Art

USING THE 4 CATEGORIES OF FORMAL ANALYSIS (IN YOUR BOOK) WHICH ARE LISTED BELOW, COMPLETE A FORMAL ANALYSIS.  MAKE SURE YOU DO YOUR RESEARCH ON THE ARTIST, THE MEANING OF THE PAINTING,  THE FIGURES IN THE PAINTING (NUDE WOMAN, BLACK WOMAN, AND CAT).  FIND OUT WHY THEY ARE ALL IN THE PAINTING?  LOOK INTO THEIR BACKGROUNDS AS REAL PEOPLE AND NOT JUST CHARACTERS IN THE PAINTING.  THE FORMAT OF THE ANALYSIS SHOULD BE AS FOLLOWS:

DESCRIPTION:

ANALYSIS:

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EVALUATION:

INTERPRETATION:

GO TO YOUR BOOK AND/OR LOOK AT THE LECTURES TO FIGURE OUT WHAT GOES INTO EACH OF THOSE CATEGORIES.

Chapter 4: Describing Art

Formal Analysis, Types, and Styles of Art

LEARNING OUTCOMES

• Employ a vocabulary of art specific terms and critical approaches to conduct a formal analysis of works of art.

 

• Identify different types of art based on the degree of representation or nonrepresentation a work displays.

 

• Distinguish between variations of representational qualities within a work of art.

 

• Identify characteristics that relate an individual or group of works to a cultural style, stylistic movement or period, or an individual artist’s style.

 

Elements and Principles of Design

Line – expressive, implied

Shape – organic, geometric, hard- or soft-edged

Volume has three dimensions: length, width, and height

 

Mass is the quantity of matter, often meaning its weight

 

Texture – actual or implied

 

Color – saturation, brightness, primary, secondary, scheme

(complementary, analogous, monochromatic)

Perspective – linear, atmospheric

 

Unity/Variety

Balance – symmetrical, asymmetrical

Emphasis/movement

Rhythm/repetition

Formal or critical analysis

A formal of critical analysis an examination of …

 

the elements and principles of design

present in an artwork and

 

the process of deriving meaning from

how those elements and principles are used

 

the ways the visual artist attempts to communicate a

concept,

idea, or

emotion

Representational or Non-representational

Representational art is a visual reference to the experiential world. The range of representational art is labeled as

naturalistic,

idealized, or

abstract

 

Non-representational or Non-objective is art that does not attempt to present an aspect of the recognizable world. Instead of suggesting a narrative by depicting objects meaning in non-objective art is communicated through shapes, colors, textures, and other elements and principles of design.

Style

can refer to the general appearance of a work or a group of works that were created in accordance with a specific set of principles about form or appearance.

 

can refer to the art as a whole that was made during a particular era and within a certain culture.

 

does the artwork belong to a more specific stylistic movement? Italian Renaissance? Realism? Abstract Expressionism?

 

can also refer to how elements and principles of design are employed by an individual artist: the visual features of that artist’s work and their characteristics when using a given medium.

Four Aspects of a Formal Analysis

Description – describe the use of visual elements.

 

Analysis – how are the elements arranged, describe the artist’s use of the principles of design.

 

Interpretation – the combination of what an object symbolizes to the artist and what it means to the viewer.

 

Evaluation – judging whether a work of art is successful given what you have understood from your description, analysis, and interpretation. Using steps 1-3 above can you justify your emotionally response (joyful, disturbing, calm, energetic) to the artwork?

J.M.W. Turner, Snow Storm: Steam-Boat off a Harbor’s Mouth, oil on canvas, 1842.

Mood created by …

Colors

Lines

Shapes

Brushstroke

Scale and proportion

 

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Mary Cassatt, Lady at the Tea Table, 1883-85, oil on canvas.

Contrast – color

 

Unity/variety – shapes

 

Balance – organization

of composition

 

Contrast – color

 

Unity/variety – shapes

 

Balance – organization

of composition

 

 

 

 

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Representational or Abstract Art

Generally, if the work has visual reference to the phenomenal

world, we consider it to be representational.

 

Art that shows purposefully simplification, distortion, or

fragmentation of the visual world is referred to as abstract art.

 

Representational to abstraction is a continuum.

 

Rosa Bonheur, Ploughing the Nevers, 1849, oil on canvas.

Bonheur’s cows are naturalistic in appearance.

She aims to make them an accurate depiction of the cows she portrays.

 

Edward Hicks, The Residence of David Twining, 1846, oil on canvas, gold leaf.

Hicks had no training as an artist and

visual accuracy was not his primary

goal for his paintings.

 

Exact proportions are exchanged

for simplified shapes in order to

express themes of community.

 

12

Franz Marc, The Yellow Cow, 1911, oil on canvas.

If we think of representational

and abstraction as a continuum,

at which end does this work rest?

 

 

 

13

Theo van Doesburg, Composition (The Cow), c. 1917, gouache, oil, and charcoal on paper.

Theo van Doesburg reduces the

linear forces of a cow’s form to

the three forms he thought were

essential components;

vertical, horizontal, and diagonal.

 

This was his process to create a

strongly abstract picture that titled

Composition VIII (The Cow).

 

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Theo van Doesburg, Composition VIII (The Cow), c. 1918, oil on canvas.

Discuss how you see the

cow in this ‘composition’.

 

Where is the head,

hooves, tail?

 

15

Statue of Menkaura and Queen Khamerernebty II, 2490-2472 B.C., graywacke.

The subject matter of this Ancient Egyptian sculpture is

a pharaoh and his queen.

 

A canon is a set of rules, principles, or norms, used to

represent human beings, often gods or rulers. These

principles determine proportions, stance, garments,

as well as other aspects of the human figure.

 

Idealization is a form of representational art that follows

given canon for the representation of special persons in

a culture.

 

Marble statue of a kouros, c. 590-580 B.C., marble.

 

The Ancient Greeks paid great attention to developing their

own idealized male figure sculpture based on their

cultural ideal of man is the “measure of all things”.

 

In what ways is this sculpture representational? Abstract?

 

 

 

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Polykleitos, Doryphoros from Pompeii, 440 B.C., marble.

In this sculpture the Ancient Greeks developed what they

believed was the epitome of naturalism in the artistic

depiction of the male figure.

 

We will examine four figures from the ancient Greek styles

Archaic period (800-480 BCE),

to the Early Classical (c. 480-450 BCE),

and then the High Classical period (c. 450-400 BCE),

 

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Marble statue of a kouros, c. 590-580 B.C., marble.

The Kroisos Kouros,

c. 530 B.C., marble.

The Kroisos Kouros, c. 530 B.C., marble.

Kritios Boy,

c. 480 B.C.,

Marble.

Contrapposto is the term for the representation of the weight shift of the knees and hips that occurs when standing with one leg at ease or walking.

 

This pose places the figure’s weight on

one foot, setting off a series of adjustments to the hips and shoulders that produce a subtle S-curve; a stance many of us use everyday.

 

Kritios Boy, c. 480 B.C., Marble.

Kritios Boy, c. 480 B.C., Marble.

Polykleitos,

Doryphoros from

Pompeii,

440 B.C., marble.

Polykleitos, Doryphoros from Pompeii, 440 B.C., marble.

Idealized?

Representational?

Naturalistic?

 

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Non-Representational or Non-Objective Art

Non-Representational or Non-Objective Art are two terms

that are used interchangeably.

 

Each term describes, or is a label for, art that does not

attempt to represent or refer to the visible world.

 

To avoid confusion we will use the term non-objective art.

Wassily Kandinsky, Blue Mountain, 1908-09, oil on canvas.

Is Kandinsky’s painting Blue Mountain

an example of non-objective art?

 

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Wassily Kandinsky, Angel of the Last Judgement, 1911, oil on cardboard.

Do you think that Kandinsky was

able to use color, line, shape,

unity and variety to communicate

something of human emotion in

this painting?

 

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Wassily Kandinsky, Red Spot II, 1921, oil on canvas.

Style

The three main categories of artistic style are:

 

Period styles that derive their characteristic structure from the culture prevalent

during a particular time period.

 

Regional styles that reflect the influences of the culture prevalent in a particular place.

 

Formal styles are used to denote an individual or group of artists working with

the elements and principles of design to reach similar goals and are not necessarily characteristic of either one place or one time.

Style is the term used for characteristic, or a number of characteristics, that we can identify as constant, recurring, or coherent with a particular group, or culture, or with an artist’s work at a specific time.

 

Regional or Cultural Style

Art is a product of its time and place.

 

 

Cultural style combines period and regional style in a unique and distinctive way.

 

 

SUPPLEMENT: Map of the Middle and Near East

Standard of Ur, 26th century B.C., “War” panel, 2600 B.C., shell, limestone, lapis lazuli, bitumen.

This stone panel is one example of the cultural style of the Ancient Near East.

 

A composite view represents portions of the body shown in profile and other parts of the body in frontal view.

Music Stele, c. 2100 B.C., limestone.

This stele, or stone slab, depicts Gudea with

attendants in one register, or horizontal band of space,

and musicians below.

 

composite view

 

 

32

Sargon II and dignitary, 722-705 B.C.E, limestone.

Hierarchical proportion is the use of different sizes of figures to indicate each figures importance. The larger the figure, the greater the importance.

 

Acropolis of Athens.

Cultural Style:

Ancient Greece and Rome

 

The height, or what was once considered the ‘best’ or pinnacle, of Ancient Greek art is referred to as Classical.

 

Today, most Ancient Greek scholars no longer think of one sub-style being “better” than another.

 

An acropolis is the highest point in an ancient Greek city and houses sacred buildings.

The most famous is the Acropolis in Athens, Greece.

Ancient Greek art has many stylistic sub-divisions, including:

 

Geometric (900-700 BCE)

Orientalizing (700-600BCE

Archaic (600-480 BCE)

Classical

Early Classical (480-450 BCE),

High Classical (450-400 BCE),

Late Classical (400-323 BCE)

Hellenistic (323-31 BCE)

SUPPLEMENT MAP: Greek stylistic sub-divisions

Praxiteles, Apollo Sauroctonus, c. 350-340 B.C., marble.

The Late Classical style of Ancient Greek art

represents the human figure as more dynamic,

more expressive, more emotional, more dramatic

than the earlier High Classical style.

 

 

Comparatively one figure can be seen as calm and the other more dynamic.

Discuss the choices made by the artist to create those different expressions for each sculpture.

 

37

Glycon of Athens, Hercules Farnese, c. 216 AD, marble.

The Hercules Farnese is an example the Roman Republican

style of art.

 

 

The dates of this style overlap with Ancient Greek art,

but it’s geographical location, the Roman Empire,

influenced the artists to work in a different style.

 

Anti-idealized representation has a frank and

unvarnished study of individuals that are often older,

more mature citizens.

 

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Togatus Barberini, first century AD, marble.

 

 

SUPPLEMENT: Examples of Roman Republican period sculpture.

Veristic,

or verisimilitude,

means the artist strives

to make a truthful

rendition of a person’s

likeness.

 

Augustus of Prima Porta, 1st century AD, white marble.

This work dates to the Early Imperial era (27 BCE-197 CE)

 

Idealization of the human figure is used for representation of rulers like Emperor Augustus and emphasizes a mental conception of beauty, a standard of perfection.

Early Imperial era (27 BCE-197 CE)

 

Idealization of the human figure is used for representation of rulers like Emperor Augustus and emphasizes a mental conception of beauty, a standard of perfection.

 

Overall, Roman art is, using broad terminology, naturalistic.

 

41

The Tetrarchs, 300 AD, porphyry.

Tetrarchy means ”the rule of four”.

 

This sculpture represents the four co-ruling

emperors, or tetrarchs, who worked together

to rule the four divisions of the vast Roman Empire.

 

 

SUPPLEMENT MAP

Marble portrait head of the Emperor Constantine I, c. 325-370 A.D., marble.

SUPPLEMENT: Indian Subcontinent Maps

Elephants on North Torana, Sanchi, India.

Stupas are dome-shaped shrines used to house Buddhist relics.

 

Yakshi are female nature figures and are represented at the entrance gates to a stupa.

 

 

Standing Bodhisattva Maitreya.

A bodhisattva is a being in Buddhism who has achieved enlightenment but chooses to remain in this world to help others advance their spirituality.

 

Maitreya is derived from the Sanskrit word for “friend.”

 

Buddhism is a religion and philosophy that developed from the teachings of the Buddha (Sanskrit: “Awakened One”), a teacher who lived in northern India between the mid-6th and mid-4th centuries BCE.

Located in Gandhara, known today as Pakistan.

 

47

Period Styles

Period styles derive their characteristic structure from the culture prevalent

during a particular time period or era.

 

 

 

SUPPLEMENTAL MAP: Romanesque and Gothic Eras in Europe

The term Romanesque means

Roman-like and identifies European

art and architecture from 1000 CE to 1000 CE.

 

Gothic is the term for the art and

architecture of Europe, especially northern Europe, from 1100 CE – 1300 CE.

Romanesque and Gothic Eras in Europe SUPPLEMENTAL: Gothic Cathedral floor plan

Christianity is one of the world’s major religions and stems from the life, teachings, and death of Jesus of Nazareth (the Christ, or the Anointed One of God) in the 1st century CE.

 

A portal is a doorway.

 

Gislebertus, Last Judgement, 1130-45, stone.

A tympanum is the semicircular area above the doors of a cathedral.

Gislebertus, Last Judgement, 1130-45, stone.

Saints Martin, Jerome, and Gregory, c. 1220-1230, stone.

These Gothic sculptures from a cathedral portal

show greater naturalism than the Romanesque

tympanum figures in the Last Judgment.

 

54

Masaccio, Holy Trinity, 1425, fresco.

A renaissance is a re-birth or re-awakening.

 

The Italian Renaissance was a conscious and purposeful revival of the ideals of Greece and Rome, especially humanism.

 

Humanism is the belief in the value of humans and their endeavors. Artists of the Italian Renaissance sought ways to express themselves as individuals in their art.

 

Orthogonal lines

 

Linear perspective

 

Raphael, Madonna and Child Enthroned with Saints, c. 1504, oil and gold on wood.

Humanism of the Italian Renaissance both

celebrated human intellectual and creative

accomplishments and embraced and

emphasized the humanity of Christ.

 

Titian, Madonna and Child, c. 1508, oil on wood.

Formal Style Stylistic Periods or Movements

 

We will look at examples of stylistic periods;

 

Realism

 

Expression(ism)

 

Abstract Expressionism

 

 

 

 

Formal Style: Realism

Naturalism and Realism mean two different ideas when used in the context of the visual arts.

 

Naturalism means of or pertaining to the appearance of nature, without idealization. The artist strives to make the appearance of the objects represented corresponds to nature, … to how the subject of the artwork looks in the natural world.

 

Realism refers to artworks that relay information or opinions about the underlying social or philosophical reality of the subject matter. These works may look naturalistic, but they have a societal component as well.

 

 

Gustave Courbet, A Burial at Ornans, 1849-50, oil on canvas.

The École des Beaux-Arts was the nationally institutionalized body in control of training and exhibition of art in France.

Gustave Courbet, The Stone Breakers, 1849, oil on canvas.

Ilya Repin, Barge Haulers on the Volga, 1870-73, oil on canvas.

Realism, vs. realism is a stylistic movement that appears across the western world during the 19th century.

This work is an example of realism from 19th-century Russia.

 

62

Wilhelm Leibl, Three Women in Church, 1878-82, tempera on mahogany.

Wilhelm Leibl’s painting of rural peasant women

is an example of realism from 19th-century Germany.

George Bellows, Cliff Dwellers, 1913, oil on canvas.

Edward Steichen, Moonlight: The Pond, 1904, platinum print with applied color.

 

Gum bichromate is photographic

print process which requires

gum Arabic and bichromate

to be brushed on the surface

of the light-sensitive paper and

allows manipulation of the

final image.

 

Lucas Samaras, Transformation, 1973, manipulated polaroid SX-70 print

Lucas Samaras used his fingers and a

stylus to rub and smear the image on

a self-developing polaroid print, thereby

manipulating the photograph to

and create his final image.

 

66

Expression(ism)

Expressionism in the visual arts gives up a measure of naturalism in favor of emotional content.

 

Unknown artist, The Great Goddess Durga Slaying the Buffalo Demon, c. 1750, opaque watercolor and gold and silver colored metallic paint on paper.

Pieta Liebieghaus, c. 1390, walnut, remnants of original polychromy.

Andachtsbilder is the German term for devotional images used to aid prayer.

 

SUPPLEMENT: Expressionism in Germany Neue Sachlichkeit, or New Objectivity

George Grosz, Fit for Active Service, George Grosz, The White General, 1919,

1916-17, pen and ink. pen and ink.

Abstract Expressionism

Abstract Expressionism was a stylistic

movement that emphasized the

physical properties of the medium used

as opposed to pictorial narrative.

 

 

 

Clyfford Still, Untitled, 1957, oil on canvas

 

Jackson Pollock, The Deep, 1953

Mark Rothko, No. 61 (Rust and Blue), 1953

Individual Style

A catalogue raisonné is a detailed, comprehensive list of the artist’s work.

Johannes Vermeer, The Geographer, 1669, oil on canvas.

Thirty-four paintings have been attributed to Vermeer.

 

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Vermeer, Woman in Blue Reading a Letter, c. 1662-3, oil on canvas.

Vermeer, The Milkmaid, c. 1657,

oil on canvas.

Vincent van Gogh, Wheat Field with Cypresses, 1889, oil on canvas.

Vincent van Gogh, Wheat Field with Cypresses, 1889, oil on canvas.

Impasto is the thick

application of paint.

Summary

We outlined a structured approach to understanding an artwork by using

description, analysis, interpretation, and evaluation to help recognize how works of art can carry meaning.

 

We established representational and non-objective as the two broadest categories of the style of an artwork.

 

We confirmed that the degree of abstraction in a representational work is relative, on a continuum, and that idealization is an off-shoot of representational work that shows an adjustment of accuracy toward a

mental conception of beauty, a standard of perfection.

 

Summary

We recognized three broad categories of style as

regional, period, and personal style.

 

Cultural or Regional examples we examined were form the ancient Near East, Ancient Greece and Rome, and the Indian sub-continent.

 

Period styles we examined included the Romanesque and Gothic periods of Europe and the Italian Renaissance.

 

19th-century Realism (Germany, Russia, and the United States) and Expressionism (Germany and the United States)

Édouard Manet, Olympia (article) | Realism | Khan Academy