ARTA111 - Week 13 Lecture
ARTA111 - Week 13 Lecture
ARTA111 - Week 13 Lecture
ONLINE LECTURE
mod·ern
/ˈmädərn/
relating to the present or
recent times as opposed to the
remote past.
art
/ärt/
the expression or application
of human creative skill and
imagination, typically in a
visual form.
Modern art comprises creative work created during the era
roughly from the 1860s to the 1970s, and specifies the forms
and concepts of art established during that time period. The
term is most usually associated with art in which traditional
norms are abandoned in favor of experimentation.
Modern painters experimented with new ways of seeing as well
as new ideas about material nature and the roles of art. Many
works of contemporary art tend to move away from narrative,
which was characteristic of past art forms, and toward
abstraction. More recent creative work is referred to it as
contemporary art or postmodern art.
Wheatfields With Crows, 1890 by Vincent Van Gogh
Galatea de las esferas, 1952 by Salvador Dali
con·tem·po·rar·y
/kənˈtempəˌrerē/
- living or occurring at the same time.
- belonging to or occurring in the
present.
Art
/ärt/
the expression or application of human
creative skill and imagination,
typically in a visual form.
"Pure Pop (Mona Lisa)" by Orlando Quevedo
Contemporary art is artwork made by living artists now. As a result, it
depicts the diverse, global, and ever-changing issues that shape our
world.
Curiosity, an open mind, and a desire to discuss and debate are the best
tools for approaching a piece of modern art.
Impressionism was the foundation of
contemporary art. It all began in Paris as
a reaction to a rather formal and rigorous
style of painting practiced in studios
and dictated by conventional
organizations such as the Academie des
Beaux-Arts.
Unlike many members of other art
movements, Post-Impressionists primarily
composed their works independently of
others, allowing them to experiment in a
variety of directions, ranging from
intensified Impressionism, as typified by
van Gogh, to pointillism, as seen in
Seurat's most famous work Sunday
Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte
(1884–86).
Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte, 1884–86 by Georges Seurat
• To begin, Modern and Contemporary Art are two
distinct periods of art.
Original Version
Contemporary Version Original Version
• Op art, also called optical art, branch of mid-20th-century
geometric abstract art that deals with optical illusion.
Contemporary Version
Original Version
Contemporary Version
• Art from any medium that contains movement perceivable by the viewer
or that depends on motion for its effect.
Original Version
Contemporary Version
Original Version
• Minimal art, also called ABC art, is the culmination of
reductionist tendencies in modern art.
➢ Repetition of shapes
➢ Geometric forms
➢ Not expressive
Contemporary Version
Original Version
Contemporary Version
Original Version
• Pop art is an art movement that emerged in the 1950s and flourished in
the 1960s in America and Britain. It is an art that is based on popular
culture and mass media. Characterized by bold, simple, everyday imagery,
and vibrant block colors.
• The Pop Art movement aimed to blur the boundaries between "high" art and
"low" culture. By creating paintings or sculptures of mass culture
objects and media stars.
• Postmodernism refers to a reaction against modernism. It is less a
cohesive movement than an approach and attitude toward art, culture,
and society.
• The Neo-Pop artists used the iconography of Pop Art to their own ends,
creating commentary that mimics Pop Art, but also incorporating
contemporary “kitsch” imagery and references to political and social
issues that did not exist in the 60’s.
• The name Photorealism (also known as Hyperrealism or Superrealism) was
coined in reference to those artists whose work depended heavily on
photographs, which they often projected onto canvas allowing images to
be replicated with precision and accuracy.
• The movement came about within the same period and context as
Conceptual Art, Pop Art, and Minimalism and expressed a strong interest
in realism in art, over that of idealism and abstraction.
PHOTOREALISM
➢ Most photorealist painters work
directly from photographs or
digital computer images -
either by using traditional grid
techniques, or by projecting
colour slide imagery onto the
canvas.
➢ The aim is to recreate the
same sharpness of detail
throughout the painting.
➢ John Cyril Dojaylo
➢ Roxas, Capiz
➢ Romuel Dojaylo
➢ Roxas, Capiz
• Conceptual art is a movement that prizes ideas over the formal or
visual components of art works.
INSTALLATION
ART