44
BIG IDEAS

BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

BIG IDEAS

Page 2: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and
Page 3: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

3

Big Idea 1

Page 4: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

4

Big Idea 1

Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event.

Essential Question:

What is art and how is it made?

Page 5: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and
Page 6: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

6

Students differentiate the components of

form,

function,

content, and/or

context of a work of art.

Raspberry colored sheet in my workshop materials.

Learning Objective 1.1

Page 7: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

7

Reordering this list of ideas for clearer student understanding:

1st content

2nd form

3rd context

4th function

Learning Objective 1.1

Page 8: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and
Page 9: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

9

►Content

►Form►Context►Function

Learning Objective 1.1

Page 10: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

10

► Content of a work of art consists of interacting, communicative elements of design, representation, and presentation within a work of art. Content includes subject matter: visible imagery that may be formal depictions (e.g., minimalist or nonobjective works), representative depictions (e.g., portraiture and landscape), and/or symbolic depictions (e.g., emblems and logos). Content may be narrative, symbolic, spiritual, historical, mythological, supernatural, and/or propagandistic (e.g., satirical and/or protest oriented). 

Content College Board Definition

Page 11: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

11

►Interactive communicative elements of the work

►Subject matter – visual imagery►Narrative elements►Symbolic elements-

iconography

Content can be Objective / Non-objective

Content

Page 12: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

12

Content (what the work of art is about – specifically it’s subject matter) is often related to the function of the work or the intended purpose of the work of art within the culture.

Works of architecture do not have “content” but architects choose architectural styles and building motifs to support the buildings function

Content

Page 13: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

13

►Content►Form

►Context►Function

Learning Objective 1.1

Page 14: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

14

Form describes component materials and how they are employed to create

physical and visual elements that coalesce into a work of art. From is investigated by applying design elements and principles to analyze the work’s fundamental visual components and their relationship to the work in its entirety.

Form – College Board Definition

Page 15: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

15

►Material used

►Techniques employed in the work’s creation

►Elements of art

►Principles of design

►The above visual elements “coalesce” in a work of art = Style

Form / Formal Analysis

Page 16: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

Form - ways of analyzing sculpture

Materials / techniquesMaterials / techniquesStance / presentationStance / presentationProportion (figure)Proportion (figure)Anatomical detail / correctnessAnatomical detail / correctnessMovement / gestureMovement / gestureFacial expressionFacial expressionOrganic / geometric formOrganic / geometric formNegative / positive spaceNegative / positive space

in my workshop materials

Page 17: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

17

►Content►Form►Context

►Function

Learning Objective 1.1

Page 18: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

18

Characteristics of the artist and audience – including aesthetic, intellectual, religious, political, social, and economic characteristics – are context. Patronage, ownership of a work of art, and other power relationships are also aspects of context. Contextual information includes audience response to a work of art. Contextual information may be provided through records, reports, religious chronicles, personal reflections, manifestos, academic publications, mass media, sociological data, cultural studies, geographic data, artifacts, narrative and/or performance (e.g., oral, written, poetry, music, dance, dramatic productions), documentation, archaeology, and research.

Context College Board Definition

Page 19: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

19

Four ways to think about “context”

Context

Page 20: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and
Page 21: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

Contextual Analysis

1: Physical location of the

work of art in its original

setting

Where was the work of art originally situated?

Page 22: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

Contextual Analysis

2:Artist and patron of the work of art

Who was the patron or

the work?

Who was the artist?

Page 23: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

Contextual Analysis

3: Historical events which influence the work of art

What is the subject matter of the work of art and is it historical relevant ?

Page 24: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

Contextual Analysis

4: Concepts and ideas which surround the work – ideas and beliefs

What religious, social or philosophical ideas within the culture influence the content or presentation of the work of art?

Page 25: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

Context for Sumerian Art

Teaching Context

History: Constant political change in the region due to geography being open to constant invasion (Sumerian > Akkadian > Neo-Sumerian > Babylonian > Hittite > Assyrian > Neo-Babylonian > Persian)

Politics: slow to construct unified communities because of different racial groups and invasion

Religion: king/ ruler was not god-king (as in Egypt) but god’s delegate - patron deities for each city states

Geology: building restricted by available materials, no stone quarries/ forests = sun-baked brick

Art History: Interest in the Ancient Middle East heightened with the discoveries of treasure by Leonard Woolley in 1920 at the Royal Cemetery at Ur

Page 26: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

Passage from the Epic of Gilgamesh

Enkidu slept alone in this sickness and he poured out his heart to Gilgamesh.

“Last night I dreamed again, my friend. The heavens moaned and the earth replied; I stood alone before an awful being; his face was somber like the black bird of the storm. He fell upon me with the talons of an eagle and he held me fast, pinioned with his claws, till I smothered; then he transformed me so that my arms became wings covered with feathers. He turned his stare towards me, and he led me away to the palace of Irkalla, the Queen of Darkness, to the house from which none who enters ever returns, down the road from which there is no coming back.>

Page 27: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

Passage from the Epic of Gilgamesh (cont.)

There is the house whose people sit in darkness; dust is their food and clay their meat. They are clothed like birds with

wings for covering, they see no light, they sit in darkness. I entered the house of dust and I saw the kings of the earth, their crowns put away for ever; rulers and princes, all those

who once wore kingly crowns, and ruled the

world in the days of old…..O my brother, let some great prince, some other, come when I am dead, or let some god stand at our gate, let

him obliterate my name and write his own

instead”

Page 28: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

28

►Content►Form►Context

►Function

Learning Objective 1.1

Page 29: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

29

Function includes the artist’s intended use(s) of the work, which may change according to the context of audience, time, location, and culture. Functions may be for utility, intercession, decoration, communication, and commemoration and may be spiritual, social, political, and/or personally expressive.

Function College Board Definition

Page 30: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

30

► Context determines function, and plays a significant role in shaping the intended purpose of a work of art or architecture.

► Knowing the patron of the work is essential to knowing it’s function

► Knowing the original location is helpful

► If the work of art has no patron, then knowing about the artist’s life is critical in determining the artist’s intention.

Function

Page 31: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and
Page 32: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

32

“Students explain how artistic decisions about art making shape a work of art.”

Materials and techniques –

how they affect form and function of a work of art or architecture

The creative process

Learning Objective 1.2

Page 33: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

33

“Students describe how context influences artistic decisions about creating a work of art.”

CREATIVE PROCESS

influence by contextual issues such as:

Availability of materials

Original location Scale/size

Intended audience

Geography and cultural traditions

Learning Objective 1.3

Page 34: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

34

“Students analyze form, function, content, and/or context to infer or explain the possible intentions for creating a specific work of art.”

MEANING

Intentions of the artist or creator

Relevant contextual issues especially the patron’s agenda

Meaning of the work

Learning Objective 1.4

Page 35: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

35

Big Idea 2

Page 36: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

36

Big Idea 2

Art making is shaped by tradition and change.

Essential Question:

Why and how does art change?

Page 37: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

37

Students describe features of tradition and/or change in a single work of art or in a group of related works.

Learning Objective 2.1

Page 38: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

38

Students explain how and why specific traditions and/or changes are demonstrated in a single work or group of related works.

Learning Objective 2.2

Page 39: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

39

Students analyze the influence of a single work of art or group of related works on other artistic production.

Learning Objective 2.3

Page 40: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

40

- two accurate identifiers (in addition to any given in the suggested list of works within the prompt)

- students will not lose credit if additional identifiers provided are incorrect

-student should try to include all four of the following identifiers:

- title or designation, - name of the artist or culture of

origin, - date of creation, and - materials

“Students identify a work of art.”

Learning Objective 3.1

Page 41: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

41

“Students analyze how formal qualities and/or content of a work of art elicit(s) a response.”

Learning Objective 3.2

Page 42: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

42

“Students analyze how contextual variables lead to different interpretations of a work of art.”

Meaning of the work of art

Change over time

Audience response

Learning Objective 3.3

Page 43: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

43

“Students justify attribution of an unknown work of art.”

Stylistic Analysis

Learning Objective 3.4

Page 44: BIG IDEAS. 3 Big Idea 1 4 Artists manipulate materials and ideas to create an aesthetic object, act, or event. Essential Question: What is art and

44

Students analyze relationships between works of art based on their similarities and differences.

Comparative analysis

Learning Objective 3.5