late 1920s – 1940s: surrealism
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Before?. After?. http://ebookee.org/The-Interpretation-of-Dreams-The-Complete-and-Definitive-Text_465810.html. Late 1920s – 1940s: Surrealism. DADA. * Development of DADA : After WW1 1916 at Cabaret Voltaire, Zurich (Switzerland): - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
• Late 1920s – 1940s: Surrealism
http://ebookee.org/The-Interpretation-of-Dreams-The-Complete-and-Definitive-Text_465810.html
• After?
• Before?
DADA
* Development of DADA:
- After WW1- 1916 at Cabaret Voltaire, Zurich (Switzerland):
~ 2 artists -- Hugo Ball & Hulsenback found the word ‘Dada’ accidentally by inserting a knife at random in a German-French dictionary.
DADA: Symbolized a deliberate anti-rational, anti-aesthetic point of view.
• Why Dada developed:
- A reaction to the disillusionment engendered by World War I & life in general.
~ Feelings of disgust & revulsion.
~ Blamed rational forces of scientific and technological development for bringing European civilization to the brink of self-destruction.
DADA: Means a variety of things in various languages.
~ French: Hobby-horse~ Romanian: Yes, Yes (Slavic tongues)~ German: A sign of absurd naivety
- Choice of word had childhood associations (when repeated sounds like meaningless babble; suggest instinct & intuition as means of knowledge.)
*AIMS of DADA:
- To destroy the concept of art as an aesthetic activity.
-To replace art by anti-art or non-art
Dadaists mocked all the values of what they believed to be a culture gone mad, by making
works of non-art.
Tristan Tzara (on the composition of a poem):
“Take a newspaper. Take a pair of scissors. Choose an article as long as you are planning to make your poem.
Cut out the article. Then cut out each of the works that make up this article and
put them in a bag. Shake it gently. Then take out the scraps one after the other in the order in which they left the bag. Copy conscientiously. The poem
will be like you.”
* What & How did the Dadaists create?
- Noise Music- Nonsense poem
- Art objects produced by unorthodox means. * Experimented with automatic drawing
* Use of Chance results
* Execution of Choice
DADA
Strategies of Jean Arp:
- Drew the same design every day until his hand automatically began to create variations on the original shapes. – Beginnings of automatism
- Tore up coloured paper, or his own drawings and let them fall as they would. – Chance effect
Jean Arp
Collage with Squares Arranged According to the Laws of Chance.
1916 -- 17
Torn & pasted papers
http://www.salemstate.edu/~ckramer/arp.html
MARCEL DUCHAMP1887 -- 1968
* French-American painter & sculptor.
* One of the key figures of modern art.
~ Chief tool: Readymade
DADA
READYMADE
* A found object that already exists -- often a mundane manufactured product -- and is given a new identity as an
artwork/part of an artwork.
Since 1912, Duchamp elevated commonplace objects to status of works of art.
Challenged the traditional claims of art to beauty and significance.
READYMADES
Bicycle Wheel1913
* A bicycle wheel mounted on a stool.
http://www.moma.org/collection/depts/paint_sculpt/blowups/paint_sculpt_020.html
READYMADES
In Advance of the Broken Arm1915
http://www.abcgallery.com/D/duchamp/duchamp22.html
Choice of the Readymades:
“… never dictated by aesthetic delectation but… on a reaction of visual indifference with
a total absence of good or bad taste -- a complete anesthesia.”
~ Duchamp
READYMADES
* Examples of Duchamp’s attempts to de-mystify art.
* Proclaimed that the world was already so full of ‘interesting’ objects that the artist need not add to them. Instead, he could just pick one, and this ironic act of choice was equivalent to creation -- a choice of mind rather than of hand.
READYMADES
Fountain1917
READYMADES
Fountain1917
* Purpose: ~ To create ‘a new thought’ for an object.
“It could not be indecent because such objects were on show everywhere in plumbers’ shop windows.”
- Duchamp
REBELLION OF THE READYMADE
- Mainly intellectual:
~ Regarded as a precursor of the Conceptual Art movement of the 1960s.
- Offered a new definition of the artist -- a person who manipulates the context as a way of changing perceptions instead of a maker of objects.
- Introduced a new & subversive definition of originality.
What is the difference between these two works?
http://www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/auth/vinci/joconde/joconde.jpg
RECTIFIED READYMADES
L.H.O.O.Q.1919
* Drew on a reproduction of Mona Lisa a moustache and beard as if defacing a billboard.
* Also gave it a punning title -- LHOOQ~ Translated from French -- “She has hot
pants/ass”.
* Dada’s concern: Contradicted the idea of the sanctity of art & the value of the unique art object.
* Intention:- To emphasize art’s intellectual basis in thought or philosophy.
MAN RAY
(1890 -- 1977)
- Took up photography & invented Rayograph
* Rayograph = A technique for rendering a 3-D abstract world in a photographic print.
(A camera-less photographic image made by a process in which objects were placed on a sensitized paper, when was then exposed directly to light.)
Rayographs by Man Ray
Gift1921
- First ready-made by Man Ray.
- Mass-produced iron adorned with a row of carpet tacks.
- Reflected sardonic spite.
- An alarming object -- possible effects in the laundry OR the ungracious connotations of its title.
Kurt Schwitters1887 -- 1948
* German artist
* Created collage compositions from rubbish and trash-- odds & ends of wood, broken bits of glass and plaster, torn tram tickets, chocolate wrappers, newspapers, etc.
* Merz pictures: Displayed the typical Dada contempt for conventional techniques.
* Common theme: City as compressor, intensifier of experience
* “Merz” pictures~ Collages from rubbish & debris
- Investigated the rubbish of civilisation: tram tickets, chocolate wrappers & transformed them into objects of artistic quality whilst allowing them to preserve their identity.
Merz Picture 25A
Schwitters
Merzbau
Merzbau –Schwitter’s ultimate work of Art
- Constructed in his house in Hanover (1923)
- It began as disparate pieces of collage and assemblages round the studio walls, which over time were connected by string, then wire, then wood, and finally plastered wood. His "Merzbau" gradually took over the downstairs and when it required more space for expansion, Schwitters cut a hole in the ceiling and gave notice to his upstairs lodgers. Into the individual "grottos" of the Merzbau Schwitters placed a bizarre collection of objects gathered from his friends and fellow artists, anything from a stolen sock to a broken pencil.
http://homepage.ntlworld.com/davepalmer/cutandpaste/schwitters.html
http://www.tate.org.uk/research/tateresearch/tatepapers/07autumn/orchard.htm
DADA
* Strategies/Techniques of the Dadaists destroyed traditional notions of what art should be.
By breaking up conventional notions of art, the Dadaists sought to set free the visual imagination
completely.
• CRITICAL
• PLAYFUL
Rene MagrittePersonal Values 1952
Surrealism
Salvador DaliThe Persistence of Memory
193124 cm x 33 cm
http://momawas.moma.org/collection/depts/paint_sculpt/blowups/paint_sculpt_016.html
Surrealism
Joan MiroHarlequin’s Carnival
1924Oil on canvas
Surrealism
Automatic Drawing
• Automatic drawing was developed by the Surrealists as a means of expressing the subconscious.
• In automatic drawing, the hand is allowed to move 'randomly' across the paper. In applying chance and accident to mark-making, drawing is to a large extent freed of rational control.
• Hence the drawing produced may be attributed in part to the subconscious and may reveal something of the psyche.
1950s: Abstract Expressionism
Number 26A, 1948Jackson Pollock1948Oil, enamel & aluminium on canvas
Jackson Pollock
“….painting is a state of being….Painting is self
discovery.”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vy6Omz1bDPg
“New needs demand new techniques”
-Pollock
- Direct expression /revelation of the unconscious moods.
~ The scatter & fall of the paint further emphasized the liquid nature of the medium itself
• Studied classical drawing and composition, and also American "regionalist" painting styles
• During the Great Depression and the World War II years, he painted murals for the Works Progress Administration's "Federal Art Project".
Jackson Pollock – His artistic journey
Early & Mid 1940s:
- Began work that was based on automatic techniques.
- Made use of pictographs & ideograms which were in part suggested by his study of Carl Jung & Red Indian mythology with influences from the Surrealist artist, Joan Miro.
Jackson Pollock – His artistic journey
Bird1941Oil and sand on canvas, 70.5 x 61.6 cm
Guardians of the Secret 1943
- Use of mythical imagery
Dog = Guardian of Pollock’s psyche, represented by the central panel.
- Pollock gradually turned to rituals to represent life cycle, powers & forces.
Jackson Pollock – His artistic journey
- Eyes: Imagery connecting the inner and outer
worlds.
~ Use of short cursive brushwork --allowed his lines to form a series of patterns over the whole surface of the picture.
Eyes in the Heat1946
Jackson Pollock – His artistic journey
JACKSON POLLOCK1912 -- 1956
Concerns:
- Forces and energy (Dissolution of matter into energy under extreme stress.)
- Life cycles
- Focuses on the creative idea of evolution, eternal change and eternal life.
Broke down the conventional idea of ‘art’
~ Freed the need to depict images.
~ The act & process of painting become the subject & content of a work.
Autumn Rhythm (Number 30),19501950Enamel on canvas266.7 x 525.8 cm
Jackson Pollock
~ Painting = Physical activity (Movement of arms, a source of expressive power)
Tapped on his own subconscious
~ Canvas = A spontaneous arena in which the artist ‘performs’ or ‘acts’. His painting process becomes a ritual