Four art articles, 1 page each

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Homework 3

Expressionism: Emotion Driven Art.

Below, you will find a set of readings and videos that will introduce you to artists and art movements that focused on expressing emotion. Fauvism and German Expressionism are both rooted in the first decades of the 20th century, and both movements have expressionist elements.

The Fauvist movement was a short-lived, lasting only about two years (1905-1907) but it was very influential. Fauvism was a French style, and it was strongly influenced by two of the artists we studied back in week 11: Van Gogh and Gauguin. Like those earlier artists, Fauvists used color to express emotion, but didn’t worry much about it accurately representing reality. One of the overall goals of the Fauvists was to create a kind of art that appeared fresh and un-labored, they wanted their paintings to retain the sense of spontaneity that sketches often have.

German Expressionism is a category of expressionism that was roughly parallel with the Fauvist style in France. German Expressionism lasted longer than Fauvism however, and it is also quite diverse, with many subgroups and trends within it. German Expressionists are also highly emotional, but in a different way than the Fauvists. They often focus on the self: the emotional world of the artist, and their interactions with the complex and sometimes frightening conditions of the Modern world.

Reading 1: This set of two articles will introduce you to the Fauvist style and explain its main characteristics.

Click here for the article A beginner's guide to Fauvism

(Links to an external site.)

Click here for the article Fauvism .

(Links to an external site.)

Reading 2: This set of articles and videos will feature several artworks by the leader of the Fauvists and its most influential member: Henri Matisse.

Click here for the article Matisse, Bonheur de Vivre

(Links to an external site.)

Click here for the article Matisse, Goldfish

(Links to an external site.)

Click here for the video Matisse, The Red Studio

(Links to an external site.)

Click here for the article Matisse, The Red Studio

(Links to an external site.)

Reading 3: This set of articles and videos will introduce you to expressionism as a general term, and then move on to introduce German Expressionist artist Ernst Ludwig Kirchner.

Click here for the article Expressionism

(Links to an external site.)

Click here for the article German Expressionism: Themes

(Links to an external site.)

Click here for the article Ernst Ludwig Kirchner

(Links to an external site.)

Click here for the article Kirchner, Self-Portrait As a Soldier

(Links to an external site.)

Click here for the video Kirchner, Street, Dresden

(Links to an external site.)

Click here for the video Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, "Street, Berlin"

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Reading 4: This set of articles and videos focusses on Austrian Expressionist artist Egon Schiele, and artist who died very young, but whose work has since become a hallmark of Expressionism.

Click here for the video Schiele, Seated Male Nude (Self-Portrait)

(Links to an external site.)

Click here for the video Schiele, Hermits

(Links to an external site.)

Click here for the article A Rebel’s Feverish Burst of Insolence

(Links to an external site.)

Click here for the article Egon Schiele: a graphic virtuoso rescued from the wilderness

(Links to an external site.)

Reading 5: German Expressionism had several phases and trends within it. Käthe Kollwitz and Otto Dix—the two artists introduced in this set of readings and videos—are from a slightly later generation of Expressionists in Germany. Both of these artists’ careers were strongly impacted by the rise of the Nazis, and so an article about art in Nazi Germany is also included below.

Click here for the article Käthe Kollwitz 1867–1945

(Links to an external site.)

Click here for the article Käthe Kollwitz, In Memoriam Karl Liebknecht

(Links to an external site.)

Click here for the article The Art of War, Otto Dix’s Der Krieg [War] cycle 1924

(Links to an external site.)

Click here for the video Dix, Portrait of the Journalist Sylvia von Harden

(Links to an external site.)

Click here for the article Art in Nazi Germany

(Links to an external site.)

Reading 6: Not all Expressionism depicted recognizable figures or objects. Vasily Kandinsky is one of the most influential expressionists, and much of his work is fully abstract, and creates emotions with color and shape alone. The article and videos below will introduce you to his work.

Click here for the video Kandinsky, Improvisation 28 (second version), 1912

(Links to an external site.)

Click here for the video Vasily Kandinsky, "Klänge (Sounds)"

(Links to an external site.)

Click here for the article How Kandinsky helped create abstract art

Choose two artworks to write about this lesson: they should be from two different expressionist styles. The expressionist styles we’ve discussed are: Fauvism and several German Expressionist trends (including The Bridge, The Blue Rider, and New Objectivity).

In a 1page double-spaced essay, compare and contrast your two chosen examples. Describe and explain each example on its own, and then discuss the two examples together, focusing on their similarities and differences. Include accurate information about the artists, styles, and historical context by using at least two reputable research sources. Be sure your essay includes a bibliography in MLA form, in-text citations where appropriate, and an introduction and conclusion.

Option 1 Grading Criteria

The student composes a clearly written, error free, 1 page essay:

5 points

The student discusses each of the two artworks accurately and in-depth 10 points

The student compares and contrasts the two images in a thorough and accurate way 10 points

Two reputable research sources are used, and the paper includes a bibliography and in-text citations where appropriate 5 points