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Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

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Page 1: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Getting to Know the World’s Great ArtistsTulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Page 2: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Getting to Know the World’s Great ArtistsOklahoma Fine Arts Standard Two: Visual Art History and Culture

Page 3: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Getting to Know the World’s Great ArtistsOklahoma Fine Arts Standard Two: Visual Art History and Culture

Describe and place a variety of significant art objects by artist, style and historical and cultural context.

Identify historical themes and cultural purposes of works of art and artifacts.

Demonstrate a basic knowledge of several fields of art such as painting, sculpture, drawing, computer graphics, printmaking, architecture, and fiber arts.

Identify how visual art is used in today’s world including the popular media of advertising, television, and film.

The student will recognize the development of Visual Art from an historical and cultural perspective.

Page 4: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Getting to Know the World’s Great ArtistsOklahoma Fine Arts Standard Two: Visual Art History and Culture

You will look at the work of three artists from a long time ago. They painted in the 19th and 20th Centuries. Their names are Vincent Van Gogh, Pablo Picasso, and Edward Hopper.

Page 5: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Introducing the Art Work of Vincent Van Gogh

Self Portrait. 1889. Oil on Canvas.

Page 6: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Vincent was an artist for whom things never went right. He never smiled in his self portraits. Yet, the paintings he made are loved the world over.

Page 7: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Van Gogh was born in Holland in 1853, but he didn’t become a painter until he had grown up. He had many other jobs first. He was even a minister.

Page 8: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

The Wheat Field. 1880. Oil on Canvas.

Page 9: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

He loved his home country of Holland and made many beautiful paintings of the landscape, the windmills, and the common people at

work. Do you see the smoke from the factory in the background?

Page 10: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Vincent always tried his best at whatever he did. For a while he worked in an art gallery and then a bookstore. Finally, he studied to become a minister. None of these professions made him as happy as when he was painting.

Page 11: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

The Potato Eaters. 1885. Oil on Canvas.

Page 12: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Van Gogh’s first paintings were dark in color and showed the life style of the poor people he was helping as a minister. In

this painting, the family was so poor they had only a few potatoes to eat for dinner.

Page 13: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

The dark colors of Van Gogh’s early paintings gave people the message that the lives of the poor people were hard. He kept using the dark colors until he discovered Japanese artwork.

He loved the bright colors of the Japanese artists.

Page 14: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Bedroom at Arles.1888. Oil on Canvas.

Page 15: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

In 1886 Vincent moved to Paris, France. It was the center of the art world then. He met many painters there. His best friend was another artist, Paul Gauguin.

Page 16: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

His friend convinced him to move to the South of France, a city called Arles. Here is a picture he painted for his landlord of his own room. He had no money to pay the rent, so the landlord kept the painting.

Page 17: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

The Starry Night. 1889. Oil on Canvas.

Page 18: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

The Starry Night is probably the most beloved of all of Van Gogh’s works. It has been made into cards and posters all over the world. The

singer Don McClain even made a song about it.

Page 19: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Why do we love this artwork so much? Everyone has different reasons. Some like the swirling colors; some like the way the stars glow; some like

the way the little town looks so cozy and safe.

Page 20: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Van Gogh belonged to a group of artists called the “Post Impressionists.” The characteristics of their art movements included:

•Studying the way changing light would change colors•Working out of doors quickly so as to capture the changing light•Painting scenes of the common man•Using small dabs of color placed side by side and allowing the human eye to blend them•Using intense colors to draw out emotion

Page 21: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Does this painting look like it is moving? How did Van Gogh make this landscape look like the wind was blowing?

Page 22: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Sunflowers. 1888. Oil on Canvas.

Page 23: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Van Gogh usually put his paint on very thick. Sometimes he painted so fast he didn’t even mix his colors. He used paint right out of the tube (which was a new invention at that time)—in the past artists had to blend paint from power pigment and oil.

Van Gogh used so much paint he was always running out. He had to give up buying other things so he could afford to buy his paint.

Page 24: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Hardly anyone was interested in Van Gogh’s work while he was alive. He sold only a few drawings and maybe one or two paintings.

Today his work sells for millions of dollars to collectors around the world.

The colors are so intense in this painting that you can almost smell the flowers or feel the bright sun.

Page 25: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Maybe more than any other artist, Van Gogh’s feelings came out in his paintings. That’s why he is one of the world’s greatest artists.

Page 26: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

You may find Van Gogh’s art work in many museums in the United States. You can really see the brush strokes in person. This is a picture of a museum in Holland called the Van Gogh Museum. The only art work on display is Van Gogh’s!

Page 27: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Here is a finger puppet that is sold on the internet….can you guess who this is?

Page 28: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Introducing the Art Work of Pablo Picasso

Self Portrait. 1896. Charcoal.

Page 29: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Pablo Picasso was born in Malaga, Spain in 1881. He was just a teenager when he made this self portrait In charcoal. He would go on to become

one of the most famous artists of our time.

Page 30: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Picasso’s father was an art teacher at the local art institute. Picasso was a lively child. He learned to walk so that he could reach his favorite cookies.

He learned to draw at an early age with help from his father.

Page 31: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

When Picasso became a teenager, he went off to art school in the Spanish town of Barcelona. He was one of the top students there.

Page 32: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Self Portrait. 1901. Oil on Canvas.

Page 33: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Picasso graduated from Art School in Barcelona and headed for Paris. For him the city was alive with energy. He almost instantly found the art

community and made many friends.

Page 34: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

While in Paris he lived in poverty, but produced many art works. He had many young friends who were poets and artists and they inspired and

supported one another.

Page 35: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

The Old Guitar Player. 1902. Oil on Canvas.

Page 36: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

For three years Picasso painted works that were mostly in shades of blue. His subject matter was the miserable lives of people shunned by society: the poor, the sick, and beggars.

Most of these paintings are of people who look sad.

Page 37: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

The Family of Saltimbanques. 1905. Oil on Canvas.

Page 38: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

For two years Picasso painted his Rose Period paintings. These paintings are mostly done in tones of pink with delicate lines. The mood is less

serious than the Blue Period paintings.

Page 39: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

These people are circus performers. They are chosen by Pablo Picasso to symbolize his feelings about the artist’s condition. In French,

“saltimbanques” are buffoons.

Page 40: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

The Three Musicians. 1921. Oil on Canvas.

Page 41: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

This is a painting from Pablo’s Cubism period. This period is considered to be the most revolutionary development in the 20th Century. It is a completely new

way of representing reality

Page 42: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

What are the characteristics of Cubism?

•The painting appears flat without any depth that perspective might give.

•The viewer is able to see several sides of an object all at one time.

•The painted objects often appear fragmented or geometric.

•Geometric patterns are highlighted.

•Often artists used words collaged (pasted) from the newspaper.

Page 43: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

In this painting there are three figures, masked and costumed. The three musicians are seated next to each other, behind a table. From left to right they are a pierrot (holding a wind instrument), a harlequin (holding a guitar), and a

monk (holding a music score). There is a dog under the table.

Page 44: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Guernica. 1937. Oil on Canvas.

Page 45: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

On April 26, 1937, during the Spanish Civil War, an aerial attack by Nazi bombers acting as allies of the Spanish fascists completely destroyed the Basque town of Guernica in North East Spain. The horror of the event was described by Picasso in his painting entitled “Guernica.”

The work reveals Picasso’s deeply held belief in freedom for all, which led him to take the part of the oppressed and victims of violence.

Page 46: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

The painting does not contain any specific details that tie it to the actual bombing of Guernica. It is a symbol of the devastation caused by all war.

It has a universal message: all war is madness.

Page 47: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Here is an advertisement for a Citroin (a French made car). This model is called Picasso. What message is the car maker giving by

naming it after Picasso?

Page 48: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Picasso was a revolutionary artist who changed many traditions in painting. He lived to be a very old man and produced hundreds of painting during his life time.

Most cities have museums that own a Picasso. Philbrook Museum had an exhibit a few years ago that displayed some of his work.

Page 49: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Introducing the Art Work of Edward Hopper

Nighthawks. 1942. Oil on Canvas.

Page 50: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Edward Hopper was born in Nyack, New York, in 1882. He was one of America’s greatest artists and was known

as an American Realist painter.

Page 51: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Even if you’ve never seen Edward Hopper’s paintings before, many of them might look familiar to you. That’s

because he painted pictures of real, everyday things.

Page 52: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

When you look at this painting you might wonder what the people are doing out so late at night. Although the restaurant is bright and warm, nobody

looks very friendly or happy. The dark shadows and shapes of the buildings give you the feeling that something mysterious could happen at any

moment.

Page 53: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Self Portrait. 1925-1930. Oil on Canvas.

Page 54: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Edward Hopper always liked to draw. When he was very young, he got a blackboard as a gift.

His mother encouraged Hopper and his sister to draw. It was one of their favorite things to do.

He was a tall boy. By the time he was 12 years old he was 6 feet tall. He felt funny about being so tall and spent a lot of time alone.

While he was alone he practiced painting.

Page 55: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

His parents knew how much he wanted to be an artist. After he graduated from high school, they sent him to New York City to study art.

One of his teachers at the Art School brought him all over town to look at life as it really was. This teacher believed that there is beauty in everything, even buildings in the city.

Most other artists at this time would not paint city scenes.

Page 56: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

When he was growing up he lived right next to the Hudson river. This river holds the Statue of Liberty. He saw all kinds of boats coming and going.

Page 57: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

He even built his own small sailboat when he was 14 years old. He always loved water and boats, and he painted many pictures of them and the houses that line the coast.

Page 58: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Cape Cod Morning. Oil on Canvas.

Page 59: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Hopper fell in love with a woman he met in art school. Her name was Jo Nivison. She was an artist too. He used her as a model in practically

every painting he did with a woman.

Page 60: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Sometimes he changed the color of her hair or put her in different costumes. Here she is looking out the window of a house at the

seashore in a town called Cape Cod.

Page 61: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Here she is standing on a porch in the city.

Page 62: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

House by the Railroad. 1925. Oil on Canvas.

Page 63: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Hopper was what is known as an American Realist painter. His works look like real buildings or people. Because of the dramatic use of light and shadow, they all have a mysterious look about them.

Page 64: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Although he traveled three times to Europe to study art, he kept returning to America and painting common scenes from every day life in the States.

Page 65: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Gas. 1940. Oil on Canvas.

Page 66: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

The Hoppers never had children. Instead, they loved to travel around the country, stopping to paint scenes of

America that caught their eyes.

Page 67: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Hopper used strong shapes, shadows, and lighting to make everyday things interesting. Sometimes it is fun to guess

what the people in Hopper’s paintings are thinking.

Page 68: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Early Sunday Morning. 1930. Oil on Canvas.

Page 69: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Even without people in them, Edward Hopper’s paintings of houses and buildings make you wonder what could be going on inside of them.

Page 70: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

His use of sunlight shining on a building or the way a lamp lights the inside of the room makes the whole scene mysterious. Some people say

his paintings have a lonely feeling about them. What do you think?

Page 71: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Hopper the Art Frog was found on-line

Page 72: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

The Edward Hopper paintings in this slide show are in the museums listed below. If you are on vacation maybe you can visit them:

Addison Gallery –Andover Mass.The Chicago Art InstituteButler Institute-Youngstown OhioCarnegie Museum-PittsburghDallas Museum of ArtHuntington Library-San Marino CaliforniaMetropolitan Museum-New YorkMuseum of Modern Art-New YorkPhiladelphia Museum of ArtWhitney Museum of Art-New York

Page 73: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

Let’s think about Art

If you were to make a drawing or a painting in the style of one of these artists what would you include?

Would you consider the light and color around you?Would you paint common people and places?Would you use “collage” or pasting words and images on your paintings?Would you paint or draw a portrait, landscape, or a still life?

Think about one of the three artists and make either a portrait, a still life, or a landscape. The portrait can be a self-portrait. Use crayons, collage, or paints. Use forms and shadows to give a mysterious quality to your art work.

Page 74: Getting to Know the World’s Great Artists Tulsa Public Schools – Fifth Grade Visual Arts Assessment

The EndMany thanks to the Visual Arts

Assessment Committee:

Carole Odierno-Memorial High SchoolCarol Dvorak-Carver Middle SchoolFran Kallsnick-Byrd Middle SchoolJoe Sizemore-Nimitz Middle SchoolLinda Barnett-Wright Elementary SchoolJanet Gillis-Carnegie Elementary SchoolJanet Lefler-Key Elementary SchoolAnn Tomlins-Fulton