"Edouard manet olympia" Essays and Research Papers

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    way since 24‚000 B.C.E. when a small‚ female figure was carved by our ancestors. Venus of Willendorf was a first step in a long history of artists‚ styles and conventions that brought us to what art critics named the first truly modern painting: Olympia. Great milestones were accomplished along the way: Praxitales’ Aphrodite was the first Greek female nude. The Sleeping Venus by HYPERLINK "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giorgione"Giorgione‚ was the first female reclining nude in European painting

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    Advertisement Sex‚ being a part of the human experience‚ has for very long been depicted as an intimate activity. However‚ sex has existed as a marketable commodity since the Roman Empire‚ and still exists as such to this day. Eduardo Manet’s Olympia‚ 1865‚ confronts its contemporary society with prostitution‚ depicting a reclined prostitute staring directly at the viewer‚ making the viewer see the scene from the point of view of the customer’s. Manet’s criticism of sex as a commodity is shown

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    The meaning of a work of art/media//design is not fixed‚ whatever the intention of the maker. During the Renaissance the female nude became a popular subject for painters‚ said to glorify beauty‚ truth and love. However‚ history suggests that in a society unfamiliar with confrontation with female flesh‚ certain nudes were greeted with shock and disgust. In fact‚ some nude images may have even been created with pornographic intent. This essay will address the title ’s statement using Titian ’s 1538

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    Art History 21

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    1. Discuss the impact of photography on the nineteenth-century landscape. How did it affect painting? What were the political implications of the medium? Use examples to support your essay. Landscape painting was a particularly effective vehicle for allegory because it allowed artists to make fictional subjects appear normal‚ conditioned‚ acceptable‚ or destined. Art was not just about the landscape‚ it actually allowed the spirit of the painter to come alive in their work. The allegory

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    The fascination of images: How do images teach us to desire The culture in which we live teaches us to‚ and what to desire. It does so through the works of psychoanalysis‚ interpreting the unconscious‚ free associations‚ fantasies and dreams. Interpreting these in a way in which to make the viewer the resolute to the images. The basic human needs are different to that of what we desire‚ we need food‚ water‚ shelter‚ yet we do not desire these things in a way in which we desire love and sex

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    The 18th & 19th Centuries

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    CH 20 – The 18th & 19th Centuries: Six main movements: Rococo‚ Neoclassicism‚ Romanticism‚ (The Academy)‚ Realism‚ Impressionism (Macchiaioli) & Postimpressionism Rococo is a unique style occurring toward the end of the Baroque period. It is a much more ornate style that shows sweetness‚ gaiety‚ and light; painterly and pastel features. It is chiefly characterized by the representation of the leisurely activities of upper class society by a frivolous choice of themes. Rococo is derived

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    Academic Institutionalization of the "fine arts” and the nature of academic instruction * The academy set the standard for what was art. * Very specific criteria * Only allowed to do History Painting: an event out of history‚ the bible‚ or mythology * Other than history – portrait‚ still lives‚ genre painting * Subject matter: history/mythology/politics * Studying in Rome was the high point of artistic development * Mengs‚ Parnassus‚ 1761 *

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    October 23‚ 1852. Sometime in the 1860’s‚ Forain and his parents moved to Paris where he started to study under Jacquesson de la Chevreuse‚ Jean Baptiste Carpeaux‚ and André Gill who were all great French artists. Forain had the opportunity to meet Édouard Manet because of his friendship with Edgar Degas. “In 1879 Forain was invited by Degas to join the fourth Impressionist exhibition‚ and he exhibited again with the Impressionists in the fifth (1880)‚ sixth (1881) and eighth (1886) exhibitions…” (Oxford

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    scenes. (Wikipedia) Manet and Morisot both became major players in the Impressionist movement as well as the establishment of the Salon de Refuses. She and Camille Pissarro were the most consistent exhibitors at the Impressionist exhibitions. Morisot was thought to have a played major role in the organization of these events and the keeping the temperamental artists working together for the advancement of the Impressionist movement. Her friends and fellow artists included Manet‚ Degas‚ Gauguin‚ Alfred

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    Impressionism

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    mature style. Berthe Morisot (1841-95) was an important active and innovative member of the French Impressionist group. She joined them in 1874‚ not only as an artist‚ but also an energetic organizer of exhibitions and a friend‚ particularly of Manet. Her early training was more academically oriented. In 1856-57‚ Morisot starts attending drawing lessons with Geoffroy-Alphonse Chocarne‚ but in 1858 she and her sister Edma left to study under Joseph-Beno Guichard‚ a pupil of Ingres and Delacroix

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