+ non-objective art non-objective art. + non objective is another way of saying abstract non –...

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+Non-Objective ArtNON-OBJECTIVE ART

+Non Objective is another way of saying abstract

NON – OBJECTIVE = ABSTRACTION

Abstraction- A visual language where form, color and line to create a composition which may exist without relationship to the real world.

Non – objective art IS NOT modern.

+Piet Mondrian

where the influence of cubism stimulated the development of his geometric, nonobjective style, which he called neoplasticism

artistic language that makes no concessions to visible reality. In addition, he was one of the

+Elements and Principles of Design became the subject

Lines, shapes, colors, textures, values and spaces

+Wassily Kandinsky

He is credited with painting the first modern abstract work.

Russian painter one of the most influential artists in abstract art.

His desires for inner expression led to the development of non-representational art, or art without a given subject. This style, along with Kandinsky's ideas on the importance of color in expression.

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+Henri Matisse

French Artist know for his use of color and fluid, brilliant and draftsmanship

Henry Matisse was one of the greatest artists of his time. He was always open to new styles and used many different ones. Matisse was always one step ahead in art fashion.

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+Pablo Picasso

Spanish painter and sculptor, generally considered the greatest artist of the 20th century.

1 reason why he is Famous for CUBISM,

Cubism is when objects are broken up and re-assembled in an abstracted form

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Generalizations about Abstraction

Vary the colors& shapes

Overlapping areas.

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Artist: Pablo PicassoArtist's Lifespan: 1881-1973Title: ViolinDate: 1912

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Artist: Pablo PicassoArtist's Lifespan: 1881-1973Title: GuitarDate: 1913

+ Artist: Juan Gris

Artist's Lifespan: 1887-1927

Title: Guitar and Flowers

Date: 1912

+ Artist: Joan Miro

Artist's Lifespan: 1893-1983

Title: Still-Life with Old Shoe

Date: 1937

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Artist: Kasimir Malevich

Artist's Lifespan: 1878-1935

Title: Cow and Violin

Date: 1912-13

+ Artist: Willem De Kooning

Artist's Lifespan: 1904- Title: Asheville Date: 1948

Location of Origin: United States

Style: Abstract Expressionism

Genre: Abstraction

+ Artist: Giacomo BallaArtist's Lifespan: 1871-

1958Title: Mercury Passing

in Front of the SunDate: 1914

Location of Origin: Italy

Medium: Oil on canvasStyle: FuturismGenre: Abstraction

+ Artist: Stuart Davis Artist's Lifespan:

1894-1964 Title: Rapt at

Rappaport¹s Date: 1952

Location of Origin: United States

Style: American Scene

Genre: Abstraction

+ Artist: Frank StellaArtist's Lifespan:

1936-Title: Shoubeegi

(Indian Birds)Date: 1978

Location of Origin: United States

Medium: Mixed media

Original Size: 7 ft 10 in x 10 ft x 2 ft 8 1/2 in

Style: Neo-Abstraction

Genre: Abstraction

+ Artist: Howard

Hodgkin

Artist's Lifespan: 1932-

Title: Dinner in Palazzo Albrizzi

Date: 1984-1988

Location of Origin: England

Medium: Oil on wood

Original Size: 3 ft 10 1/4 in x 3 ft 10 1/4 in

Style: Neo-Abstraction

Genre: Abstraction

+Artist: Fernand LégerArtist's Lifespan: 1881-1955Title: The CityDate: 1919

Location of Origin: FranceStyle: Synthetic CubismGenre: City life

“Pop Artists did images that anybody walking down the street could recognize in a split second…all the great modern things that the Abstract Expressionists tried so hard not to notice at all.”—Gretchen Berg.

Three Coke Bottles, 1962, AWF

Pop Artists used common images from

everyday culture as their sources including:

Roy Lichtenstein, Masterpiece, 1962

• Advertisements

• Consumer goods

• Celebrities

• Photographs

• Comic strips

Series: A number of objects, events or people of the similar kind or related in nature.

Jackie paintings, 1964, AWF

Distortion

To become twisted out of shape

What is viewfinder?

Help in cropping and focusing

Helps in finding the composition

This is where a viewfinder comes in useful, as it helps you focus on particular parts of the scene

Micro/Macro

-- Small of reduced or restricted size

-large enough to be visible with the naked eye

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