Modernism: Art and Literature - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 33
About This Presentation
Title:

Modernism: Art and Literature

Description:

Modernism: Art and Literature 1920s: From Gatsby to Picasso * – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:273
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 34
Provided by: MHS75
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Modernism: Art and Literature


1
Modernism Art and Literature
  • 1920s From Gatsby to Picasso

1
2
Essential Questions
  • Unit EQ How and why do American values shift?
  • Todays EQ How were the political, economic, and
    social factors of the era responsible for
    hastening the art and culture revolutions of the
    1920s?

2
3
By the end of class today, students will be able
to
  • define Modernism (a relatively complex idea in
    the world of art) in your own words
  • learn some of the important Modernist artists
  • understand the link between Modernism, Gatsby,
    Dadaism, Surrealism, and Cubism
  • learn the names of some important artists
  • analyze modernist paintings (good luck--theyre
    wacky), and in so doing review some techniques of
    interpretation

3
4
What is modernism?
4
5
Some Characteristics of Modernistic Thought
  • Rejection of tradition as being outdated in a
    changing world (Make it new!)
  • Rejection of rationality, harmony, and coherence
  • Separation of the past as being different from
    the modern age
  • Recognition that the world is complex
  • Assertion that the old final authorities (God,
    government, science, and reason) were subject to
    intense critical scrutiny
  • Approval/Embracing of discontinuity

5
6
Link to Unit EQ
  • All of these notions were reactions to a rapidly
    changing, post-WWI America.

6
7
Influences Contributingto Modernism
  • The 1920s the first time more people lived in
    urban areas than rural areas (in America)
  • Characters move from the West to the East.
  • West Rural America traditional spirit of hard
    work, self-reliance, religion, and independence.
  • East Cities and changes that threaten old
    valuesModernists say that life will never go
    back to what it was
  • Americansbecause of communal living in cities as
    well as reactions to WWIlose faith
  • Eyes of Dr. Eckleburg
  • Americans losing faith in God

7
8
Influences Contributingto Modernism
  • In the past, there was a belief that Americans
    were making steady moral progress.
  • The horror of WWI and trench warfare blew this
    notion out of the water
  • Harsh, mechanical rationality of new
    technological weapons in WWI
  • The fusion of the mechanical with the seemingly
    senseless slaughter of human beings left
    morality and realism pretty bankrupt
  • Think of the death car in Gatsby

8
9
FYI
  • MANY Americans were NOT on board with Modernism!!
  • Art exhibitions, theatre, cinema, books, and even
    new buildings of this time all served to cement
    in the public view the perception that the world
    was changing, but
  • Many reacted hostilely!
  • People spat on paintings
  • Riots organized at openings
  • Political figures denounced modernism as
    unwholesome and immoral

9
10
Dada
  • Begins in Switzerland during WWI and spreads
    peaks during early 20s
  • Includes visual arts, literature, theatre, and
    graphic design
  • Was anti-war
  • Expressed anti-war politics through anti-art
  • Dadaists wanted to ridicule what they considered
    meaningless in the modern world.
  • Usually also anti-bourgeois and anarchistic
  • Basically, they were pissed off at a world that
    allowed WWI to happen.

10
11
Dada
  • The Dada movement was not a movement
  • Its artists were not artists
  • Its art was not art
  • because art (and everything else in the world)
    has no meaning anyway.
  • Even the name Dadawhich some say means hobby
    horse in French and others just say is baby
    talkwas chosen because it was the catch phrase
    that made the least amount of sense.

12
What the Dadaists did
  • Used
  • Mild obscenities
  • Weird humor
  • Visual puns
  • Everyday objects renamed as art
  • Examples
  • Painting a mustache on the Mona Lisa and
    scribbling an obscenity underneath
  • Putting a toilet on display and naming it
    Fountain, and putting a fake signature on it

13
Marcel Duchamp
14
Marcel Duchamp
15
Sophie Taeuber
16
Man Ray The Misunderstood
17
Man Ray A Night at Saint Jean-de-Luz
18
Francis Picabia Hera
19
Surrealism
  • Born out of Dada thought
  • Andre Breton, the leader of the surrealist
    movement, said Surrealism was a revolutionary
    movement.
  • Surrealist works feature
  • the element of surprise
  • unexpected juxtapositions
  • non sequitur
  • Most surrealists regarded their work as an
    expression of PHILOSOPHY--the work itself was
    merely an artifact of that philosophy

19
20
FYI
  • Andre Breton (the leader of Surrealism) served
    in a neurological hospital where he used the
    psychoanalytic methods of Sigmund Freud (more on
    him later) with soldiers who were shell-shocked.
  • Surrealism defined as
  • Dictionary Surrealism, n. Pure psychic
    automatism, by which one proposes to express,
    either verbally, in writing, or by any other
    manner, the real functioning of thought.
    Dictation of thought in the absence of all
    control exercised by reason, outside of all
    aesthetic and moral preoccupation.Encyclopedia
    Surrealism. Philosophy. Surrealism is based on
    the belief in the superior reality of certain
    forms of previously neglected associations, in
    the omnipotence of dream, in the disinterested
    play of thought. It tends to ruin once and for
    all other psychic mechanisms and to substitute
    itself for them in solving all the principal
    problems of life.

21
Andre Masson Pedestal Table in the Studio
21
22
Salvador Dali The Persistence of Memory
23
Dali Rhinoceros Disintegration of Ilissus of
Phidias
24
Dali Metamorphosis of Narcissus
25
DaliSoft Construction With Boiled Beans
(Premonition of Civil War)
26
Dali Accommodations of Desire
27
Max Ernst-- The Elephant Celebus
28
Cubism
  • An earlier movement 20s are Late Cubism, but
    it doesnt emerge in America until then
  • Backlash to Impressionism, which focuses on light
    and color
  • In Cubist artworks, objects are
  • Broken up
  • Analyzed
  • Re-assembled in an abstracted form
  • Instead of depicting objects from one viewpoint,
    the artist depicts multiple viewpoints of a
    subject in order to represent the subject in a
    greater context
  • Often, surfaces intersect at seemingly random
    angles, removing a coherent sense of depth
  • Space shallow and ambiguous

28
29
Pablo Picasso
29
30
Pablo Picasso Le Guitariste
31
Picasso Three Musicians
32
Georges Braque Woman with a Guitar
33
Review and Discuss
  • Without looking at your notes!
  • What is modernism?
  • What is Dada?
  • What is Surrealism?
  • What is Cubism?
  • How are Dadaist, Surrealist, and Cubist art works
    representative of Modernist thought?
  • Why do these art forms flourish in America in the
    20s?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com