ICT Role in 21st Century Education & its Challenges.pptx
The evolution of Art through the Ages- From Stone Age to Cubism
1. The evolution of Art through the Ages
Maria Rachele Cesarano V AL a.s. 2015/2016
2. Art is Beauty!
"Beauty is truth, truth beauty" – that is all
Ye know on earth, and all ye need to
know.
Ode on a Grecian Urn by John Keats
What is Art?
3. • In the perspective of the
history of art, artistic works
have existed for almost as
long as humankind: from
early pre-historic art to
contemporary art; however,
some theories restrict the
concept of "artistic works"
to modern Western
societies. One early sense of
the definition of art is
closely related to the older
Latin meaning, which
roughly translates to "skill"
or "craft," as associated with
words such as "artisan."
When was Art born?
4. “All art is immortal. For emotion for the sake of
emotion is the aim of art, and emotion for the sake
of action is the aim of life.” Oscar Wilde
5. • The period of prehistory known as the Stone Age, is
divided into three separate periods:
- Paleolithic (2,500,000-10,000 BCE);
- Mesolithic (Europe, 10,000-4,000);
- Neolithic (Europe, 4,000-2,000 BCE).
Of these, the Paleolithic is by far the longer period,
accounting for about 98 percent of the entire prehistoric
era.
The term "Stone Age art" refers loosely to any works
created during these three periods. It is also commonly
referred to as "prehistoric art".
Stone Age (30,000 BC – 2500 BC)
6. • The Stone Age was the era of cave paintings
and the era of sculptures.The most famous
pieces of Art are:
During the Paleolithic era, man sculpts and paints with a
magical purpose: to promote hunting activities, to
transmit rites and legends.
9. The early art of Mesopotamia spans the Sumerian, Assyrian,
Akkadian, and Babylonian cultures, all thriving empires
that existed in a large region that is known modern day
Iraq, Kuwait, and parts of Syria and Turkey.
Thisera includedmanystone sculpturesand narrative
reliefs, including the steleupon which Hammurabi’s Code is
carved, and the Standardof Ur. Writingwas invented
aroundthis time period, by the Sumerians.
Mesopotamian (3500 BC –539 BC)
10.
11. • Ancient Egyptian art is the painting, sculpture, architecture
and other arts produced by the civilization of ancient Egypt in
the lower Nile Valley. Ancient Egyptian art reached a high
level in painting and sculpture, and was both highly stylized
and symbolic.
Much of the surviving art comes from tombs and
monuments and thus there is an emphasis on life after
death and the preservation of knowledge of the past.
Egyptian (3100 BC –30 BC)
12. • Ancient Egyptian art was created using media ranging from
drawings on papyrus through wood, stone, and paintings.
Ancient Egyptian art displays an extraordinarily vivid
representation of the ancient Egyptian's socioeconomic status
and belief systems. Egyptian styles changed remarkably little
over more than three thousand years.
13.
14. Greek Art (850 BC –31 BC)
• The period of early, Hellenistic Greek art was one of
idealism and perfection, which was reflected greatly in the
era’s architecture and sculptures.
The Parthenon was built during this time, a temple
dedicated to Athena, the goddess of wisdom and warfare,
among other things.Today, the Parthenon exists as a
symbol of Athenian democracy.
The famous styles of Greek column were also invented
during this time: Doric, Ionic, and Corinthian.
15. • In Greece, the
artworks are destined
to be contemplated
and admired, also to
serve religious and
funeral purposes.The
artist is now a
craftsman. His social
dignity depends on his
greater or lesser
participation in
manual labor. In
Greek society, only
dance, music and
poetry are considered
noble activities.
16.
17. Roman art refers to the visual arts made in Ancient Rome
and in the territories of the Roman Empire.
Roman art includes architecture, painting, sculpture and
mosaic work. Luxury objects in metal-work, gem engraving,
ivory carvings, and glass, are sometimes considered in
modern terms to be minor forms of Roman art,although this
would not necessarily have been the case for
contemporaries.
Roman Art (500 BC – 476 AD)
18. • Sculpture was perhaps considered
as the highest form of art by
Romans, but figure painting was
also very highly regarded.
Romans used art for political
propaganda and decoration
• Sculptures were linked to the
Roman concept of service to the
state and served as propaganda
that celebrated the lives of generals
and emperors.
• In addition, Romans decorated the
interiors of buildings with paintings
and a form of art called
mosaic.Artists created mosaics by
arranging pieces of glass, marble,
wood or tile into pictures.They
were used on floors, ceilings, arches
and walls.
19.
20. Middle Ages Art (476 – 1400)
• The medieval art of the Western world covers a vast
scope of time and place, over 1000 years of art in
Europe, and at times the Middle East and North Africa.
It includes major art movements and periods, national
and regional art, genres, revivals, the artists crafts, and
the artists themselves.
21. • Early Medieval Art reflects the differences between the
development of the Catholic religion in the west and the
Byzantium Empire of the East. So, there were 2 main types of
Art and style:
Christian Art Byzantine Art
In addition, there was another type of Art and style which was
spread in the same period: Islamic Art.
22. Christian Art
• Christian art is sacred art which uses themes and
imagery from Christianity.
Most Christian groups use or have used art to some
extent, although some have had strong objections to
some forms of religious image, and there have been
major periods of iconoclasm within Christianity.
23.
24. This period saw the birth of
the Islamic religion, and
structures like the Hagia
Sophia and the Alhambra.
• In Byzantium, Art
accompanies the theocratic
power to present its
religious-political and
flamboyant character
26. The Medieval period of the late Middle Ages saw the
emergence of Gothic Art and great advances in art
techniques in Medieval Times.
During this period artists broke away from the
influences of the Byzantine Art and Romanesque art
styles.
Gothic Art
28. • The word “Renaissance” is a French term meaning
rebirth, which is exactly what the Renaissance movement
was. It was a cultural rebirth of art, literature, and
intellect after a vast period of darkness, disease, and
war. Music, art, science, philosophy, and other schools
thrived during this era, which gave birth to such greats
as Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, Donatello, and
more.
31. Venetian and Northern Renaissance (1430 – 1550)
• During this era, the Renaissance movement spread
from Italy to France, Germany, Poland and other
northern European countries. Bellini, Jan van Eyck,
Bosch, and other artists reigned during this time.
33. The Baroque was a highly
religious era that overlapped
the ThirtyYears War between
the Protestants and the
Catholics. Baroque artists like
Rembrandt and Caravaggio
were well known during this
time for the tense, moody, and
extremely dramatic style of
their work, reflected in lighting
techniques and subject matter.
Baroque architecture like that of
the Palace of Versailles was
known for its ornate intensity.
Many of these art periods were
reflected in the music of the
time as well.
Baroque (1600 – 1750)
34.
35. Neoclassical Art (1750 – 1850)
• The Neoclassical era toned down the extremity of Baroque
while still capturing the grace and aesthetic perfection of
Greco-Roman art periods. It was likely the overlapping Age
of Enlightenment, which saw another turn towards the
scientific over the religious, that set the tone for this era, as
well as the concurrent Industrial Revolution.
Jacques-Louis David, and Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres were
well known painters during this time.
38. • While past art eras had embraced the religious and the
scientific, Romanticism saw an emphasis on the self, as well
as a rejection of the kind of order that the Enlightenment
had imposed in favor of a more chaotic approach to life.
This took place during the American Revolution and the
French Revolution, and saw its crowning artists across a host
of different counties. Delacroix,Turner, and Gericault,
among others, defined the landscape with their dark and
moody works.
Romanticism (1780 – 1850)
40. “To select, combine and concentrate that which is
beautiful in nature and admirable in art is as much
the business of the landscape painter in his line as
in the other departments of art.”
J. M.W.Turner
41. Realism (1848 – 1900)
• Realism was the first movement to finally reject all the drama,
intensely exaggerated emotion, and grandeur of other art
styles for a more grounded approach to human nature.
The working class ruled the era of Realism, at least as far as art
went. Common folks’ lives were pictured there, and all the
mundane experiences and struggles that characterize life.
Famous artists include Courbet and Millet.
43. • Impressionism might have been one of the first
purely aesthetic art periods, a style focused on
capturing a visual phenomenon rather than an
intensely political or religious one.
• Impressionism rejected dated techniques that
dictated form and order, and painted freely.
Their works were like impressions of scenes and
people, hence the name. Painters like Monet,
Manet, and Cassatt were known during this
time.
Impressionism (1865 – 1885)
45. • Post-impressionism was the logical
follow-up to impressionism, an art
style that maintained its philosophy
– a rejection of traditional art rules
and its focus on perfection – but also
rejected its supposed limitations.
Post-impressionism carried on
impressionism’s free style and
unrestricted brush techniques, but
applied it to more common scenes,
and also painted forms rather than
just impressions.
Notable post-impressionists include
Rousseau, Toulouse-Lautrec, and Van
Gogh.
Post-Impressionism (1885 – 1910)
48. Expressionism and Fauvism were partially products of wartime.
They flourished during and after the first World War with their
harsh colors, bold shapes, and often its disturbing emotional
content.
Fauvism and Expressionism (1900 – 1935)
50. • Cubism is one of the most
influential visual art styles of
the early twentieth century. It
is created by Pablo Picasso
(Spanish, 1881–1973) and
Georges Braque (French,
1882–1963) in Paris between
1907 and 1914.
The essence of cubism is that
instead of viewing subjects from a
single, fixed angle, the artist
breaks them up into a multiplicity
of facets, so that several different
aspects/faces of the subject can
be seen simultaneously.
Cubism and Pablo Picasso
51. - Abstract
- Broken Mirror Effect
- Rearranged
- Geometric
- More than one view
- Simplified Shapes
52. • There are two phases of Cubism:
Analytic Cubism Synthetic Cubism
53.
54. “ When I was a child, my mother said to me,
'If you become a soldier, you'll be a general. If you
become a monk, you'll end up as the Pope.'
Instead, I became a painter and wound up as
Picasso.”