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the art of being artless ART111

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Page 1: Chapter 2

the art of being artless

ART111

Page 2: Chapter 2

Alfred Stieglitz

Page 3: Chapter 2

Alfred Stieglitz, Georgia O’Keeffe, 1927

Page 4: Chapter 2

Alfred Stieglitz, The Steerage, 1907

Page 5: Chapter 2

Walker Evans, Self-Portrait, 1927

Page 6: Chapter 2

Walker Evans, 42nd Street, 1929

Page 7: Chapter 2

Walker Evans, Mother and Children in Doorway, Havana, 1933

Page 8: Chapter 2

Walker Evans, Subway Portrait, 1938

Page 9: Chapter 2

Dorothea Lange, circa 1920s

Page 10: Chapter 2

Dorothea Lange, Dust Bowl Migrant Mother, Nipomo, CA, 1936

Page 11: Chapter 2

Dorothea Lange, Child Living in Oklahoma City Shacktown 1936

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Dorothea Lange, Scene along Skid Row Howard Street, 1937

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Page 14: Chapter 2

Bob Ross

Page 15: Chapter 2

Vintage Paint-by-Number Painting

Page 16: Chapter 2

Andy Warhol, Do It Yourself, 1962

Page 17: Chapter 2

100-year old Grandma Moses painting at her farm, 1960

Page 18: Chapter 2

Grandma Moses, 1956

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Grandma Moses

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Lee Krasner, Birth, 1956

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Lee Krasner in her studio

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Franz Klein in his studio

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Franz Klein, New York, 1953

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Willem De Kooning in his studio, 1950s

Page 25: Chapter 2

Willem De Kooning, Woman and Bicycle, 1952-3

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Jackson Pollock in his studio

Page 27: Chapter 2

Winston Churchill plein air painting

Page 28: Chapter 2

Winston Churchill, The Blue Room, 1948

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USA, c. 1930, from Thomas Walther Collection

Page 31: Chapter 2

Vintage Double Exposure Snapshot

Page 32: Chapter 2

Vintage Snapshot

Page 33: Chapter 2

“But a deeper issue may be our new equation of art with perfection, an equation hastened by the spread of technology. We now expect flawless recordings by musicians, perfect photographs by artists. We have easy access to all this, which means that, as in so many other aspects of life, we prefer to cede these endeavors to professionals, figuring we can't do them as well, as if something like art is worth doing only if you do it like a professional. Art isn't about perfection. Before cameras, travelers sketched so that they could record what they saw on trips, as souvenirs, in the same way that bourgeois families, in the days before recordings, used to listen to music by making it themselves at home on the piano or singing in the parlor. There was a more intimate connection between the amateur musician or artist and the professional, because amateurs had firsthand experience. What's lost today is not just the accidental masterpiece but also that sense of art not as a remote commodity but as something we all make. “

Interview with Michael Kimmelman

Page 34: Chapter 2

Read:• Chapter 2, “The Art of Being Artless”

Respond on Verso:• Reflect on the reading.

Respond on Flipgrid:• Find a photograph that is deeply meaningful to

you. Share the photo & describe its importance. Bring the photo to class next week to share.

Respond on Instagram: #art111happyaccidents• Take 10 photographs this week of moments

that you wanted to remember…for their beauty, importance, etc.

• DO NOT edit them! Be content with “happy accidents”