Description

Book Synopsis


Table of Contents

Introduction 1

About This Book 1

Foolish Assumptions 2

Icons Used in This Book 2

Beyond the Book 2

Where to Go from Here 3

Part 1: Getting Started with Art History 5

Chapter 1: Art Tour through the Ages 7

Connecting Art Divisions and Culture 8

It’s Ancient History, So Why Dig It Up? 8

Mesopotamian period (3500 bc–500 bc) and Egyptian period (3100 bc–332 bc) 9

Ancient Greek period (c 850 bc–323 bc) and Hellenistic period (323 bc–32 bc) 9

Roman period (300 bc–ad 476) 9

Did the Art World Crash When Rome Fell, or Did It Just Switch Directions? 10

Byzantine period (ad 500–ad 1453) 10

Islamic period (seventh century+) 10

Medieval period (500–1400) 10

High Renaissance (1495–1520) and Mannerism (1530–1580) 10

Baroque period (1600–1750) and Rococo period (1715–1760s) 11

In the Machine Age, Where Did Art Get Its Power? 11

Neoclassicism (1765–1830) 11

Romanticism (late 1700s–early 1800s) 11

The Modern World and the Shattered Mirror 12

Responding to modern pressures 12

Conceptualizing the craft 13

Expressing mixed-up times 13

Chapter 2: Why People Make Art and What It All Means 15

Focusing on the Artist’s Purpose 15

Recording religion, ritual, and mythology 15

Promoting politics and propaganda 16

When I say jump: Art made for patrons 16

Following a personal vision 17

Detecting Design 17

Perceiving pattern 17

Rolling with the rhythm 17

Weighing the balance 17

Looking for contrast 18

Examining emphasis 18

Decoding Meaning 19

The ABCs of visual narrative 19

Sorting symbols 19

Chapter 3: The Major Artistic Movements 21

Distinguishing an Art Period from a Movement 21

Tracking Major 19th-Century Art Movements 22

Realism (1840s–1880s) 22

Impressionism (1869–late 1880s) 22

Post-Impressionism (1886–1892) 22

Moving Off the Rails in the 20th Century 23

Fauvism and Expressionism 23

Cubism, Futurism, Dada, and Surrealism 24

Abstract Expressionism (1946–1950s) 25

Pop Art (1960s) 25

Conceptual art, performance art, and feminist art (late 1960s–1970s) 25

Postmodernism (1970–) 25

Part 2: From Caves to Colosseum: Ancient Art 27

Chapter 4: Magical Hunters and Psychedelic Cave Artists 29

Cool Cave Art or Paleolithic Painting: Why Keep It a Secret? 30

Hunting on a wall 31

Psychedelic shamans with paintbrushes 31

Flirting with Fertility Goddesses 32

Dominoes for Druids: Stonehenge, Menhirs, and Neolithic Architecture 33

Living in the New Stone Age: Çatalhöyük, Göbekli Tepe, and Skara Brae 33

Cracking the mystery of the megaliths and menhirs 34

Chapter 5: Fickle Gods, Warrior Art, and the Birth of Writing: Mesopotamian Art 37

Climbing toward the Clouds: Sumerian Architecture 38

Zigzagging to Heaven: Ziggurats 38

The Tower of Babel 39

The Eyes Have It: Scoping Out Sumerian Sculpture 39

Worshipping graven images 40

Stare-down with God: Statuettes from Abu Temple 40

Playing Puabi’s Lyre 41

Unraveling the Standard of Ur 42

Stalking Stone Warriors: Akkadian Art 43

Stamped in Stone: Hammurabi’s Code 43

Unlocking Assyrian Art 44

Babylon Has a Baby: New Babylon 45

Chapter 6: One Foot in the Tomb: Ancient Egyptian Art 47

Ancient Egypt 101 48

Segmenting the Egyptian periods 48

Thanking the Nile 49

The Art of a Unified Egypt 49

Depicting the unification 49

Noting art as history in the Palette of Narmer 50

The Egyptian Style: Proportion and Orientation 51

Excavating Old Kingdom Architecture 52

Early mastabas and step pyramids 52

Turning to stone 53

Making the architecture great 53

Spending life preparing for death 54

The In-Between Period and Middle Kingdom Realism 55

New Kingdom Art 56

Hatshepsut: A female phenom 56

Akhenaten and Egyptian family values 56

Raiding King Tut’s tomb treasures 58

Admiring the world’s most beautiful dead woman’s tomb 59

Decoding Books of the Dead 59

Too-big-to-forget sculpture 61

Chapter 7: Greek Art, the Olympian Ego, and the Inventors of the Modern World 63

Mingling with the Minoans: Snake Goddesses, Minotaurs, and Bull Jumpers 64

Greek Sculpture: Stark Symmetry to a Delicate Balance 66

Kouros to Kritios Boy 66

Golden Age sculptors: Myron, Polykleitos, and Phidias 68

Fourth-century sculpture 70

Figuring Out Greek Vase Painting 71

Cool stick figures: The geometric style 71

Black-figure and red-figure techniques 72

Rummaging through Ruins: Greek Architecture 73

Greece without Borders: Hellenism 76

Sculpting passion and struggle 76

Honoring the classical in a new world 77

Chapter 8: Etruscan and Roman Art: It’s All Greek to Me! 79

The Mysterious Etruscans 79

Temple to tomb: Greek influence 79

Smiles in stone: The eternally happy Etruscans 80

Infusing Art with Roman Influence 80

Linking the territory that was Rome 82

Art as mirror: Roman realism and

Republican sculptural portraits 82

Progressing on to propaganda 83

Shirking idealism for authenticity 84

Realism in painting 85

Roman mosaics 86

Revealing Roman Architecture: A Marriage of Style and Engineering 87

Temple of Portunus 87

Maison Carrée 88

Roman aqueducts 88

The Colosseum 88

The Pantheon 90

Part 3: Art after the Fall of Rome: ad 500–ad 1760 93

Chapter 9: The Graven Image: Early Christian, Byzantine, and Islamic Art 95

The Rise and Fall of Constantinople 95

Christianizing Rome 96

After the fall: Divisions and schisms 96

Early Christian Art in the West 96

Rejecting paganism 97

Drawing on Roman art and culture 97

Byzantine Art Meets Imperial Splendor 98

Justinian and Early Byzantine architecture 98

Amazing mosaics: Puzzle art 100

San Vitale: Justinian and Theodora mosaics 101

The mosaics of St Mark’s Basilica, Venice, Italy (Middle Byzantine) 103

Icons and iconoclasm 103

Islamic Art: Architectural Pathways to God 106

The Mosque of Córdoba 107

The dazzling Alhambra 109

A temple of love: The Taj Mahal 110

Chapter 10: Mystics, Marauders, and Manuscripts: Medieval Art 113

Irish Light: Illuminated Manuscripts 114

A unique Christian mission 114

Browsing the Book of Kells, Lindisfarne Gospels, and other manuscripts 114

Drolleries and the fun style 116

Charlemagne: King of His Own Renaissance 117

Weaving and Unweaving the Battle of Hastings: The Bayeux Tapestry 117

Providing a battle blueprint 117

Portraying everyday life in medieval England and France 118

Peddling political propaganda 119

Making border crossings 119

Romanesque Architecture: Churches That Squat 120

St Sernin 120

Durham Cathedral 121

Romanesque Sculpture 122

Nightmares in stone: Romanesque relief 123

Roman sculpture revival 123

Relics and Reliquaries: Miraculous Leftovers 123

Gothic Grandeur: Churches That Soar 125

Building a church-and-state alliance 125

Bigger and brighter 125

Making something new from old parts 126

Finishing touches and voilà! 127

Expanding the Gothic dream 127

Stained-Glass Storytelling 127

Gothic Sculpture 128

Italian Gothic 129

Gothic Painting: Cimabue, Duccio, and Giotto 130

Cimabue 130

Duccio 132

Giotto 133

Tracking the Lady and the Unicorn: The Mystical Tapestries of Cluny 134

Themes of love and desire? 134

Themes with religious connotation? 135

The questions remain 136

Chapter 11: Born-Again Culture: The Early and High Renaissance 137

The Early Renaissance in Central Italy 138

The Great Door Contest: Brunelleschi versus Ghiberti — And the winner is! 138

The Duomo of Florence 139

Vanishing points and perspective 140

Sandro Botticelli: A garden-variety Venus 144

Donatello: Putting statues back on their feet 145

The High Renaissance 146

Reviving self-respect 146

Elevating humanity in art 147

Leonardo da Vinci: Renaissance man 147

Leonardo’s techniques 147

Leonardo’s greatest works 148

Michelangelo: The main man 150

Michelangelo’s greatest works 152

Raphael: The prince of painters 153

Chapter 12: Venetian Renaissance, Late Gothic, and the Renaissance in the North 157

A Gondola Ride through the Venetian Renaissance 158

First stop, Bellini 158

A shortcut to Mantegna and Giorgione 160

Dürer’s Venice vacations 161

Touring the 16th century with Titian 162

The Venice of Veronese 164

Tintoretto and Renaissance ego 165

La Tintoretta: Marietta Robusti 166

Palladio: The king of classicism 167

Late Gothic: Northern Naturalism 168

Jan van Eyck: The Late Gothic ace 168

Rogier van der Weyden: Front and center 169

Northern Exposure: The Renaissance in the Netherlands and Germany 172

Decoding Bosch 172

Deciphering the dark symbolism of Grünewald 174

Dining with Bruegel the Elder 175

Chapter 13: Art That’ll Stretch Your Neck: Mannerism 177

Detecting the Non-Rules of Mannerism 177

Pontormo: Front and Center 178

Bronzino’s Background Symbols and Scene Layering 179

Parmigianino: He’s Not a Cheese! 180

Contrasting proportions and balance 181

A surreal feel 181

Arcimboldo: À la Carte Art 182

Sofonisba Anguissola (1532–1625): Invading Art History’s Guys’ Club 183

Finding a place in the Spanish court 183

Rubbing elbows with the court painters 184

El Greco: Stretched to the Limit 185

Evolving a unique Mannerist style 185

Drawing inspiration from mysticism 185

How unappreciated was El Greco? 186

Lavinia Fontana: The First Professional Female Painter 187

Applying a rich education and broad network 187

Supplying the missing female storyline 187

Endowing Jesus with more humanity 188

Finding Your Footing in Giulio Romano’s Palazzo Te 189

Architectural surprises outside 190

An inside to die for 190

Chapter 14: When the Renaissance Went Baroque 193

Baroque Origin, Purpose, and Style 194

Annibale Carracci: Heavenly Ceilings 194

Shedding Light on the Subject: Caravaggio and His Followers 195

Elements of Caravaggio style 195

Caravaggio style applied 196

Orazio Gentileschi: Baroque’s gentle side, more or less 197

Shadow and light dramas: Artemisia Gentileschi 197

Elisabetta Sirani and an Art School for Women 199

Sirani’s notable career 199

Portraying brave and capable women 200

The Ecstasy and the Ecstasy: Bernini Sculpture 202

Embracing Baroque Architecture 203

Maderno and the launch of Baroque architecture 203

Bernini: Transforming St Peter’s Basilica 203

Baroque style migrates northward 204

Fischer: Harmonizing Baroque style 204

Dutch and Flemish Realism 205

Rubens: Fleshy, flashy, and holy 206

Rembrandt: Self-portraits and life in the shadows 207

Laughing with Hals 209

Bold Strokes: Judith Leyster 209

Vermeer: Musicians, maids, and girls with pearls 212

French Flourish and Baroque Light Shows 213

Poussin the Perfect 213

Candlelit reverie and Georges de La Tour 213

Versailles: Architecture as propaganda and the Sun King 214

In the Limelight with Caravaggio: The Spanish Golden Age 215

Ribera and Zurbarán: In the shadow of Caravaggio 215

Velázquez: Kings and princesses 216

Chapter 15: Going Loco with Rococo 219

What You Get in Rococo Art 220

Breaking with Baroque: Antoine Watteau 221

Fragonard and Boucher: Lush, Lusty, and Lavish 222

François Boucher 222

Jean-Honoré Fragonard 222

Flying High: Giovanni Battista Tiepolo 223

Rococo Lite: The Movement in England 223

William Hogarth 224

Thomas Gainsborough 224

Sir Joshua Reynolds 226

Part 4: The Industrial Revolution Revs Up Art’s Evolution: 1760–1900 229

Chapter 16: All Roads Lead Back to Rome and Greece: Neoclassical Art 231

When Philosophers and Artists Join Forces 232

The promotion of reason 232

Enlightened views and political progress 232

Angelica Kauffman: The Queen of Neoclassicism 233

Focusing on women and brother- or sisterhood 233

Not everyone loved the depictions 235

Jacques-Louis David: The King of Neoclassicism 235

Grand, formal, and retro 236

Propagandist for all sides 237

Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres: The Prince of Neoclassical Portraiture 238

Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun: Portraitist of the Queen and Fashion Setter 239

Illustrating fashion trends 240

Fleeing for her life 241

Adélaïde Labille-Guiard: From Ideal to Real and Royals to Revolutionaries 241

Starting with socially acceptable miniatures 242

Graduating to sizeable self-portraiture 242

Working with the Revolutionaries 243

Canova and Houdon: Greek Grace and Neoclassical Sculpture 243

Antonio Canova: Ace 18th-century sculptor 243

Jean-Antoine Houdon: In living stone 244

Chapter 17: Romanticism: Reaching Within and Acting Out 247

Kissing Isn’t Romantic, but Having a Heart Is 247

Romancing independence 248

Romancing spirituality 248

Romancing the wild 249

Far Out with William Blake and Henry Fuseli: Personal Mythologies 249

Unifying body and soul 249

Drawing on imagination 250

Inside Out: Caspar David Friedrich 251

The Revolutionary French Romantics: Gericault and Delacroix 252

Théodore Gericault 252

Eugène Delacroix 253

Francisco Goya and the Grotesque 255

J. M. W. Turner Sets the Skies on Fire 257

Rebels with a Cause 260

Courbet and Daumier: Painting Peasants and Urban Blight 261

Gustave Courbet 261

Honoré Daumier: Guts and grit 262

The Barbizon School and the Great Outdoors 263

Jean-François Millet: The noble peasants 263

Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot: From naked truth to dressed-up reality 264

Rosa Bonheur: From a Horse Fair to Buffalo Bill 265

Portraying the Paris horse fair 266

Gaining world-wide renown 267

Keeping It Real in America 267

Along came Thomas Cole 267

Westward ho! with Albert Bierstadt 269

George Catlin, painter of western Indian tribes 271

Edmonia Lewis 272

Navigating sun, storm, and sea with Winslow Homer 272

Boating through America with Thomas Eakins 273

The Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood: Medieval Visions and Painting Literature 273

Dante Gabriel Rossetti: Leader of the Pre-Raphaelites 274

Marie Spartali Stillman: From model to artist 275

John Everett Millais and soft-spoken symbolism 276

The Ten: America’s First Art Movement 276

Celebrating the leisure class 277

Creating art for art’s sake 278

Ashcan Artists: Capturing the Grit of Urban Life 278

Presenting the urban underbelly 278

Illustrating the rough life 279

Chapter 19: First Impressions: Impressionism 281

M & M: Manet and Monet 282

Édouard Manet: Breaking the rules 283

Claude Monet: From patches to flecks 284

Pretty Women and Painted Ladies: Renoir and Degas 286

Impressionists and the movement’s midlife crisis 287

Pretty as a picture: Pierre-Auguste Renoir 287

The dancers of Edgar Degas 288

Cassatt, Morisot, and Other Female Impressionists 289

Mary Cassatt 290

Berthe Morisot 291

Eva Gonzalès 292

American Impressionism 293

William Merritt Chase: An Impressionist with Realist ties 293

Frieseke in the Giverny American Art Colony 294

Jane Peterson 295

Chapter 20: Making Their Own Impression: The Post-Impressionists 297

You’ve Got a Point: Pointillism, Georges-Pierre Seurat and Paul Signac 297

Observing the science of color 297

Applying the science of color 298

Red-Light Art: Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec 299

Tracking the “Noble Savage”: Paul Gauguin 300

Brittany paintings 301

Tahiti paintings 302

Gauguin’s influence 302

Painting Energy: Vincent van Gogh 303

Trading the ministry for art 303

Expanding artistic energy 303

Painting while confined 304

Love Cast in Stone: Rodin and Claudel 304

Auguste Rodin 305

Camille Claudel 306

The Mask behind the Face: James Ensor 306

The Hills Are Alive with Geometry: Paul Cézanne 308

Art Nouveau: Curves, Swirls, and Asymmetry 309

Art Nouveau: Not a painting style 309

Making functionality pretty 310

Fairy-Tale Fancies and the Sandcastle Cathedral of Barcelona: Antoni Gaudí 310

Part 5: Twentieth and Twenty-First Century Art 313

Chapter 21: From Fauvism to Expressionism 315

Fauvism: Colors Fighting like Animals 315

Henri Matisse 316

André Derain 317

Maurice de Vlaminck 317

German Expressionism: Form Based on Feeling 318

Die Brücke and World War I 318

Der Blaue Reiter 321

Austrian Expressionism: From Dream to Nightmare 324

Gustav Klimt and his languorous ladies 325

Egon Schiele: Turning the self inside out 325

Oskar Kokoschka: Dark dreams and interior storms 326

Chapter 22: Cubist Puzzles and Finding the Fast Lane with the Futurists 329

Cubism: All Views At Once 329

Pablo Picasso 330

Analytic Cubism: Breaking things apart 332

Synthetic Cubism: Gluing things together 332

Fernand Léger: Cubism for the commoner 333

Futurism: Art That Broke the Speed Limit 333

Umberto Boccioni 335

Gino Severini 335

Precisionism: Geometry as Art 336

The Harlem Renaissance and the Jazz Age 338

Chapter 23: Nonobjective Art: Dada, Surrealism, and Abstract Expressionism 343

Suprematism: Kazimir Malevich’s Reinvention of Space 343

The path to Suprematism 344

Reinventing the world in shape and color 344

Constructivism: Showing Off Your Skeleton 345

Tatlin’s Tower 346

A dance between time and space: Naum Gabo 346

Piet Mondrian and the De Stijl Movement 347

Dada Turns the World on Its Head 347

Dada, the ground floor, and Cabaret Voltaire 348

Dada: Influencee and influencer 348

Marcel Duchamp: Nudes, urinals, and hat racks 349

Hans (Jean) Arp: In and out of Dadaland 350

Surrealism and Disjointed Dreams 351

Max Ernst and his alter ego, Loplop 351

Salvador Dalí: Melting clocks, dreamscapes, and ants 352

René Magritte: Help, my head’s on backwards! 354

Dissecting Frida Kahlo 354

Joan Miro 356

My House Is a Machine: Modernist Architecture 357

Frank Lloyd Wright: Bringing the outside in 357

Bauhaus boxes: Walter Gropius 359

Le Corbusier: Machines for living and Notre-Dame du Haut 359

Abstract Expressionism: Fireworks on Canvas 361

Arshile Gorky 361

Jackson Pollock: Flick, fling, drip, splash, swirl — action painting 362

Lee Krasner: Almost patterns 363

Willem de Kooning 364

Chapter 24: Anything-Goes Art: Fab Fifties and Psychedelic Sixties 365

Artsy Cartoons: Pop Art 365

The many faces of Andy Warhol 366

Blam! Comic books on canvas: Roy Lichtenstein 367

Fantastic Realism 368

Ernst Fuchs: The father of the Fantastic Realists 368

Hundertwasser: Organic architecture and art 369

Louise Nevelson: Picking up the Trash and Assemblage 370

Louise Bourgeois: Sexualized sculpture 371

Less-Is-More Art: Rothko, Newman, Stella, Frankenthaler, and Others 372

Color Fields of dreams: Rothko and Newman 372

Helen Frankenthaler 373

Minimalism, more or less 373

Photorealism 374

Richard Estes: Always in focus 374

Clinical close-ups: Chuck Close 375

Helen Hardin: Native American Futurism 375

Performance Art and Installations 376

Fluxus: Intersections of the arts 376

Joseph Beuys: Fanning out from Fluxus 377

Carolee Schneemann: Body art and breaking taboos 378

Chapter 25: Photography: From Science to Art 381

The Birth of Photography 381

Transitioning from Science to Art 382

An early attempt to “artify” photography 383

Focusing on documentary photography 384

Alfred Stieglitz: Reliving the Moment 384

Recognition for photography as high art 385

Picturesque pictures 385

Henri Cartier-Bresson’s uncanny eye 386

From painting to photography 386

Stealth and the “Decisive Moment” 386

Group f/64: Edward Weston, Imogen Cunningham, and Ansel Adams 387

Dorothea Lange: Depression to Dust Bowl 388

Margaret Bourke-White: From Industrial Beauty to Political Statements 389

Photographing for Fortune 389

Photographing for Life 389

Fast-Forward: The Next Generation 391

Chapter 26: The New World: Postmodern Art 393

From Modern Pyramids to Titanium Twists: Postmodern Architecture 393

Viva Las Vegas! 394

Chestnut Hill: Case in point 394

Philip Johnson and urban furniture 395

The prismatic architecture of I M Pei 395

Deconstructivist architecture of Peter Eisenman, Frank Gehry, and Zaha Hadid 396

Making It or Faking It? Postmodern Photography and Painting 399

Cindy Sherman: Morphing herself 399

Gerhard Richter: Reading between the layers 400

Installation Art and Earth Art 401

Judy Chicago: A dinner table you can’t sit at 401

It’s a wrap: Christo and Jeanne-Claude 402

Robert Smithson and earth art: Can you dig it? 403

Glow-in-the-Dark Bunnies and Living, Genetic Art 404

Part 6: The Part of Tens 407

Chapter 27: Ten Must-See Art Museums 409

The Louvre (Paris) 409

The Uffizi (Florence) 410

The Vatican Museums (Rome) 410

The National Gallery (London) 410

The Metropolitan Museum of Art (NYC) 410

The Prado (Madrid) 411

The National Gallery of Art (D.C.) 411

The Rijksmuseum (Amsterdam) 411

British Museum (London) 412

The Kunsthistorisches Museum (Vienna) 412

Chapter 28: Ten Great Books by Ten Great Artists 413

On Painting, by Leonardo da Vinci 413

Lives of the Most Eminent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects, by Giorgio Vasari 413

Complete Poems and Selected Letters of Michelangelo 414

The Journal of Eugène Delacroix 414

Van Gogh’s Letters 414

Rodin on Art, by Paul Gsell 414

Der Blaue Reiter Almanac, edited by Wassily Kandinsky and Franz Marc 414

Concerning the Spiritual in Art, by Wassily Kandinsky 415

The Diary of Frida Kahlo: An Intimate Self-Portrait 415

Hundertwasser Architecture: For a More Human Architecture in Harmony with Nature, by Friedensreich Hundertwasser 415

And Others 415

Index 417

Art History For Dummies

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      Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
      Publication Date: 21/06/2022
      ISBN13: 9781119868668, 978-1119868668
      ISBN10: 1119868661

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Table of Contents

      Introduction 1

      About This Book 1

      Foolish Assumptions 2

      Icons Used in This Book 2

      Beyond the Book 2

      Where to Go from Here 3

      Part 1: Getting Started with Art History 5

      Chapter 1: Art Tour through the Ages 7

      Connecting Art Divisions and Culture 8

      It’s Ancient History, So Why Dig It Up? 8

      Mesopotamian period (3500 bc–500 bc) and Egyptian period (3100 bc–332 bc) 9

      Ancient Greek period (c 850 bc–323 bc) and Hellenistic period (323 bc–32 bc) 9

      Roman period (300 bc–ad 476) 9

      Did the Art World Crash When Rome Fell, or Did It Just Switch Directions? 10

      Byzantine period (ad 500–ad 1453) 10

      Islamic period (seventh century+) 10

      Medieval period (500–1400) 10

      High Renaissance (1495–1520) and Mannerism (1530–1580) 10

      Baroque period (1600–1750) and Rococo period (1715–1760s) 11

      In the Machine Age, Where Did Art Get Its Power? 11

      Neoclassicism (1765–1830) 11

      Romanticism (late 1700s–early 1800s) 11

      The Modern World and the Shattered Mirror 12

      Responding to modern pressures 12

      Conceptualizing the craft 13

      Expressing mixed-up times 13

      Chapter 2: Why People Make Art and What It All Means 15

      Focusing on the Artist’s Purpose 15

      Recording religion, ritual, and mythology 15

      Promoting politics and propaganda 16

      When I say jump: Art made for patrons 16

      Following a personal vision 17

      Detecting Design 17

      Perceiving pattern 17

      Rolling with the rhythm 17

      Weighing the balance 17

      Looking for contrast 18

      Examining emphasis 18

      Decoding Meaning 19

      The ABCs of visual narrative 19

      Sorting symbols 19

      Chapter 3: The Major Artistic Movements 21

      Distinguishing an Art Period from a Movement 21

      Tracking Major 19th-Century Art Movements 22

      Realism (1840s–1880s) 22

      Impressionism (1869–late 1880s) 22

      Post-Impressionism (1886–1892) 22

      Moving Off the Rails in the 20th Century 23

      Fauvism and Expressionism 23

      Cubism, Futurism, Dada, and Surrealism 24

      Abstract Expressionism (1946–1950s) 25

      Pop Art (1960s) 25

      Conceptual art, performance art, and feminist art (late 1960s–1970s) 25

      Postmodernism (1970–) 25

      Part 2: From Caves to Colosseum: Ancient Art 27

      Chapter 4: Magical Hunters and Psychedelic Cave Artists 29

      Cool Cave Art or Paleolithic Painting: Why Keep It a Secret? 30

      Hunting on a wall 31

      Psychedelic shamans with paintbrushes 31

      Flirting with Fertility Goddesses 32

      Dominoes for Druids: Stonehenge, Menhirs, and Neolithic Architecture 33

      Living in the New Stone Age: Çatalhöyük, Göbekli Tepe, and Skara Brae 33

      Cracking the mystery of the megaliths and menhirs 34

      Chapter 5: Fickle Gods, Warrior Art, and the Birth of Writing: Mesopotamian Art 37

      Climbing toward the Clouds: Sumerian Architecture 38

      Zigzagging to Heaven: Ziggurats 38

      The Tower of Babel 39

      The Eyes Have It: Scoping Out Sumerian Sculpture 39

      Worshipping graven images 40

      Stare-down with God: Statuettes from Abu Temple 40

      Playing Puabi’s Lyre 41

      Unraveling the Standard of Ur 42

      Stalking Stone Warriors: Akkadian Art 43

      Stamped in Stone: Hammurabi’s Code 43

      Unlocking Assyrian Art 44

      Babylon Has a Baby: New Babylon 45

      Chapter 6: One Foot in the Tomb: Ancient Egyptian Art 47

      Ancient Egypt 101 48

      Segmenting the Egyptian periods 48

      Thanking the Nile 49

      The Art of a Unified Egypt 49

      Depicting the unification 49

      Noting art as history in the Palette of Narmer 50

      The Egyptian Style: Proportion and Orientation 51

      Excavating Old Kingdom Architecture 52

      Early mastabas and step pyramids 52

      Turning to stone 53

      Making the architecture great 53

      Spending life preparing for death 54

      The In-Between Period and Middle Kingdom Realism 55

      New Kingdom Art 56

      Hatshepsut: A female phenom 56

      Akhenaten and Egyptian family values 56

      Raiding King Tut’s tomb treasures 58

      Admiring the world’s most beautiful dead woman’s tomb 59

      Decoding Books of the Dead 59

      Too-big-to-forget sculpture 61

      Chapter 7: Greek Art, the Olympian Ego, and the Inventors of the Modern World 63

      Mingling with the Minoans: Snake Goddesses, Minotaurs, and Bull Jumpers 64

      Greek Sculpture: Stark Symmetry to a Delicate Balance 66

      Kouros to Kritios Boy 66

      Golden Age sculptors: Myron, Polykleitos, and Phidias 68

      Fourth-century sculpture 70

      Figuring Out Greek Vase Painting 71

      Cool stick figures: The geometric style 71

      Black-figure and red-figure techniques 72

      Rummaging through Ruins: Greek Architecture 73

      Greece without Borders: Hellenism 76

      Sculpting passion and struggle 76

      Honoring the classical in a new world 77

      Chapter 8: Etruscan and Roman Art: It’s All Greek to Me! 79

      The Mysterious Etruscans 79

      Temple to tomb: Greek influence 79

      Smiles in stone: The eternally happy Etruscans 80

      Infusing Art with Roman Influence 80

      Linking the territory that was Rome 82

      Art as mirror: Roman realism and

      Republican sculptural portraits 82

      Progressing on to propaganda 83

      Shirking idealism for authenticity 84

      Realism in painting 85

      Roman mosaics 86

      Revealing Roman Architecture: A Marriage of Style and Engineering 87

      Temple of Portunus 87

      Maison Carrée 88

      Roman aqueducts 88

      The Colosseum 88

      The Pantheon 90

      Part 3: Art after the Fall of Rome: ad 500–ad 1760 93

      Chapter 9: The Graven Image: Early Christian, Byzantine, and Islamic Art 95

      The Rise and Fall of Constantinople 95

      Christianizing Rome 96

      After the fall: Divisions and schisms 96

      Early Christian Art in the West 96

      Rejecting paganism 97

      Drawing on Roman art and culture 97

      Byzantine Art Meets Imperial Splendor 98

      Justinian and Early Byzantine architecture 98

      Amazing mosaics: Puzzle art 100

      San Vitale: Justinian and Theodora mosaics 101

      The mosaics of St Mark’s Basilica, Venice, Italy (Middle Byzantine) 103

      Icons and iconoclasm 103

      Islamic Art: Architectural Pathways to God 106

      The Mosque of Córdoba 107

      The dazzling Alhambra 109

      A temple of love: The Taj Mahal 110

      Chapter 10: Mystics, Marauders, and Manuscripts: Medieval Art 113

      Irish Light: Illuminated Manuscripts 114

      A unique Christian mission 114

      Browsing the Book of Kells, Lindisfarne Gospels, and other manuscripts 114

      Drolleries and the fun style 116

      Charlemagne: King of His Own Renaissance 117

      Weaving and Unweaving the Battle of Hastings: The Bayeux Tapestry 117

      Providing a battle blueprint 117

      Portraying everyday life in medieval England and France 118

      Peddling political propaganda 119

      Making border crossings 119

      Romanesque Architecture: Churches That Squat 120

      St Sernin 120

      Durham Cathedral 121

      Romanesque Sculpture 122

      Nightmares in stone: Romanesque relief 123

      Roman sculpture revival 123

      Relics and Reliquaries: Miraculous Leftovers 123

      Gothic Grandeur: Churches That Soar 125

      Building a church-and-state alliance 125

      Bigger and brighter 125

      Making something new from old parts 126

      Finishing touches and voilà! 127

      Expanding the Gothic dream 127

      Stained-Glass Storytelling 127

      Gothic Sculpture 128

      Italian Gothic 129

      Gothic Painting: Cimabue, Duccio, and Giotto 130

      Cimabue 130

      Duccio 132

      Giotto 133

      Tracking the Lady and the Unicorn: The Mystical Tapestries of Cluny 134

      Themes of love and desire? 134

      Themes with religious connotation? 135

      The questions remain 136

      Chapter 11: Born-Again Culture: The Early and High Renaissance 137

      The Early Renaissance in Central Italy 138

      The Great Door Contest: Brunelleschi versus Ghiberti — And the winner is! 138

      The Duomo of Florence 139

      Vanishing points and perspective 140

      Sandro Botticelli: A garden-variety Venus 144

      Donatello: Putting statues back on their feet 145

      The High Renaissance 146

      Reviving self-respect 146

      Elevating humanity in art 147

      Leonardo da Vinci: Renaissance man 147

      Leonardo’s techniques 147

      Leonardo’s greatest works 148

      Michelangelo: The main man 150

      Michelangelo’s greatest works 152

      Raphael: The prince of painters 153

      Chapter 12: Venetian Renaissance, Late Gothic, and the Renaissance in the North 157

      A Gondola Ride through the Venetian Renaissance 158

      First stop, Bellini 158

      A shortcut to Mantegna and Giorgione 160

      Dürer’s Venice vacations 161

      Touring the 16th century with Titian 162

      The Venice of Veronese 164

      Tintoretto and Renaissance ego 165

      La Tintoretta: Marietta Robusti 166

      Palladio: The king of classicism 167

      Late Gothic: Northern Naturalism 168

      Jan van Eyck: The Late Gothic ace 168

      Rogier van der Weyden: Front and center 169

      Northern Exposure: The Renaissance in the Netherlands and Germany 172

      Decoding Bosch 172

      Deciphering the dark symbolism of Grünewald 174

      Dining with Bruegel the Elder 175

      Chapter 13: Art That’ll Stretch Your Neck: Mannerism 177

      Detecting the Non-Rules of Mannerism 177

      Pontormo: Front and Center 178

      Bronzino’s Background Symbols and Scene Layering 179

      Parmigianino: He’s Not a Cheese! 180

      Contrasting proportions and balance 181

      A surreal feel 181

      Arcimboldo: À la Carte Art 182

      Sofonisba Anguissola (1532–1625): Invading Art History’s Guys’ Club 183

      Finding a place in the Spanish court 183

      Rubbing elbows with the court painters 184

      El Greco: Stretched to the Limit 185

      Evolving a unique Mannerist style 185

      Drawing inspiration from mysticism 185

      How unappreciated was El Greco? 186

      Lavinia Fontana: The First Professional Female Painter 187

      Applying a rich education and broad network 187

      Supplying the missing female storyline 187

      Endowing Jesus with more humanity 188

      Finding Your Footing in Giulio Romano’s Palazzo Te 189

      Architectural surprises outside 190

      An inside to die for 190

      Chapter 14: When the Renaissance Went Baroque 193

      Baroque Origin, Purpose, and Style 194

      Annibale Carracci: Heavenly Ceilings 194

      Shedding Light on the Subject: Caravaggio and His Followers 195

      Elements of Caravaggio style 195

      Caravaggio style applied 196

      Orazio Gentileschi: Baroque’s gentle side, more or less 197

      Shadow and light dramas: Artemisia Gentileschi 197

      Elisabetta Sirani and an Art School for Women 199

      Sirani’s notable career 199

      Portraying brave and capable women 200

      The Ecstasy and the Ecstasy: Bernini Sculpture 202

      Embracing Baroque Architecture 203

      Maderno and the launch of Baroque architecture 203

      Bernini: Transforming St Peter’s Basilica 203

      Baroque style migrates northward 204

      Fischer: Harmonizing Baroque style 204

      Dutch and Flemish Realism 205

      Rubens: Fleshy, flashy, and holy 206

      Rembrandt: Self-portraits and life in the shadows 207

      Laughing with Hals 209

      Bold Strokes: Judith Leyster 209

      Vermeer: Musicians, maids, and girls with pearls 212

      French Flourish and Baroque Light Shows 213

      Poussin the Perfect 213

      Candlelit reverie and Georges de La Tour 213

      Versailles: Architecture as propaganda and the Sun King 214

      In the Limelight with Caravaggio: The Spanish Golden Age 215

      Ribera and Zurbarán: In the shadow of Caravaggio 215

      Velázquez: Kings and princesses 216

      Chapter 15: Going Loco with Rococo 219

      What You Get in Rococo Art 220

      Breaking with Baroque: Antoine Watteau 221

      Fragonard and Boucher: Lush, Lusty, and Lavish 222

      François Boucher 222

      Jean-Honoré Fragonard 222

      Flying High: Giovanni Battista Tiepolo 223

      Rococo Lite: The Movement in England 223

      William Hogarth 224

      Thomas Gainsborough 224

      Sir Joshua Reynolds 226

      Part 4: The Industrial Revolution Revs Up Art’s Evolution: 1760–1900 229

      Chapter 16: All Roads Lead Back to Rome and Greece: Neoclassical Art 231

      When Philosophers and Artists Join Forces 232

      The promotion of reason 232

      Enlightened views and political progress 232

      Angelica Kauffman: The Queen of Neoclassicism 233

      Focusing on women and brother- or sisterhood 233

      Not everyone loved the depictions 235

      Jacques-Louis David: The King of Neoclassicism 235

      Grand, formal, and retro 236

      Propagandist for all sides 237

      Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres: The Prince of Neoclassical Portraiture 238

      Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun: Portraitist of the Queen and Fashion Setter 239

      Illustrating fashion trends 240

      Fleeing for her life 241

      Adélaïde Labille-Guiard: From Ideal to Real and Royals to Revolutionaries 241

      Starting with socially acceptable miniatures 242

      Graduating to sizeable self-portraiture 242

      Working with the Revolutionaries 243

      Canova and Houdon: Greek Grace and Neoclassical Sculpture 243

      Antonio Canova: Ace 18th-century sculptor 243

      Jean-Antoine Houdon: In living stone 244

      Chapter 17: Romanticism: Reaching Within and Acting Out 247

      Kissing Isn’t Romantic, but Having a Heart Is 247

      Romancing independence 248

      Romancing spirituality 248

      Romancing the wild 249

      Far Out with William Blake and Henry Fuseli: Personal Mythologies 249

      Unifying body and soul 249

      Drawing on imagination 250

      Inside Out: Caspar David Friedrich 251

      The Revolutionary French Romantics: Gericault and Delacroix 252

      Théodore Gericault 252

      Eugène Delacroix 253

      Francisco Goya and the Grotesque 255

      J. M. W. Turner Sets the Skies on Fire 257

      Rebels with a Cause 260

      Courbet and Daumier: Painting Peasants and Urban Blight 261

      Gustave Courbet 261

      Honoré Daumier: Guts and grit 262

      The Barbizon School and the Great Outdoors 263

      Jean-François Millet: The noble peasants 263

      Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot: From naked truth to dressed-up reality 264

      Rosa Bonheur: From a Horse Fair to Buffalo Bill 265

      Portraying the Paris horse fair 266

      Gaining world-wide renown 267

      Keeping It Real in America 267

      Along came Thomas Cole 267

      Westward ho! with Albert Bierstadt 269

      George Catlin, painter of western Indian tribes 271

      Edmonia Lewis 272

      Navigating sun, storm, and sea with Winslow Homer 272

      Boating through America with Thomas Eakins 273

      The Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood: Medieval Visions and Painting Literature 273

      Dante Gabriel Rossetti: Leader of the Pre-Raphaelites 274

      Marie Spartali Stillman: From model to artist 275

      John Everett Millais and soft-spoken symbolism 276

      The Ten: America’s First Art Movement 276

      Celebrating the leisure class 277

      Creating art for art’s sake 278

      Ashcan Artists: Capturing the Grit of Urban Life 278

      Presenting the urban underbelly 278

      Illustrating the rough life 279

      Chapter 19: First Impressions: Impressionism 281

      M & M: Manet and Monet 282

      Édouard Manet: Breaking the rules 283

      Claude Monet: From patches to flecks 284

      Pretty Women and Painted Ladies: Renoir and Degas 286

      Impressionists and the movement’s midlife crisis 287

      Pretty as a picture: Pierre-Auguste Renoir 287

      The dancers of Edgar Degas 288

      Cassatt, Morisot, and Other Female Impressionists 289

      Mary Cassatt 290

      Berthe Morisot 291

      Eva Gonzalès 292

      American Impressionism 293

      William Merritt Chase: An Impressionist with Realist ties 293

      Frieseke in the Giverny American Art Colony 294

      Jane Peterson 295

      Chapter 20: Making Their Own Impression: The Post-Impressionists 297

      You’ve Got a Point: Pointillism, Georges-Pierre Seurat and Paul Signac 297

      Observing the science of color 297

      Applying the science of color 298

      Red-Light Art: Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec 299

      Tracking the “Noble Savage”: Paul Gauguin 300

      Brittany paintings 301

      Tahiti paintings 302

      Gauguin’s influence 302

      Painting Energy: Vincent van Gogh 303

      Trading the ministry for art 303

      Expanding artistic energy 303

      Painting while confined 304

      Love Cast in Stone: Rodin and Claudel 304

      Auguste Rodin 305

      Camille Claudel 306

      The Mask behind the Face: James Ensor 306

      The Hills Are Alive with Geometry: Paul Cézanne 308

      Art Nouveau: Curves, Swirls, and Asymmetry 309

      Art Nouveau: Not a painting style 309

      Making functionality pretty 310

      Fairy-Tale Fancies and the Sandcastle Cathedral of Barcelona: Antoni Gaudí 310

      Part 5: Twentieth and Twenty-First Century Art 313

      Chapter 21: From Fauvism to Expressionism 315

      Fauvism: Colors Fighting like Animals 315

      Henri Matisse 316

      André Derain 317

      Maurice de Vlaminck 317

      German Expressionism: Form Based on Feeling 318

      Die Brücke and World War I 318

      Der Blaue Reiter 321

      Austrian Expressionism: From Dream to Nightmare 324

      Gustav Klimt and his languorous ladies 325

      Egon Schiele: Turning the self inside out 325

      Oskar Kokoschka: Dark dreams and interior storms 326

      Chapter 22: Cubist Puzzles and Finding the Fast Lane with the Futurists 329

      Cubism: All Views At Once 329

      Pablo Picasso 330

      Analytic Cubism: Breaking things apart 332

      Synthetic Cubism: Gluing things together 332

      Fernand Léger: Cubism for the commoner 333

      Futurism: Art That Broke the Speed Limit 333

      Umberto Boccioni 335

      Gino Severini 335

      Precisionism: Geometry as Art 336

      The Harlem Renaissance and the Jazz Age 338

      Chapter 23: Nonobjective Art: Dada, Surrealism, and Abstract Expressionism 343

      Suprematism: Kazimir Malevich’s Reinvention of Space 343

      The path to Suprematism 344

      Reinventing the world in shape and color 344

      Constructivism: Showing Off Your Skeleton 345

      Tatlin’s Tower 346

      A dance between time and space: Naum Gabo 346

      Piet Mondrian and the De Stijl Movement 347

      Dada Turns the World on Its Head 347

      Dada, the ground floor, and Cabaret Voltaire 348

      Dada: Influencee and influencer 348

      Marcel Duchamp: Nudes, urinals, and hat racks 349

      Hans (Jean) Arp: In and out of Dadaland 350

      Surrealism and Disjointed Dreams 351

      Max Ernst and his alter ego, Loplop 351

      Salvador Dalí: Melting clocks, dreamscapes, and ants 352

      René Magritte: Help, my head’s on backwards! 354

      Dissecting Frida Kahlo 354

      Joan Miro 356

      My House Is a Machine: Modernist Architecture 357

      Frank Lloyd Wright: Bringing the outside in 357

      Bauhaus boxes: Walter Gropius 359

      Le Corbusier: Machines for living and Notre-Dame du Haut 359

      Abstract Expressionism: Fireworks on Canvas 361

      Arshile Gorky 361

      Jackson Pollock: Flick, fling, drip, splash, swirl — action painting 362

      Lee Krasner: Almost patterns 363

      Willem de Kooning 364

      Chapter 24: Anything-Goes Art: Fab Fifties and Psychedelic Sixties 365

      Artsy Cartoons: Pop Art 365

      The many faces of Andy Warhol 366

      Blam! Comic books on canvas: Roy Lichtenstein 367

      Fantastic Realism 368

      Ernst Fuchs: The father of the Fantastic Realists 368

      Hundertwasser: Organic architecture and art 369

      Louise Nevelson: Picking up the Trash and Assemblage 370

      Louise Bourgeois: Sexualized sculpture 371

      Less-Is-More Art: Rothko, Newman, Stella, Frankenthaler, and Others 372

      Color Fields of dreams: Rothko and Newman 372

      Helen Frankenthaler 373

      Minimalism, more or less 373

      Photorealism 374

      Richard Estes: Always in focus 374

      Clinical close-ups: Chuck Close 375

      Helen Hardin: Native American Futurism 375

      Performance Art and Installations 376

      Fluxus: Intersections of the arts 376

      Joseph Beuys: Fanning out from Fluxus 377

      Carolee Schneemann: Body art and breaking taboos 378

      Chapter 25: Photography: From Science to Art 381

      The Birth of Photography 381

      Transitioning from Science to Art 382

      An early attempt to “artify” photography 383

      Focusing on documentary photography 384

      Alfred Stieglitz: Reliving the Moment 384

      Recognition for photography as high art 385

      Picturesque pictures 385

      Henri Cartier-Bresson’s uncanny eye 386

      From painting to photography 386

      Stealth and the “Decisive Moment” 386

      Group f/64: Edward Weston, Imogen Cunningham, and Ansel Adams 387

      Dorothea Lange: Depression to Dust Bowl 388

      Margaret Bourke-White: From Industrial Beauty to Political Statements 389

      Photographing for Fortune 389

      Photographing for Life 389

      Fast-Forward: The Next Generation 391

      Chapter 26: The New World: Postmodern Art 393

      From Modern Pyramids to Titanium Twists: Postmodern Architecture 393

      Viva Las Vegas! 394

      Chestnut Hill: Case in point 394

      Philip Johnson and urban furniture 395

      The prismatic architecture of I M Pei 395

      Deconstructivist architecture of Peter Eisenman, Frank Gehry, and Zaha Hadid 396

      Making It or Faking It? Postmodern Photography and Painting 399

      Cindy Sherman: Morphing herself 399

      Gerhard Richter: Reading between the layers 400

      Installation Art and Earth Art 401

      Judy Chicago: A dinner table you can’t sit at 401

      It’s a wrap: Christo and Jeanne-Claude 402

      Robert Smithson and earth art: Can you dig it? 403

      Glow-in-the-Dark Bunnies and Living, Genetic Art 404

      Part 6: The Part of Tens 407

      Chapter 27: Ten Must-See Art Museums 409

      The Louvre (Paris) 409

      The Uffizi (Florence) 410

      The Vatican Museums (Rome) 410

      The National Gallery (London) 410

      The Metropolitan Museum of Art (NYC) 410

      The Prado (Madrid) 411

      The National Gallery of Art (D.C.) 411

      The Rijksmuseum (Amsterdam) 411

      British Museum (London) 412

      The Kunsthistorisches Museum (Vienna) 412

      Chapter 28: Ten Great Books by Ten Great Artists 413

      On Painting, by Leonardo da Vinci 413

      Lives of the Most Eminent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects, by Giorgio Vasari 413

      Complete Poems and Selected Letters of Michelangelo 414

      The Journal of Eugène Delacroix 414

      Van Gogh’s Letters 414

      Rodin on Art, by Paul Gsell 414

      Der Blaue Reiter Almanac, edited by Wassily Kandinsky and Franz Marc 414

      Concerning the Spiritual in Art, by Wassily Kandinsky 415

      The Diary of Frida Kahlo: An Intimate Self-Portrait 415

      Hundertwasser Architecture: For a More Human Architecture in Harmony with Nature, by Friedensreich Hundertwasser 415

      And Others 415

      Index 417

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