Development of Modern Art FA2012

Rutgers University - Newark

Monday, September 18, 2017

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Saturday, September 9, 2017

Cultural Front: Preparing to cover comic book Noble #1 with East S...

Cultural Front: Preparing to cover comic book Noble #1 with East S...: We got the first batch of comic books for our study group, so we'll get rolling soon. We'll start with Noble #1. It's an int...
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*Check out the syllabus as I have made adjustments and corrections for our final weeks.

Quiz 2 - 12/20 11:45am-2:45pm
Study Guide Here

Due 12/11
Quiz review and good-bye party

Due 12/4
The Bauhaus, Le Corbusier, The International Style and Frank Lloyd Wright
Required Reading:
· Hunter, Jacobus & Wheeler, Chapter 13
Additional Readings and Reproductions:
· Le Corbusier, Towards a New Architecture
· Le Corbusier, “Five Points Towards a New Architecture,” 1926, from Programs and Manifestoes on 20th-Century Architecture, ed. Ulrich Conrads, pp. 99-101

Due 12/6
The Rise of New York as an Art Capital
Required Reading:
· Hunter, Jacobus & Wheeler, Chapter 17
Suggested Readings and Reproductions:
· ”Jackson Pollock: Is he the greatest living painter in the United States?,” Life Magazine, August 1949, in Richard Hertz and Norman M. Klein, Twentieth Century Art Theory: Urbanism, Politics and Mass Culture, pp. 351-356
· Martica Sawin, Surrealism in Exile and the Beginning of the New York School

POST 4 due (edit until 12/8)
What is Bauhaus? What is the history of this important school of modernism? How did it become one of the most influential movements in art and design history? How has and does Bauhaus continue to influence art, architecture and design?

Please find examples of contemporary works directly influenced by Bauhaus. Explain specifically how principles may still be referenced and used to create the contemporary works.

5-6 paragraphs, include images and links. Use your readings and additional resources to help in your analysis. Cite your resources.
_______________________
Due 11/27 and 11/29
Surrealism
Required Reading:
· Hunter, Jacobus & Wheeler, Chapter 12
Suggested Reading:
· André Breton, excerpt from the first “Manifesto of Surrealism,” 1924, in Charles Harrison and Paul Wood, ed., Art in Theory, 1900-1990: An Anthology of Changing Ideas, pp. 432-439

Architecture at the Turn of the Century
Required Reading:
· Hunter, Jacobus & Wheeler, Chapter 6
· Eisenman , pp. 331
Suggested Reading:
· Frank Lloyd Wright, “A Home in a Prairie Town,” in Holt

Post 3 Due 11/29
Select a 19C painting from the exhibition Angels and Tomboys at the Newark Museum. Based on your observation, the information from the tour, your readings in Eisenman and other research, briefly describe the painting, the subject and the time in which it was created.

Then choose a modernist painting (in Hunter text) from the early 20C (Cubism, Abstract Art, Dada, Constructivism, Surrealism etc. through the 1940s) Briefly describe this painting as well. How are these paintings similar and different? What art principles are each depicting? In what context is each made? How is gender depicted/addressed (if it is addressed?) In this comparison be sure to define Modernism.

5-6 paragraphs, include images and links. Use your readings and additional resources to help in your analysis. Cite your resources. Be sure to link back to the Newark Museum as well.

TRIP TO NEWARK MUSEUM
SUNDAY 11/18 at 12:45pm *mandatory assignment if you cannot attend, you must attend on your own before the assignment is due. We are meeting just inside the museum's main entrance by 12:45pm.

___________________

Due 11/20 (NO CLASS on 11/22)
Dada and the Ready Made
Required Reading:
· Hunter, Jacobus & Wheeler, Chapter 11
Suggested Reading:
· Richard Huelsenbeck, “En Avant Dada: a History of Dada,” and in Chipp pp. 377-382
· Marcel Duchamp, “The Richard Mutt Case,” 1917, in Charles Harrison and Paul Wood, ed., Art in Theory, 1900-1990: An Anthology of Changing Ideas, p. 248

________________________

DUE 11/13 and 11/15

*NO Group presentations for the rest of the semester

Cubism and Abstraction in the Wake of Cubism
READINGS: Hunter, Jacobus & Wheeler, Chapter 9 and ch 10

PLAN FOR TRIP TO NEWARK MUSEUM
SUNDAY 11/18 at 1pm *mandatory assignment if you cannot attend, you must attend on your own before the assignment is due
____________________________

Classes cancelled 10/30 and 11/1
Classes should resume Tuesday 11/6

*Reminder: groups must post a summary of their presentation (just one post per group) and link to the resources ASAP in order to be graded!! Title your post Group___ presentation: __________.

Now DUE 11/6 and 11/8
No new readings due - review all readings for your midterm quiz

Study Guide Quiz 1

MIDTERM QUIZ
_______________
DUE 10/23
Post 2 Due
American and European painting in the late 19C is wrought with tension, opposition and technical developments. Please analyze these in an examination of the works of Mary Cassatt and Thomas Eakins. How do issues of gender and gender roles play a part in this comparison? You may use various artists and paintings of the time to support your argument, but you should concentrate on these two artists in particular.

5-6 paragraphs, at least one image and 1 link. Use your readings and additional resources to help in your analysis. Cite your resources.

Group 8 presents

READINGS:
Post-Impressionism
Review Readings:
· Eisenman, Chapters 17-19; 21
· Hunter, Jacobus & Wheeler, Chapter 2; pp. 34-47

DUE 10/25
READINGS:
Expressionism
· Eisenman, Chapter 20
· Hunter, Jacobus & Wheeler, pp. 47-60; 112-126.


_______________
Due 10/16
Impressionism
Review:
· Eisenman, Chapters 15+16 (Impressionism + Manet)
· Hunter, Jacobus & Wheeler, pp. 17-22

Due 10/18
Post-Impressionism
Required Readings:
· Eisenman, Chapters 17-19; 21
· Hunter, Jacobus & Wheeler, Chapter 2; pp. 34-47

Post 2 NOT DUE -- only due 10/23

_________________________

DUE 10/11
Impressionism and Beyond
Groups 6 + 7 present (one unified idea per group - only 10 minutes and a brief discussion!)

Required Reading:
· Eisenman, Chapters 15+16 (Impressionism + Manet)
· Hunter, Jacobus & Wheeler, pp. 17-22

Due 10/9
**SYLLABUS CHANGE****
No Required Reading

Suggested Reading:
· Hunter, Jacobus & Wheeler, pp. 15-17
· Édouard Manet, “Reasons for Holding a Private Exhibition,” 1867, in Holt, pp. 368-369

_________________________

DUE 10/4
Group 5 presents

Required Reading:
· Eisenman, Chapter 11 - (Realism + Courbet)

DUE 10/2
Group 4 presents

Required Reading:
· Eisenman, Chapters 10 + 13
(Realism, Naturalism + Decline of History Painting)
· Hunter, Jacobus & Wheeler, pp. 13-15
_________________________

DUE 9/27
Review the readings due 9/25

DUE 9/25
Group 3 presents

POST 1
Neoclassicism and Romanicism

Choose two (or more) works of art from these periods that we have studied. Explain the works and why each is an example of Neoclassicism or Romanticism. Explain the difference between these two styles by comparing and contrasting them. How do these two styles differ in form, intention and approach? How does each develop and why? Which of these styles ultimately prevails? Be clear and thorough in your analysis.

5-6 paragraphs, at least one image and 1 link. Use your readings and additional resources to help in your analysis. Cite your resources.

Required Reading: American Art 1770-1865
· Eisenman, Chapters 6, 8 & 9.
_________________________

DUE 9/20
Group 2 presents

Required Reading: Goya
Eisenman, Chapter 3

_____________________

DUE 9/18
*Post 1 postponed until 9/25

Group 1 presents

Required Reading:
· Eisenman, Chapters 2 and 5
Suggested Reading:
· Casper David Friedrich, “Thoughts on Art,” Eugène Delacroix, journal excerpts, 1822-1859, in Holt, pp. 152-171
· John Constable, “Letters,” in Holt

DUE 9/13
Review readings
Be prepared to identify slides from Ch 1 for a brief in class response to the readings.

DUE 9/11
Introduce yourself on the blog - MINI POST
Please post 1 paragraph about yourself and your professional and academic goals. How do art and art history fit into your studies and your interests. Do you feel politics and societal conditions influence art and culture? You must include one image and one link.

READINGS:
Required Reading:
• Eisenman, Chapter 1
Suggested Reading:
• Jacques-Louis David, “The Painting of the Sabines” 1800, in Holt, pp. 4-14
• Maurice Denis, “The Doctrine of Ingres,” 1912, in Holt, pp. 34-38

_________________________

DUE 9/06
Please be sure you are signed up for the blog and draft a post to experiment and practice using blogger (first post due Tuesday 9/11.)

No Readings Due. Please be sure to aquire the required and suggested texts.

_________________________

Link to the Syllabus

Readings on the syllabus refer to chapters in your texts:

Required texts:
• Stephen F. Eisenman, ed., Nineteenth-Century Art: A Critical History, 4th Edition

• Hunter, Jacobus, and Wheeler Modern Art: Painting, Sculpture, Architecture, Photography 3rd Edition, Revised and Expanded 2005

Suggested texts:
• Elizabeth Gilmore Holt, ed. From the Classicists to the Impressionists: Art and Architecture in the 19th Century

• Herschel B. Chipp, ed., Theories of Modern Art: A Source Book by Artists and Critics

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