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Modern Art Ashcan School, Regionalism, Abstract Expressionism, and Pop Art

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Modern Art. Ashcan School, Regionalism, Abstract Expressionism, and Pop Art. Modern Art. Defining modernism: modern refers to a period dating roughly from the 1860s through 1970 . Modernism was not one movement, but rather a multiplicity of ‘isms’. We are focusing on works post 1900. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Modern Art

Modern Art

Ashcan School, Regionalism, Abstract Expressionism, and Pop Art

Page 2: Modern Art

Modern Art

• Defining modernism: modern refers to a period dating roughly from the 1860s through 1970 . Modernism was not one movement, but rather a multiplicity of ‘isms’.

• We are focusing on works post 1900.

Page 3: Modern Art

Modernism is

• a desire to break away from impressionist art.• ditching the old rules of perspective, color, and

composition in order to work out their own visions. • reinforced by scientific discoveries that there is a whole

world behind things. • ‘Reality’-whatever that was- became a far more

abstract concept than it had been a generation earlier. • abandons intellect for intuition and depicts the world as

they perceived it behind the veils of physical appearance.

Page 4: Modern Art

The Armory Show

• The event that was truly a catalyst for the growth of American Modernism was the Armory Show of 1913 in New York. This landmark event presented nearly 1,300 works representing 300 artists, about two thirds Americans, covering styles ranging from Ashcan to French Impressionist, Fauvist and Cubist. More than 75,000 people attended, and an entire generation of artists, collectors and critics were given a glimpse of the future.

Page 5: Modern Art

The Ashcan School 1908-1918"Apostles of Ugliness"

• “Art for life’s sake" the Ash Can school shocked audiences with their depictions of the streets and city life.

• Best known for works portraying scenes of daily life in New York's poorer neighborhoods.

• The movement is most associated with a group known as The Eight, whose members included five painters associated with the Ashcan school.

Page 6: Modern Art

The “Eight”

Page 7: Modern Art

Robert Henri, Snow in New York, 1902

Page 8: Modern Art

John Sloan The Six O'clock Train

Page 9: Modern Art

Robert HenriChild

Page 10: Modern Art

Robert HenriGirl

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George Bellows New York

Page 13: Modern Art

John SloanPigeons

Page 14: Modern Art

Everett Shin, Cross Streets of New York, 1899

Page 15: Modern Art

George Bellows,Dempsey and Firpo

Page 16: Modern Art

Stag at Sharkey’s -1909

Page 17: Modern Art

Cliff Dwellers, 1913

Page 18: Modern Art

McSorley's Bar1912

Page 19: Modern Art

Regionalism1930-1935

• Regionalism: Artists who shunned city life, and technological advances, to create scenes of rural life.

• Regionalist style is best-known through the so-called "Regionalist Triumvirate" of Grant Wood in Iowa, Thomas Hart Benton in Missouri, and John Steuart Curry in Kansas.

• During the Great Depression of the 1930s, Regionalist art was widely appreciated for its reassuring images of the American heartland.

Page 20: Modern Art

The Top Dog of Regionalism Thomas Hart Benton

• There is a certain irony in the fact that Regionalism, which was promoted as the very expression of American democracy, was the kissing cousin of both the official art of 1930s Russia and that of 1930s Germany

Page 21: Modern Art
Page 22: Modern Art

Boomtown-1928

Page 23: Modern Art

Wreck of the ole 97 Train-1943

Page 24: Modern Art

The Social History of Missouri

Page 25: Modern Art

The Ballad of the Jealous Lover of Lone Green Valley-1934

Page 26: Modern Art

The Hailstorm-1940

Page 27: Modern Art

Grant Wood

Page 28: Modern Art

American Gothic, 1930

Page 29: Modern Art

Parodies

Page 30: Modern Art

The Real Deal

Page 31: Modern Art

Stone City, 1930

Page 32: Modern Art

The Birthplace of Herbert Hoover, West Branch, Iowa

Page 33: Modern Art

Iowa Cornfield

Page 34: Modern Art

Andrew Wyeth, 2007

Page 35: Modern Art

Wyeth Quotes

• You think you're developing and getting better and then you see something you did years ago. Looking at your early work.. sometimes it has a depth that surprises you.

• Artists today think of everything they do as a work of art. It is important to forget about what you are doing.. then a work of art may happen.

Page 36: Modern Art

Christina’s World

Page 37: Modern Art

• With water color, you can pick up the atmosphere, the temperature, the sound of snow shifting through the trees or over the ice of a small pond or against a windowpane. Water color perfectly expresses the free side of my nature." - Andrew Wyeth

Page 38: Modern Art

The Master Bedroom

Page 39: Modern Art

• I've never studied the Japanese. That's something that must have crept in there. But the Japanese are my biggest clients. They seem to like the elemental quality.

Page 40: Modern Art

Wind From the Sea

Page 41: Modern Art

Abstract ExpressionismPost WW II

• Abstract expressionism: originated in New York in the 1940s and 1950s and aimed at subjective emotional expression with particular emphasis on the creative spontaneous act (e.g., action painting).

• The emphasis is on spontaneous, automatic or subconscious creation. What does it feel like.

• New York replaced Paris as the center of the artistic world.

Page 42: Modern Art

Jackson Pollock“You don’t look at a rose and ask what it means”

Page 43: Modern Art

Lavender Mist: Number 1, 1950

Page 44: Modern Art

Lavender Mist

• It looks like an aerial photograph of a city, but it is a city that has somehow been blasted . . . It also looks like astronomical photographs of nebulae and galaxies . . . while at the same time close up details of this and other paintings resemble microscopic photos of molecular structures.

Page 45: Modern Art

Jackson Pollock

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CrVE-WQBcYQ

Page 46: Modern Art

Summertime

Page 48: Modern Art

Full Fathom Five, 1947

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Eyes in the Heat, 1946"This is not art--it's a joke in bad taste." --Reynolds News headline, 1959

Page 50: Modern Art

Georgia O’Keefe

Page 51: Modern Art

Radiator Building, Night, New York

Page 52: Modern Art

1926 - Yellow Calla

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1930 - White Camelia

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1927 - Red Poppy

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1931 - Red, White, and Blue

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1929 - Black Cross, New Mexico

Page 57: Modern Art

1965 - Sky Above Clouds IV

Page 58: Modern Art

Edward Hopper'The man's the work. Something doesn't come out of nothing.'

Page 59: Modern Art

Nighthawks

Page 60: Modern Art

The Boulevard of Broken Dreams

Page 62: Modern Art

Automat

Page 63: Modern Art

New York Movie 1939

Page 64: Modern Art

Rooms By the Sea

Page 65: Modern Art

Pop Art

• "The term first appeared in Britain during the 1950s and referred to the interest of a number of artists in the images of mass media, advertising, comics and consumer products.

• Pop art challenged tradition by asserting that an artist's use of the mass-produced visual commodities of popular culture is contiguous with the perspective of fine art.

Page 66: Modern Art

The Big Guns of Pop Art

Andy Warhol Roy Lichtenstein

Page 67: Modern Art

Andy WarholTurquoise Marilyn 1962

Page 68: Modern Art

Mickey Mouse 1981

Page 69: Modern Art

Campbell's Soup Can 1964

Page 70: Modern Art

Whaam! 1963

Page 71: Modern Art

Roy LichtensteinDrowning Girl 1963