art history
DESCRIPTION
Art History. An introduction to Art History. What is Art?. Survey questions. Is this Art?. Is this Art?. Is this Art?. Is this Art?. SUPPLIES. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
SUPPLIES• Binder: You will need to keep your
notes organized and all of the handouts organized. YOU WILL NEED A SEPARATE BINDER FOR THIS COURSE (2.5 inch is large enough).
• Note cards: You will need to keep note cards handy for each of the units. (Several Packs)
• Annotated Mona Lisa: This is HIGHLY recommended text, this will be essential for simplifying the information of the course.
Course Website• http://mvhsaparthistory.wikispaces.
com/• Other Helpful websites:
–www.nga.gov–www.smartart.org
VocabularyYou will be learning a great deal of
new vocabulary words over the next two semesters.
Some words will be ones you recognize, but they will have
different meanings in this subject. It’s important you study the
vocabulary.
AP Exam• Part A - Multiple Choice (40% of the
test) 1 hour– 20 minutes - 5 sets of MC questions
matched with images (7-9 MC questions each)
– 40 Minutes - 85 MC questions. • Part B - Short Answer (60% of the test)
– (2) 30 minute essay questions using your own image knowledge- At Least One Beyond Western Tradition example needed. NO PREHISTORIC, ANCIENT NEAR EAST, OR EGYPTIAN.
– (6) 10 minute “free response” questions using one or two provided images.
AP Exam• Western Tradition: 80%
–Ancient to Medieval - 30% (1st Semester)
–Renaissance to Present - 50% (2nd Semester)
• Non-Western Tradition: 20%– Including: Egypt, Ancient Near
East, Africa, India, MesoAmerica, Japan, China, Native American, South Seas. (1st and 2nd Semester)
Western Art:Art History is approached most commonly from the western tradition, which
includes Europe and later artists influenced by
Europeans. This is generally because it is where art
historians have the largest amount of information and
variety of styles.
When a person looks at art generally they…
1)… react to what they see,2)… interpret the work in the light of their own experiences,3)… judge it as a success or a failure.
YOU WILL LEARN TO INSTEAD UNDERSTAND ART,
WHY IT WAS MADE, AND WHY IT WAS IMPORTANT!
“Art appreciation doesn’t require a knowledge of the
historical context of an artwork (or building). Art
History does”
Art History is important for understanding History and
History is important for understanding History.
What to look for in a work of art…
1) Objectives components: Title, Artist/Architect, and Date.
2) Context: Where it was made, Who commissioned it?
3) Content: What is in the artwork, the iconography
4) Formal Attributes: The Period and Style of the work.
5) Art Media and Technique: How was the piece made and what did they use to make it.
What do you know about the artistic
style? 1) Period Style: Artistic characteristics of a specific time period, some time periods don’t have artistic styles.
2) Regional Style: Geographical Styles.
3) Personal Style: Particular methods and themes of creating an individual artistic styles.
What is the subject matter of the work of
art?• Genre: These are images of daily life.
• Landscapes: An image where the subject is Land.
• Portrait: An image where the subject is a person.
• Iconography: Means “writing of images” refers to content (subject) and the study of the symbols of the art (images that stand for other objects or ideas).
It is essential to know who paid for the work (Patron) and when
possible who made the artwork
(Artist/Architect).