Terms
Influence/Style
Historical Context
Artworks
Artworks/Style
100

What is collage? 

the practice of composing an artwork by gluing a wide range of materials – including pieces of paper, fabric, newspaper clippings, and sometimes readymade objects to a surface. Often done by hobbyists in the 1800s but incorporated into avant-garde artmaking practices first with the Cubists.

100

Why did Romare Bearden and Faith Ringgold reference Picasso in their works? 

to critique Picasso's inspiration/appropriation of African masks and reclaim African art for Black American artists as a point of pride and celebration of Black artistic creativity.

100

What major historical event was Dada a reaction to?

World War I

100

List three traits of Ukiyo-e prints

bright colors, decorative detailing, exaggerated foreshortening, asymmetry of design, areas of flat unshaded color, imaginative cropping

100

What was the goal of the Wall of Respect in Chicago? 

Create community solidarity and celebrate Black excellence. Write and create narrative of Black American history.

200

What is Japonisme? 

the fashion for Japanese art in the West and the Japanese influence on Western art and design following the opening of formerly isolated Japan to world trade

200

Which famous artist served as an inspiration for Jasper Johns in his work Flag?

Marcel Duchamp

200

What major domestic/foreign policy of the Tokagawa Period (Edo) Japan in part led to the unique traits of Ukiyo-e prints?

Japan's relative isolation in trade/travel. Only open trade with China/Korea, the Dutch

200

Why does Andy Warhol choose his subject matter of soup in his 1962 painting of Campbell's soup cans? 

social equalizer, elevating mundane items central to contemporary American life. Everything made in a factory, this is the defining feature of American life, so art should be like and about factory.

200

Why did Surrealists practice Exquisite Corps? 

Activate play and move beyond the ideas generated in conscious thought. Access the subconscious

300

What do Coolaid colors refer to in art of the 1970s?

The color tone preferred by AfriCOBRA artist Wadsworth Jarrel. Jarrel purposely employed bright bold colors popular in the 1970s and popularized by the popular drink Kool-aid. 

300

What cultural influences are the artists drawing from who created The Qianlong Emperor as Manjushri, The Bodhisattva of Wisdom from the Qing Dynasty?  List the two biggest influences that make this work unique for Chinese Imperial portraiture

Tibetian/Mongolian Thangkas, European chiaroscuro

300

What famous historical event inspired the formation of Spiral?

The March on Washington

300

List two ways that Monet's Impression sunrise breaks against academic standards prevalent in the 1870s

loose brushstrokes, unfinished look, subject matter, pure color straight from tube

300

Why can we consider Jasper Johns's Flag a mirror?

Presents flag neutrally to viewer. How they respond says more about them than the artist's own beliefs. Johns hopes to show the viewer the precarious nature of signs/symbols and the failure of art/anything to be universal

400

What is the Literati Bias in Qing Dynasty Art? 

The (untrue) belief that the literati artist was a more true artist than the artist working for the court, more intellectual engagement with history and his subject

400

List two traits Modernist artists admired in Japanese prints? NOT JUST THAT THEY LIKED JAPANESE THINGS

Cropping, flat zones of color, subject matter (everyday life), foreshortening
400

Why did Abstract Expressionists in New York feel naturalistic painting was no longer a valid artistic form in the 1950s?

The general state of the world- cold war, Korean war, WWII, the holocaust, Nuremberg trials, etc. 

400

What are the two leading interpretations of Jean (Hans) Arp's Collage Arranged According to the Laws of Chance?

1. He meant for gravity to be the artist, but didnt like the look

2. He wanted the viewer to develop critical thinking skills-  he tells them one thing but the visuals of the artwork suggest the statements by the artist are a lie, encouraging the viewer to think more critically about wartime propaganda and nationalism.

400

What is the goal of analytic Cubism? What is at stake for the artists?

Truth- linear perspective a lie. They want to express the total visual understanding of an object through simultaneity. They fracture the objects into smaller objects to overcome the unified singularity of an object and transform it into an object of vision.

500

What does the term action painting refer to? 

In action painting, the physical, energetic act of creating is considered as important as the finished work. Rosenberg argued that the paintings were a trace of a performance with the canvas as an arena to act, rather than a visual surface to look at.

500

How does Meret Oppenheim's Object employ the Freudian theory of the Uncanny?

Bringing two familiar objects together and making them strange/potentially scary

500

What famous European castle inspire the Qianlong Emperor in the formation of his European gardens for the Summer palance? 

Versailles

500

What was the political goal of Shiraga's Challenging Mud? 

help create psychic individualism in the Japanese viewer following the mandate of Japanese Marxists who believed a lack of individualism and understanding of one's own political agency had led to totalitarianism during WWII.

500

How did Marcel Duchamp's Fountain change debates about art in European modernism?

redefined art as anything an artist designates as art. Gives more and more leeway to the artist to define art, and incorporates readymade industrial items into artmaking practices. First conceptual artwork, in which the work is a generator of ideas/conversation rather than an art about aesthetics and beauty.
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