Western ART History
Western ART History
Western ART History
ART
HISTORY
HISTORY OF
WESTERN
Western philosophy was born during the Archaic age
of Greece (ca. 800-500 BC), when Greek thinkers
broke with purely mythological explanations of the
world by attempting to explain nature logically.
Apparently the first to do so was Thales (the "father of
Western philosophy"), who initiated a search for the
fundamental substance of all matter (see History of
Science). Thus did Western philosophy begin with the
field of science (aka "natural philosophy").
HISTORY OF
WESTERN
The history of western art begins with Italian
Renaissance, which is regarded as a golden
age of art, music and literature. The period has
thus inspired many art works for centuries
with iconic works by legendary artists like
Leonardo da Vinci, Raphael and Michelangelo
serving as muses. Beginning from the 14th
century.
HISTORY OF
WESTERN
Italian Renaissance Italian Renaissance was a
cultural movement roughly spanning the 14th
century through the mid-17th century. The
movement took painting to a higher level through
the use of perspective, the study of human
anatomy and proportion, and through the
development of an unprecedented refinement in
drawing and painting techniques.
WESTERN ART MOVEMENTS
Pre-historic Art (40,000- 4,000 B.C) rock carvings,
engravings, pictorial imagery, sculptures, and stone
arrangements.
Rococo Art (1699-1780) offered a softer style of
decorative art compared baroque's exuberance; easily
translated to silver, porcelain, and french furniture.
WESTERN ART
MOVEMENTS
Baroque (1600-1750) Ornate, over the top visual arts
and architecture; painters used an intense contrast
between light and dark and had energetic composition
matched bu rich color palettes.
Medieval Art (500-1400) centered around the church;
biblical subjects and scenes from classic mythology;
illuminated manuscript and gothic architecture.
WESTERN ART
MOVEMENTS
Neoclassicism (1750-1850) Focused on idealism
Romanticism (1780-1850) emphasized the
individual and imagination; also focused on
passion, emotion, and sensation over intellect and
reason.
WESTERN ART
MOVEMENTS
Renaissance Art (1400-1600) focused nature and
individualism; artists used linear perspective and
created depth through intense lighting and shading.
Mannerism (1527-1580) style and technique
outweighed the meaning of the subject matter; figures
had graceful.
IMPORTANT CHARACTERISTICS
OF WESTERN ART
Western Art is the portrayal, in two or three
dimensions, of the history, people, landscape and
wildlife of the area confined to the western
regions of North America, in a highly realistic or
realistic impressionist style and is inextricably
linked to the culture of the American West.
IMPORTANT CHARACTERISTICS
OF WESTERN ART
One of the greatest characteristics of ‘Western Art’
is that it polices its own quality. In other words, it
has managed to create and maintain the highest,
most exacting standards, equal to any found
anywhere or at any time in history. It also speaks
of the best in the spirit of the American people
and is a wonderful and truly American
phenomenon.
HISTORY BACKGROUND
Art history is the academic study of objects of art
in their historical development and stylistic
contexts (i.e., genre , design, form , and style ).
Art conveys political, religious, and philosophical
themes and judgments that arise as much from the
artist's environment as they do from his or her
creative impulse.
FACTORS
Factors of Socio-political concerns that led to
making arts primary function of expression: