense of their legi...
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Changes In Philosophical Method Concerning Art
940 wordsWhat is the connection between art and reality Art is self-expression of the artist's reality. Geographical environment, the origin of social circumstances, and particular period and style, influence the artists perception of reality. Ever since men and women saw their reflections in still pools, the desire to represent nature and human nature suggested itself to early people. Early people dealt with hunting and being hunted, with life and death, with existence and extinction. Life for them was ...
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Inspiration For Great Art
442 wordsLife to Gustave von Aschenbach meant more than simply living; rather, an entirely differently definition is used. To him, life was abstaining from art; but to take up art is to deny life. Thus the artist becomes the individual, and life that which he envies. All too late to realize this, Aschenbach, in his final years, finally seeks life outside his works. Unfortunately, without the rhythm and dutiful nature his art brought him, he became lost. To re-identify himself, he chose Venice to vacation...
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Nudity In The World Of Art
809 wordsEver since artists began creating art, they have incorporated sexual themes into their work. Ancient civilizations were replete with sexual or erotic imagery and their relationship to sex and the human body is clear. It could be said that the beginning of all art is the human figure. As children we draw it in stick form. Early Greeks and Romans established the classical standards for sculpting the human figure. When you think of the nude figure, you may think primarily of the female nude, which ...
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Debate Between Alfred Stieglitz And Marcel Duchamp
626 wordsAugust 09, 2003 Mulling Over Modernism From 1915 to 1929, American Modernist art went through an intense process of redefinition. Alfred Stieglitz and the cadre of artists shown at his New York gallery were partly banking on the latest aesthetic inventions and theories spawned in Europe to direct their work. This situation changed dramatically around 1915, when a number of artists arrived in New York... in particular, French artist Marcel Duchamp. In 1915, disappointed by the mainly nature-based...
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Art And Artists Of The Time
713 wordsThe Baroque Style Baroque Style The Baroque style was a style in which the art and artists of the time focused upon details, and intricate designs. During this time the portraits began to portray modern life, and artists turned their backs on classical tradition. Buildings were more elaborate and ornately decorated. These works of art created history and altered the progress of Western Civilization. The progress has been an uneven one. Regression and progress often alternated, and shifts in dire...