Modern art

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    Contemporary art has evolved into many different forms and genres. The substantial amount of freedom given by the art educational institutions to the artist enables the practice of seeking new ways of expression and evolution. This open mode of creation is necessary for the practice to freely evolve, but the freedom brings a huge responsibility onto the maker too. There is also a question of whether there is a real freedom of expression, in the world governed by the social and institutional rule

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    the art in the period of Augustus, a Shakespearean quote immediately comes to mind. “All the world's a stage, and all the men and women merely players; they have their exits and their entrances, and one man in his time plays many parts…” Augustus was both the master manipulator in making sure his family looked not just respectable, but irreparably virtuous (despite the reality being vastly different). However, Augustus and art went farther than his family he helped shape a whole new era of art culture

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    Modern Art Research Paper

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    2. How the human form was represented has changed drastically throughout history. Some of the the ways in which the representation of the human body in sculpture evolved over time are evident in comparing works of art such as Menkaure and his Queen Kah-merer-nebti II, Doryphoros, the Farnese Hercules, and Prima Porta Augustus. The Egyptian model called Menkaure and his Queen Kah-merer-nebti II is from the Old Kingdom (2,490 to 2,472 BCE), and was found in the Valley Temple of the Pyramid of Menkaure

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    people see these bounded pieces of paper? In a very general sense, they represent a type of art. "Art", as defined by the New Oxford American Dictionary, is "the expression or application of human creative skill and imagination . . . producing works to be appreciated primarily for their beauty or emotional power." The majority of people would accept this as a good idea of what art is; but really, what is art to us? Is it a good picture? Is it a catchy tune? Or is it

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    the Early Modern Courts: This research paper will particularly focus on three paintings of François Boucher, namely The Toilet of Venus, The Bridge, and Putti With Birds, and carefully analysis their visual features to understand their significance during that period. II. The primary objective of the current paper is to examine the importance of visual arts in the Early Modern Courts, representing the 16th, 17th, and 18th centuries. It will delve deeper into the significance of visual art in supporting

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    Tracey Moffat - Modern Technology and Modern Art Many modern artists use high technology equipment in their works. Whereas traditionally artists used a pencil or brush to make beautiful works of art, artists in the early twenty-first century are now using sound, video or computer generated images. Digital art developed from simple patterns and shapes made using computer programs to finished works of art which can look as realistic as a watercolour or oil painting. Modern art exhibitions often

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    Postmodern art is typically anti-establishment and rebellious, the beginning of postmodern art can be found in the late 1950’s-1960’s although the term was first used around 1970. The movement differed from previous movements as it deliberately went against the rules, artists used many different disciplines within one piece of work. A core value of postmodern art is that it is for everyone and tries to be a connection between art and everyday life. Modernism triggered post-modernism, modernism

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    In chapters two and three of The Meaning of Modern Art, Karsten Harries describes two ways that the relationship between man and nature is understood, and how these understandings are evident in the changing artistic styles and philosophical themes of the time. Harries describes two ways of seeing man’s relationship with nature. Either nature is beneath man’s reason, and thus art must reconstruct nature “in the image of reason” or man’s relationship with nature is one of intense conflict, in which

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    Ray Kaiser was born in Sacramento, California in 1912. She attended the Art Students League and the Hans Hoffman School in New York where she studied painting. In 1936, Ray was involved in the creation of the radical American Abstract Artist group, which would protest art galleries with very strict rules about what to exhibit, and would do many other things to help abstract artists. ("Charles & Ray Eames - R & Company.") She was very active and was one of the first participants of American-Born abstract

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    Impressionism was considered irreverent and ghastly for its incomplete appearance, lack of refinement, and academic disregard toward an established art community during the late 1800s. Although an outpouring of attention was given to dissidents from traditional styles, artists such Edgar Degas, Claude Monet, and eventually Mary Cassatt pressed forward to showcasing Impressionism as it became widely accepted across Europe and in America (About.com, 2014). The purposeful absence of clarity instilled

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