17
Looking at works of Art (paintings) 4 guidelines that may help us look at art in an analytical way

Looking at works of Art (paintings)

  • Upload
    gabby

  • View
    164

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Looking at works of Art (paintings). 4 guidelines that may help us look at art in an analytical way. 4 guidelines . Subject and Symbolism Technique and Technology Space, Light and Colour Historical Context Philosophical cultural social economic. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Looking at works of Art (paintings)

Looking at works of Art (paintings)

4 guidelines that may help us look at art in an analytical way

Page 2: Looking at works of Art (paintings)

Mr. Samuel Stellini SOK 2010

4 guidelines • Subject and Symbolism• Technique and Technology• Space, Light and Colour• Historical Context Philosophical cultural social economic

Page 3: Looking at works of Art (paintings)

Mr. Samuel Stellini SOK 2010

Masterpieces

The miracle of the loaves and fishes Basilica San Apolinare NuovoRavennaA.D. 520

The Wilton Diptych National GalleryLondonc. 1400

Page 4: Looking at works of Art (paintings)

Mr. Samuel Stellini SOK 2010

The Betrothal of the Arnolfini Jan Van Eyck 1434National Gallery, London

Page 5: Looking at works of Art (paintings)

Mr. Samuel Stellini SOK 2010

The Last SupperThe Last SupperLeonardo Da Vinci Leonardo Da Vinci Dining hall at Santa Maria delle Dining hall at Santa Maria delle GrazieGrazieMilanMilan14981498

The birth of VenusThe birth of VenusBotticelli SandroBotticelli Sandro14851485

Page 6: Looking at works of Art (paintings)

Mr. Samuel Stellini SOK 2010

Sketch for Composition IV Kandinsky Tate GalleryLondon

The Gare St. Lazare in ParisMonet 1877Musee D’ OrsayParis

Page 7: Looking at works of Art (paintings)

Mr. Samuel Stellini SOK 2010

Subject and Symbolism• Most of the paintings or sculptures have a specific

subject, each with a meaningful message and symbol.

• In symbolic representations, objects don’t just represent themselves but concepts of much deeper and abstract meaning

• In the pre-modern period artists assumed that the viewers were familiar with the specific subject represented.

• In the modern period sometimes colour, forms and the composition became the subject.

Page 8: Looking at works of Art (paintings)

Mr. Samuel Stellini SOK 2010

Subject and Symbolism • Pope Gregory the Great (end A.D. 6th century)

, believed that pictures were useful because they helped remind the congregation of the teachings they had received (painting for the illiterate).

• In Botticelli’s painting the subject is Venus. The commissioner needed a painting symbolising love and fertility because he had just got married.

• Leonardo’s is a religious subject commissioned by a religious order. The monks wanted this mural (wall painting) to remind them about one of the most sacred moments of Christianity.

Page 9: Looking at works of Art (paintings)

Mr. Samuel Stellini SOK 2010

Subject and Symbolism

• In Monet’s painting the train is not the main subject. In fact pictorially speaking its part of the scene.

• However, in the artist’s eyes and his contemporaries it still represented progress.

• In Kandinsky’s painting the colour and composition are the main subjects.

Page 10: Looking at works of Art (paintings)

Mr. Samuel Stellini SOK 2010

Technique and Technology

Understanding the differences between artistic mediums, skills involved in the production and being aware of technological innovations may help us understand the differences in aesthetic values.

Page 11: Looking at works of Art (paintings)

Mr. Samuel Stellini SOK 2010

Technique and Technology

• Van Eyck substituted the egg-based liquid with an oil-based one which permitted him to blend colours subtly and apply layers upon layers of paint.

• Renaissance architects studied arch-making technology to depart from the elongated forms of the Gothic period.

Page 12: Looking at works of Art (paintings)

Mr. Samuel Stellini SOK 2010

Space, Light and Colour

• Works of art has its own illusion of space and light; in some works it remains 2- dimensional but in some others the artist creates a 3-dimensional space on a flat one

• In the Renaissance, space and light became fundamental whereas in the Medieval and Modern period 3-dimentionality was not essential.

Page 13: Looking at works of Art (paintings)

Mr. Samuel Stellini SOK 2010

Space, Light and Colour

5th century mosaics had a clear didactic function so the scene was made as simple as possible.

• The predominant brilliant blue and gold background in gothic paintings give a precious and heavenly quality.

• In Leonardo’s was as if another hall was added to the real monastery hall because the physical world became important.

Page 14: Looking at works of Art (paintings)

Mr. Samuel Stellini SOK 2010

Historical Context

Every historical period develops a recognizable style which was determined by philosophical, cultural, social and economic factors of that time.

Page 15: Looking at works of Art (paintings)

Mr. Samuel Stellini SOK 2010

Philosophical • Plato believed that artists should only represent the Ideal

form, because those are the true forms.

• Aristotle attributed the origin of art to the human affinity for imitation. He concluded that it is natural for humans to "delight in works of imitation”.

• Medieval artists (craftsmen) believed that art should represent the other world and should serve a didactic purpose.

• Renaissance artists combined humanism and secularism with Christian theology.

• Modern artists believed in the subjective reality of the artist.

Page 16: Looking at works of Art (paintings)

Mr. Samuel Stellini SOK 2010

Social • Greek and Medieval artists had the status of craftsmen.

• In North Italy, there was a new form of political and social organisation: Italy had already exited from Feudalism and was anti-monarchical. E.g. Florence. The artist’s social status grew and their work was no longer considered as merely a manual activity.

• Modern artists acquired the prestigious status of ‘free’ intellectuals who provided artefacts or performances that made the viewer grow

Page 17: Looking at works of Art (paintings)

Mr. Samuel Stellini SOK 2010

Economy• In the Medieval period the main political/economic

system allover Europe was Feudalism.

• In the Renaissance the economy was based on merchants, commerce and capitalism.

• In the Modern period the economic systems alternated between capitalism, which favoured a liberal and private system, and socialism, which favoured socially conscious art and state support for the arts.