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Art History

This is your portal to information about historical works of visual art, its artists, and their contributions to society and culture. Ask questions and find answers in the following areas: Paleolithic, Neolithic, Egyptian, Mesopotamia, Persian Agean, Greek, Etruscan, Roman, Celtic, Byzantine, Indian, Southest Asian, Chinese, Korean, Japanese, Anglo-Saxon, Viking, Islamic, Pre-Columbian, Inuit, Romanesque, Gothic, Renaissance, Baroque, Rococo, Neoclassiam, Romantic, Realism, Impressionism, Art Noveau, Expressionism, Cubism, Futurism, Expressionism, Abstraction, Dadaism, Surrealism, and Pop.

3,044 Questions

What tools do you use for sculpting?

it depends on what your making and what kinda of sculpting but with regular clay scultping you use mini ribbons or loop tools, clay cleaning tools/knives, modeling tools, beads as textured tools, rubber stamps, Flexible blade knife, clay extruding glue, and a rolling pin

What minerals make lavender?

Potassium permanganate (KMnO4) gives a hue that I would't call exactly lavender (because it is purple)...

What is High Realism?

Realism and its close relatives, Naturalism and Illusionism, have all been important aspects in the development of painting in North America. During the formative periods of U.S. and Canadian history, many skilled painters were either immigrants or indigenous artists who expanded their skills from extended travel in Europe or study in European academies. The natural wonders of North America, as well as the rugged heritage of the frontier, helped to inspire a detailed, sharp focused and down to earth style. In these times paintings were often narrative in nature, providing an informal record of the frontier culture. Additionally, a thorough review of North American paintings in the pre-Civil War period will yield many examples of inspired art and cultural commentaries. Notable artists included Karl Bodmer, Charles Bird King, Charles Deas, John Mix Stanley, Eastman Johnson, George Caleb Bingham in the U.S., and Paul Kane in Canada. They were later followed by Charles M. Russell, Fredric Remington and many others.

Historical Canadian Realism Gallery

Earlier during the Colonial era, Benjamin West and John Singleton Copley were perhaps the first North Americans to establish reputations in Europe as skilled artists. In the middle decades of the 19th century, the landscapes of the Hudson River School held center stage and drew attention to the natural wonders on the American continents. Some of these artists grew to great stature, most notably Thomas Cole, Frederic Edwin Church, and Albert Bierstadt. In later decades they were followed by Thomas Moran and by Homer Watson in Canada. In the final decades of the 19th Century, Winslow Homer, Thomas Eakins and others refocused the limelight on figurative and narrative subjects. Paul Peel, a Canadian student of Eakins and Gerome, established a reputation, particularly for his work with the academic nude.

Canada's first significant school of art was called the Group of Seven. Founded in 1913, these landscape artists developed techniques en plein air. Generally influenced by French Impressionism, The Group choose subject material from the rugged areas around of Algoma District and near Georgian Bay. LeMoine Fitzgerald joined the Group of Seven in 1932, and became a founding member of the Canadian Group of Painters, which succeeded the original Group in the following year. His art was influenced by Charles Sheeler and Precisionism, and represents a kind of prelude to High Realism .

The concept of High Realism was introduced by art critic Paul Duval in his book High Realism in Canada, published in 1974. Mr. Duval defined its essential qualities as follows: "objectivity of vision, sharpness of definition, precision of technique, accuracy of detail, and excellence of craftsmanship". He went on to say that "though high realists use nature as their take-off point, they bring to it a highly personal vision, style and technique". Duval intended for High Realism art to be considered distinct from Photorealism, which appeared in the U.S. beginning in the late 1960's.

Beginning in the period following World War II, Abstract Expressionism dominated the press and art criticism in North America. But with the work of Andrew Wyeth and others in the U.S. and of Alex Colville in Canada, representational art retained a foothold, on which High Realism blossomed in the 1960s. Although perhaps never a discrete movement, still the artists of Canada share an independent worldview, based on their country's traditions, and a wholesome Canadian outlook. The ascendancy of High Realism coincided with the national celebration of Canadian Centennial in 1967.

Some of the art considered as High Realism is painted with the Egg Tempera technique, a tedious process that dates back to the Middle Ages. Egg Tempera is fast drying and does not blend at the edges, thus ideal for rendering precise and sharp details. Other artists have used acrylic polymer emulsion, which is also fast drying. There are abundant commercial products available for acrylics to make glazes, varnish or to modify texture. Oil techniques. particularly those using tempera and glazes, have also been used successfully.

Artists who have been most closely associated with High Realism include Alex Colville, Christopher Pratt, and Dan Price Brown . Related works have come from Hugh Mackenzie, Fred Ross, Tom Forrestall, and Jeremy Smith. Duval also sited E.J. Hughes, but Hughes' work generally had a distinctive naive-like style, more closely related to Magic Realism. Many of Ken Danby's early paintings were done in Egg Tempera, and are consistent with the concept of High Realism . His later works seemed to have drifted away from Fine Art toward a type of nature based photorealism . Other Canadian artists who have identified their work with High Realism include Richard T. Davis and Brian LaSaga.

While High Realism has generally been associated with Canadian art, comparable art can be found around the world in the work of a number of artists, including Robert Vickery in the U.S., Grahame Sydney in New Zealand, Brian Dunlop in Australia, Boris Koller in Austria, Heiner Altmeppen and Manfred Juergens in Germany.

What convention did Italian baroque artist carvaggio use in the conversion of saint paul?

Caravaggio used foreshortening to bring the figure to the front of the painting and project him into.

When did the traditional depiction of the Nativity in religious art switch from a grotto or cave to a stable and manger?

This happened in the 1200s. Many people mistakenly believe that a manger is a building. The manger is not a building, the manger is the little bed-like thing that baby Jesus was placed in. It was used to feed hay to animals. Jesus was placed in one of this, in a place where animals were kept.

The depiction of the Magi has also changed over time, both in the race of the individual kings and their mode of transport. In the middle ages, they were also depicted as arriving on horses. Nowadays, they arrive on camels.

What are the four types of 4 kilns in pottery and why is each one used?

There are 3 major or say professional ceramic kilns and the rest are just modifications from these. The Salt Kiln also known as the Soda kiln which is usually for glazing and salt firing, this type is mostly for fuel firing, a downdraft kiln and fires at very high temperatures to even about 1300 degrees centigrade. The second are the Raku kilns where by they are designed in a way that pottery place in them can be pulled out at the highest temperature ranging from cone 08 to cone 04 and smoked to produce interesting surface effects on the wares or pottery. They are normally not so big in a way that there design is meant to allow easy access to the pottery wares while in the firing process as they are supposed to be put directly into the smoke when pulled out from the kiln, they are usually suitable for out doors. The third type is the Test Kiln; these are small and mainly for test purposes and experimentations on new formulas of clay and glazes. They are use to make prior checks in order to see the out comes and final results before the final firing is done. They can be fuel-fired or electric and can be placed for indoors due to there size.

When was the retro era?

Retro style is style that is consciously derivative or imitative of trends, music, modes, fashions, or attitudes of the recent past, typically 15-20 years old. Therefore there is no set time period, as 'retro' simply refers to imitating a trend from the past.

What are the 4 frames of art?

1. Cultural

2. Subjective

3. Structural

4. Post Modern

Why was Venus de Milo created?

The answer is the same for all works of art (before about 1600): somebody commissioned it.

Who helped start the movement realism?

Realism, in the sense of imitating nature, has always been there, ever since the Stone Age cave paintings.

What are the new innovations to the titanic?

Some say they might build another Titanic in 2020. They also say that it will be 80% stronger. Some say there will never be another Titanic after that disaster. Nobody will ever know until that day.
Mabye, mabye not.
Another ship that runs into an iceberg and sinks, with thousands of deaths? Unlikely, although the Costa Concordia running into a reef comes close.

Another movie about the Titanic? I certainly hope not!

What art time period is 1959?

Pop Art is gaining ground as Abstract Expressionism begins to lose historical significance.

Generally speaking 1959 is the accepted date for the end of Modernism and the beginning of postmodernist or contemporary art.

You must understand however that Modernism and Postmodernism refer to a host of art movements, aswell as philosophical, technological, sociological, etc. They are not just about art, they evoke eras of human history where change is happening simultaneously on all fronts.

If you wish to refer only to the art of the period, then yes, Pop Art (c.1955) would be a good candidate, but it's far from being the only one. Arte Povera, Conceptual Art, Minimalism, Nouveau Realism, etc are also giving their first steps in the early 60s.

Sculptor who produced the first free-standing bronze figure since classical times?

Donatello is credited with reviving the ancient art of bronze casting free standing figures, his sculpture of David is the art work.

What is fluxus art?

The Fluxus Movement began in the 1960's as an international movement. Two prominent artists are George Brecht and George Maciunas. The movement continues today, and the main aim of Fluxus Artists is to upset the bourgeois routines of art and life, by using a variety of new and engaging methods such as street spectacles, outrageous exhibitions and staged performances. Music plays a big part in Fluxus, Yuko Ono was an early contributor to the movement and continues in this tradition. As Fluxus Artist George Brecht described Fluxus as "people with something unnameable in common". For more on Fluxus look to Tate Modern London.

What is the night watch?

The painting called "The Night Watch" is a 1682 painting by Rembrandt that depicts a Dutch militia. The painting's actual title in English would be "The Company of Captain Frans Banning Cocq and Lieutenant Willem van Ruytenburch preparing to march out" and its colloquial name stems from it being inaccurately thought to be a night scene (due to layers of dark varnish finally removed in the 1940s).

Where someone get Art History information online?

There are many websites devoted to art history. The most popular websites on the topic are Best History Web Sites, Academy of Art University Online and Art History Online.