ch 9 and ch 10
TRANSCRIPT
![Page 1: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Camera Arts
Chapter 9
![Page 2: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/2.jpg)
the early history of photography
• Great slide show from About.com• http://inventors.about.com/od/weirdmuseum
s/ig/Illustrated-History-Photograph/Camera-Obscura.htm
![Page 3: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/3.jpg)
![Page 4: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/4.jpg)
![Page 5: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/5.jpg)
![Page 6: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/6.jpg)
![Page 7: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/7.jpg)
The oldest known photograph in the world of a 17th century Flemish engraving, made by the French inventor Nicephore
Niepce in 1825, with an heliography technical process.
![Page 8: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/8.jpg)
Boulevard du Temple, Paris - Daguerreotype taken by Louis Daguerre. Louis Daguerre circa 1838/39
![Page 9: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/9.jpg)
Daguerreotype Portrait of Louis DaguerrePhotographer Jean-Baptiste Sabatier-Blot
1844
![Page 10: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/10.jpg)
Robert Cornelius Self-Portrait Approximate quarter-plate daguerreotype, 1839
Robert Cornelius
![Page 11: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/11.jpg)
Daguerreotype - Portrait of Samuel MorseMathew B Brady 1844-60
![Page 12: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/12.jpg)
Daguerreotype Photograph 1844The General Post Office Washington, D.C.
![Page 13: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/13.jpg)
Daguerreotype - Key West Florida 1849
![Page 14: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/14.jpg)
Daguerreotype - Photograph of Confederate Dead 1862
![Page 15: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/15.jpg)
Example of an Ambrotype - Unidentified Florida SoldierPeriod of Use 1851 - 1880s
Popularity of the daguerreotype declined in the late 1850s when the ambrotype, a faster and less expensive photographic process, became available.
![Page 16: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/16.jpg)
![Page 17: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/17.jpg)
Calotype, 1835The oldest
photographic negative in existence
The inventor of the first negative from
which multiple positive prints
were made was Henry Fox Talbot.
![Page 18: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/18.jpg)
• Talbot sensitized paper to light with a silver salt solution. He then exposed the paper to light. The background became black, and the subject was rendered in gradations of grey. This was a negative image, and from the paper negative, photographers could duplicate the image as many times as they wanted.
![Page 19: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/19.jpg)
Tintype Photography - The tintype photograpy process was patented in 1856 by Hamilton Smith.
• Daguerreotypes and tintypes were one of a kind images and the image was almost always reversed left to right.
• A thin sheet of iron was used to provide a base for light-sensitive material, yielding a positive image. Tintypes are a variation of the collodion wet plate process. The emulsion is painted onto a japanned (varnished) iron plate, which is exposed in the camera. The low cost and durability of tintypes, coupled with the growing number of traveling photographers, enhanced the tintype’s popularity.
![Page 20: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/20.jpg)
Tintype Photograph of Members of the 75th Ohio Infantry in Jacksonville
![Page 21: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/21.jpg)
Portraits & Photojournalism
Julia Margaret Cameron (self portrait)
![Page 22: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/22.jpg)
An 1864 photo by Julia Margaret Cameron of her husband, Charles Hay Cameron
![Page 23: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/23.jpg)
"Annie, my first success", 29 January 1864. Cameron's first print she was satisfied with
![Page 24: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/24.jpg)
Longfellow in 1868 by Julia Margaret Cameron
![Page 25: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/25.jpg)
Charles Darwin, 1868 by Julia Margaret Cameron
![Page 26: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/26.jpg)
Ellen Terry photographed in 1864 by Julia Margaret Cameron
![Page 27: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/27.jpg)
Julia Jackson, 1867 taken by Julia Margaret Cameron
![Page 28: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/28.jpg)
The Angel at the Tomb, 1870 taken by Julia Margaret Cameron
![Page 29: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/29.jpg)
The Rosebud Garden of Girls,-June 1868 taken by Julia Margaret Cameron
![Page 30: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/30.jpg)
A Study of the Cenci-May 1868 taken by Julia Margaret Cameron
![Page 31: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/31.jpg)
The Echo, 1868 taken by Julia Margaret Cameron
![Page 32: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/32.jpg)
1870 taken by Julia Margaret Cameron
![Page 33: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/33.jpg)
Invention of the Kodak, George Eastman
![Page 34: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/34.jpg)
![Page 35: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/35.jpg)
Daily lifeCrow Camp, 1910. Richard Throssel
![Page 36: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/36.jpg)
![Page 37: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/37.jpg)
The Tobacco Planting, ca. 1905-1911Richard Throssel
![Page 38: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/38.jpg)
Dorothea Lange, 1936
![Page 39: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/39.jpg)
http://alafoto.com/?p=821
![Page 40: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/40.jpg)
Dorothea Lange's 1936, Migrant Mother,
![Page 41: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/41.jpg)
![Page 42: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/42.jpg)
![Page 43: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/43.jpg)
Oregon, August 1939. “Unemployed lumber worker goes with his wife to the bean harvest. Note Social Security number tattooed on arm.”
![Page 44: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/44.jpg)
July 1939. Gordonton, N.C. “Country store on dirt road. Sunday afternoon.
![Page 45: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/45.jpg)
August 1936. Drought refugees from Abilene, Texas, following the crops of California as migratory workers.
![Page 46: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/46.jpg)
![Page 47: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/47.jpg)
Japanese American Children Pledging Allegiance 1942
![Page 48: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/48.jpg)
Japanese American Grocer 1942
![Page 49: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/49.jpg)
Dorothea Lange, People of Japanese ancestry arriving at Tanforan Assembly Center, 1942
![Page 50: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/50.jpg)
Ansel Adams, Mrs. Naguchi and two children, Manzanar War Relocation Center in CA, 1943
![Page 51: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/51.jpg)
The Steerage 1907 Stieglitz
![Page 52: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/52.jpg)
Stieglitz-Spring Showers, The Coach 1902
![Page 53: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/53.jpg)
"Venetian Canal" (1894)
by Alfred Stieglitz
![Page 54: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/54.jpg)
1918
![Page 55: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/55.jpg)
Alfred StieglitzIcy Night, 1893
![Page 56: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/56.jpg)
The Plaza, 1896
![Page 57: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/57.jpg)
FlatironSpring Show
ers
![Page 58: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/58.jpg)
Ansel Adams, Evening, McDonald Lake, Glacier National Park (1942)
![Page 59: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/59.jpg)
The Tetons and the Snake River (1942)
![Page 60: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/60.jpg)
Autumn Tree against Cathedral Rocks, Yosemite, 1944
![Page 61: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/61.jpg)
![Page 62: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/62.jpg)
![Page 63: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/63.jpg)
Moon and Half Dome
![Page 64: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/64.jpg)
![Page 65: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/65.jpg)
![Page 66: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/66.jpg)
![Page 67: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/67.jpg)
Orville Cox and georgia o’keeffe by Ansel Adams
![Page 68: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/68.jpg)
Hannah Hoch, Cut with the Kitchen Knife Through the First Epoch of the Weimar Beer-Belly Culture, 1919.
![Page 69: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/69.jpg)
Hannah Höch Balance 1925
![Page 70: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/70.jpg)
Hannah Höch Strong-Armed Men 1931
![Page 71: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/71.jpg)
Hannah Höch Burst Unity 1955
![Page 72: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/72.jpg)
Hannah Höch Grotesque 1963
![Page 73: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/73.jpg)
Man Ray - Dada & Surrealismchamps delicieux (rayographie series)
![Page 74: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/74.jpg)
1924
![Page 75: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/75.jpg)
1929
![Page 76: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/76.jpg)
![Page 77: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/77.jpg)
![Page 78: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/78.jpg)
![Page 79: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/79.jpg)
Cindy Shermanhttp://www.cindysherman.com/biography.shtml
![Page 80: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/80.jpg)
Untitled film still #6
![Page 81: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/81.jpg)
Untitled 96
![Page 82: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/82.jpg)
Terms to knowDaguerrotype
• Landscape photography• Photojournalism• Pure photography• Which camera put photography into the hands of
everyday people?• What was the first american conflict to be recorded
in photographs?• Match camera artists to their type of photography-– Ansel adams, alfred steiglitz, dorothea lange, julia
margaret cameron
![Page 84: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/84.jpg)
• End of chapter 9
![Page 85: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/85.jpg)
Chapter 10
Graphic design and illustration
![Page 86: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/86.jpg)
Things to know
• Origin of all types of graphic design• Industrial revolution contributed greatly to graphic
design applications• Symbols• Typography• Layout• Graphic design• Illustration• Match artists to work : rockwell, toulouse -lautrec
![Page 87: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/87.jpg)
• Graphic design – Visual presentation of information– the goal is communication of a specific message– Usually trying to sell something or give directions
• Sometimes called commercial art– At SIU they call the degree a communications
design
![Page 88: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/88.jpg)
Examples of things that are designed before production
• Books • Book jackets• Newspapers • Magazines• Advertisements • Packaging• Websites • CD covers• Road signs • Logos• Television & film credits
![Page 89: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/89.jpg)
How old is graphic design art?• Since the beginning of civilization
• Written languages• Symbols
• Today’s graphic design is rooted in– Invention of the printing press, 15th century
• Reproduction and distribution
– Industrial Revolution, 18th-19th centuriesIncreased commercial applications
– Prior, most products were local – After, mass manufacturing
![Page 90: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/90.jpg)
symbols
• Most basic level of communication• Letters are symbols
Ω Ж Φ Ш М• Even arrows had to be developed
→ Δ
![Page 91: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/91.jpg)
yin yang – dynamic balance of opposites, explains existence
female/male being/nonbeinglight/darkaction/inaction
opposites are mutually interdependent
both are necessary to make the whole
![Page 92: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/92.jpg)
Symbols have no meaning in themselves, they are given meaning by society.
The swastika dates back to Neolithic Europe, up to 5,700 yrs ago. Svastika = Sanskrit for good luck.
India
![Page 93: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/93.jpg)
US Dept of Transportation,
1974
developed to communicate to
international travelersby
Cook and Shanosky Associates
![Page 94: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/94.jpg)
logos
![Page 95: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/95.jpg)
typography
• The arrangement and appearance of letters• Calligraphy • Font, typeface
• People began to pay special attention to this with the invention of movable type, 1450
• Sometimes designers will create their own lettering• Sometimes designers use a combination of
typefaces
![Page 96: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/96.jpg)
Joan Dobkin, leaflet for Amnesty International, 1991
Textbook, pg 243
![Page 97: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/97.jpg)
layout
• Blueprint for how an extended work such as a book or magazine should look– The way a page or a pair of pages are balanced• Using smaller and larger shapes• Using darker and lighter colors• Generally asymmetrical• Looking for a visual appeal
![Page 98: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/98.jpg)
posters/ads
• Color lithography (19th century) brought about eye-catching posters– Color wasn’t practical in magazines or newspapers
• Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec– Flat simplified forms influenced by Japanese prints– Immediately collector’s items
![Page 99: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/99.jpg)
Toulouse-Lautrec
![Page 100: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/100.jpg)
Toulouse-Lautrec
![Page 101: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/101.jpg)
Constructivism – a graphic design art movement after the
Russian Revolution of 1917
They had high hopes to create a new society, wanted to make
art for the masses, not the elite. They used bold compositions.
During the 1930s, the Soviet gov’t abolished independent
artist groups, the gov’t demanded all art to be clear,
easy to understand & realistic.Poster for the 1930 film "Earth" by the Stenberg brothers
![Page 102: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/102.jpg)
Milton Glaser, 1996
![Page 103: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/103.jpg)
illustration• An image created to accompany words– Books - Poems– Magazines - Newspapers
• Illustration is a different kind of environment for artists– Tight deadlines– The work is usually thrown away• Illustrators usually find ways to work quickly but still
create striking images
![Page 104: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/104.jpg)
Norman Rockwelldid about 6 covers a year for
The Saturday evening Post for over 40 yrs.
He did 322 covers for TSEP
![Page 105: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/105.jpg)
![Page 106: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/106.jpg)
![Page 107: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/107.jpg)
![Page 108: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/108.jpg)
![Page 109: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/109.jpg)
Rockwell’s last cover for the Post1960, 1963
![Page 110: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/110.jpg)
Norman Rockwell, lithograph, 1942
Part of The Four Freedoms series.
![Page 111: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/111.jpg)
Norman Rockwell
He also worked for the Boy Scouts, and he illustrated over 40 books.
He produced over 4000 original works.
![Page 112: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/112.jpg)
Alan Lee
![Page 113: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/113.jpg)
John Howe
![Page 114: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/114.jpg)
Ted Nasmith
![Page 115: Ch 9 and ch 10](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022102514/555401f1b4c90544428b4f28/html5/thumbnails/115.jpg)
End of chapter 10
• Except digital realms…….