Vocab
Explain that artwork
Artist lore
Random
Vocab
100

Define: “readymade"

An everyday manufactured item selected and presented as a work of art (Duchamp, Fountian)

100

Describe the important concepts surrounding  Unknown artist, Kogan/Mizushashi ceramic jar.

- Is a ceremonial tea/water jar

- Imperfections + humility of the objects are what make it beautiful

- Wabi sabi

- Criss crosses = reeds you’d see along the bank of a river


100

Describe the events in Van Gogh’s life that led to the creation of Starry Night

- Struggling artist, famously only sold 1 painting in his lifetime

- Struggled with his mental health, was institutionalized

- Starry Night = paintied from his balcony (combination of observation + imagination)

100

Briefly explain the relationship between the museum and Native American Art

- Museums are not neutral → political space in which the museum arises contributed to the decimation of Native American cultures

- Issues: violence, colonialism, who’s voices are being represented?

- Gets complicated with religious objects, some aren’t intended to be seen by non-members

100

Define: “Drip painting” // “all over painting"

Drip painting: A technique popularized by Jackson Pollock. Put the canvas on the floor + splattered the paint. Radical rethinking of artmaking

All over painting: Every section of the canvas has more or less the same value

200

Define: “Fauvism"

An early 20th-century avant-garde art movement led by Henri Matisse and André Derain. It is defined by the use of intense, non-naturalistic color, bold brushwork, and simplified forms



200

Explain what we’re seeing in Gauguin, Spirit of the Dead Watching

- Reclining woman is one of his child brides

- She has just woken up from a nightmare

- An ancestor spirit is watching over her in the background

- Primitivisim, she is very sexualized:(

200

Describe Gaugain’s biography and how it informed his art

  • Decides France is too modern + moves to Tahiti (a French colony)

  • Leaves his wives and 5 kids behind in Paris

  • He takes multiple child brides 

  • Makes a ton of paintings of them

  • Gives us a lot of problematic art
200

Describe Japanese architecture. How is the space organized, what elements are important?

- More rectilinear, more immersed with nature, more malleable (rooms can have multiple functions)

- Decoration is more about balance/harmony than aesthetics

- Often surrounded by water or other forms of nature

200

Explain 3 different jobs/departments in the museum and what their roles are

NOT exhaustive

- Curator: researches art, plans exhibitions

- Director: business person, handles moslty non-art related affairs

- Education: creats community programming, tours, etc.

- Registrar: must know where all artworks are at any given moment

- PR/Marketing

- Conservators: fix damaged art, conserve it for the future

-  Legal counsel

- Donors

- Advisory board: wealthy people in the community who help make decisions

300

Define: “Primitivism"

Romanticizes the lifestyle, art, and morality of "primitive" or pre-industrial societies - RACIST!

300

Describe Rothko's, No. 3/No. 13. What is significant about this painting + what kind of painting is it?

- Color field painting

- Multi-layered, playing with colors, the more you look the more complex they are

- Meant to play games with your perception, an optical illusion (colors will sift/vibrate if you look at it the right way)

300

Describe Picasso’s biography and how it informed his art

- Spanish artist that trained in France

- Inspired to push the envelope by Gertrude Stein

- “blue period” in the early 1900s = melonchonic, despair, inspired by the death of a friend

- inspired by African art appropriated African art to do something different/shocking

300

What specific event was the turning point in encouraging American artists to push the envelope? 

The Armory Show -- watershed event that introduced avant-garde European art to the American public. Featured over 1,200 works by American and European artists

300

Define: "Post Impressionism” and give an example of 1 post-impressionist artist.

Artistic style for expressing emotions rather than optical impressions/light effects.

Artists: Van Gogh, Cezanne, Gaugain


400

Define: “Wabi sabi"

Imperfections of the object are what make it beautiful (Japanese tea/water jar

400

Describe the function of the Nkisi n’kondi (nail figure),

- Talismanic figure: can be used to resolve verbal disputes or lawsuits

- Guardian if any form of evil has been committed

- Spiritual figure, activated by hammering nails/metal fragments into the figure 

- A peg may refer to a matter being ‘settled’ whereas a nail, deeply inserted, may represent a more serious offense such as murder

400

Describe Georgia O’Keefe’s biography and how it informed her art

- Moved to New York and made art there

- Decided there were too many people, went to rural Texas

- Then moved to New Mexico

- Went into the desert and collected bones, antlers, etc. and made art from them. Believed these objects possessed an innate energy

400

Name 3 of the 19th/20th century “isms" in order (earlier example: Neoclassicisim, Romanticisim, Realism, Impressionsim)

Impressionism; Post-Impressionsim; Cubisim; Fauvism; Futurism; Dada(ism); Surrealism; Abstract Expressionsim; 

400

Define: “Ukiyo-e"

"pictures of the floating world," A traditional Japanese art genre. It primarily consists of vibrant woodblock prints. Depictings urban districts,  actors, and sweeping natural landscapes.

500

Explain the difference between Synthetic Cubisim and Analytic Cubsim

Synthetic Cubisim: Using natural elements to make something new; Connections to collage (Picasso, Still Life with Chair)

Analytic Cubsim: Breaking objects into a series of parts, argue this actually this is a more “whole” way of understanding objects. (Baraque, Cezanne, Picasso)


500

Explain what we’re seeing in Frankenthaler's, The Bay. How did she make this painting?

- Abstract expressionist, made by pouring paint from the can while she was on a ladder. She picked up the canvas and tilted it

- Central blob = reminiscent of a Bay

- She believed that art is subjective; each viewer should take from it what they want

500

Who is Jaune Quick-to-See Smith? How does her biography influence her art?

- Native American artist, Modern painter

- First Native American artist to have a solo retrospective show

- Her art comments on: trade, colonial relations, the commodification of Native American society and culture (Kansas City Chiefs, Washington Redskins)

500

Describe the controversy surrounding the Benin Bronzes and the 3 vocabulary words associated with them.

- They are objects that historical and spiritual records for the royal court of the Oba (modern Nigeria)

- Were violently looted by British colonial troops

- Still remain in the British Museum despire requests for them back

  • Provenance: history of ownership of a work of art, intention is to ensure artwork was acquired legal

  • Repatriation: Giving the art back

  • Restitution: Paying the country of origin for the market value of the artworks

500

Define: “Kintsugi"

A Japanese practice, the appreciation of broken pottery. Reconstructing objects + keeping the breaks visible with gold lacquer. The break = part of the history of the object

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