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Abstraction: How did we get here? I don’t recognize anything!

Abstraction: How did we get here? I don’t recognize anything! http://www.moma.org/explore/multimedia/audios/3/49. As you look at these works of art, ask yourself: Is the artist using abstraction to… explore the tension created between different shapes

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Abstraction: How did we get here? I don’t recognize anything!

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  1. Abstraction: How did we get here? I don’t recognize anything! http://www.moma.org/explore/multimedia/audios/3/49

  2. As you look at these works of art, ask yourself: • Is the artist using abstraction to… • explore the tension created between different shapes • deliberately deconstruct the act of seeing • construct a landscape of color (abstract expressionism—see Rothko and Frankenthaler) • dissolve linear perspective • create a “pure” image that focuses only on shape and color • create a collection of potent symbols • focus the viewer on the act of creation (gesturalist—see J. Pollack) • Is this abstract work referential? Does the artist use the ostensible subject as a jumping off point which allows him to… • focus the viewer on the color and pattern • use color to evoke a mood or emotion • evoke the dynamism of modern age

  3. terms: referential decontextualized dynamism (energy and power and speed) gesturalist assemblage (when hoarders become artists!) ready-made

  4. Paul Cezanne Mont Sainte-Victoire c. 1886

  5. Vasily Kandinsky Der Blaue Reiter 1903 One of the founders of Der Blaue Reiter. Kandinsky hoped to awaken spirituality and to inaugurate “a great spiritual epoch” through the sheer force of color. He is considered the very first artist to paint completely abstract works of art.

  6. Andre Derain Mountains at Collioure 1905 Stokstad writes that “Derain’s assertive colors, which he likened to ‘sticks of dynamite,’ do not record what he actually saw in the landscape but rather generate their own purely artistic energy” (1063). Again, the landscape—the subject—is used as an occasion for exploring the artist’s ideas about color

  7. Vasily Kandinsky Ludwigskirche in Munich 1908

  8. Gustave Klimt The Park 1909-1910

  9. Gustave Klimt Apple Tree 1912

  10. George Braque Violin and Palette 1909-1910

  11. Pablo Picasso Ma Jolie 1911-1912

  12. Vasily Kandinsky Landscape with Factory Chimney 1910

  13. Vasily Kandinsky Composition V 1911

  14. Vasily Kandinsky Composition VII 1913

  15. Vasily KandinskyFragment 2 for Composition VII1913

  16. Vasily KandinskyImprovisation No. 30 1913

  17. Franz Marc Fighting Forms 1914

  18. Robert DelaunaySun, Tower, Airplane 1913

  19. Robert Delaunay Homage to Bleriot 1914

  20. Umberto Boccioni The City Rises 1910

  21. Umberto Boccioni States of Mind 1911

  22. Giacomo Balla Dynamism of a Dog on a Leash 1912

  23. Marsden Hartley Portrait of a German Officer 1914

  24. Henri Matisse The Yellow Curtain 1915

  25. Kazimir MalevichSuprematist Composition: White on White 1918

  26. Kazimir MalevichPainterly Realism. Boy with Knapsack - Color Masses in the Fourth Dimension 1915

  27. two one three

  28. Piet Mondrian Broadway Boogie Woogie 1942-43

  29. Louise Nevelson Dawn’s Chapel IV 1959-1960

  30. Louise Nevelson Royal Game I 1961

  31. Jackson Pollack The She-Wolf 1943

  32. Jackson Pollack The Key 1946

  33. Willem de Kooning Woman I 1950-1952

  34. Willem de Kooning Woman V 1952-1953

  35. Willem de Kooning Woman and Bicycle 1953

  36. Helen Frankenthaler Mountains and Sea 1952

  37. Helen Frankenthaler Viewpoint II 1979

  38. Helen Frankenthaler Crossing 1983

  39. Galleries

  40. Cy Twombly1971

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