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WWI and its Effect on the Arts

WWI and its Effect on the Arts. Ms. Ramos. Discuss the influence of World War I on literature, art, and intellectual life in the West (e.g., Pablo Picasso, the “lost generation” of Gertrude Stein, Ernest Hemingway).

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WWI and its Effect on the Arts

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  1. WWI and its Effect on the Arts Ms. Ramos

  2. Discuss the influence of World War I on literature, art, and intellectual life in the West (e.g., Pablo Picasso, the “lost generation” of Gertrude Stein, Ernest Hemingway). You will learn how the arts & philosophy of the 1920-1930s were influenced by WWI Belief in human reason & progress was shattered Reflected in work of the period 10.6.4 Ms. Ramos

  3. Lost Generation • Attributed to Gertrude Stein • Popularized by Ernest Hemingway • The Sun Also Rises http://www.knowledgerush.com/wiki_image/8/86/Gertrude_stein.jpg http://imagecache02a.allposters.com/images/BOOK/BD037.jpg Ms. Ramos

  4. The "Lost Generation" defines a sense of moral loss or aimlessness apparent in literary figures during the 1920s. World War I seemed to have destroyed the idea that if you acted virtuously, good things would happen. Many good, young men went to war and died, or returned home either physically or mentally wounded (for most, both), and their faith in the moral guideposts that had earlier given them hope, were no longer valid...they were "Lost." http://www.montgomerycollege.edu/Departments/hpolscrv/jbolhofer.html Ms. Ramos

  5. Ms. Ramos

  6. WWI Poetry Ms. Ramos

  7. Ms. Ramos http://www.sangam.org/2009/11/images/Flandersfields_000.jpg

  8. On Receiving News of the WarIsaac Rosenberg • Snow is a strange white word.No ice or frostHas asked of bud or birdFor Winter's cost. Yet ice and frost and snowFrom earth to skyThis Summer land doth know.No man knows why. In all men's hearts it is.Some spirit oldHath turned with malign kissOur lives to mould. Red fangs have torn His face.God's blood is shed.He mourns from His lone placeHis children dead. O! ancient crimson curse!Corrode, consume.Give back this universeIts pristine bloom. Ms. Ramos

  9. Poets’ Corner • Westminster’s Abbey • 16 Great War poets remembered • "My subject is War, and the pity of War. The Poetry is in the pity.“ • Wilfred Owen http://oxfordprints.com/Ackermann/Ack.%20West.%20Poets.jpg Ms. Ramos

  10. Themes in Early Modern Art • Uncertainty/insecurity. • Disillusionment. • The subconscious. • Overt sexuality. • Violence & savagery. Ms. Ramos

  11. Early Modern Art Ms. Ramos

  12. Number 1-29 on a piece of paper • For each picture, indicate which theme it represents: • 1. incertanty/ insecurity • 2. disillusionment • 3. subconscious • 4. Overt sexuality • 5. Violence & savagery • Write a word or two to describe your reaction Ms. Ramos

  13. Edvard Munch: The Scream (1893) Expressionism • Using bright colors to express a particular emotion. http://www.pptpalooza.net/PPTs/EHAP/EarlyModernEuropeanArt.ppt#267,2,Slide 2 Ms. Ramos

  14. Franz Marc: Animal Destinies (1913) http://www.pptpalooza.net/PPTs/EHAP/EarlyModernEuropeanArt.ppt#267,2,Slide 2 Ms. Ramos

  15. Wassily Kandinsky: On White II (1923) http://www.pptpalooza.net/PPTs/EHAP/EarlyModernEuropeanArt.ppt#267,2,Slide 2 Ms. Ramos

  16. Gustav Klimt: Judith I (1901) Secessionists • Disrupt the conservative values of Viennese society. • Obsessed with the self. • Man is a sexual being, leaning toward despair. http://www.pptpalooza.net/PPTs/EHAP/EarlyModernEuropeanArt.ppt#267,2,Slide 2 Ms. Ramos

  17. Gustav Klimt: Wrogie sily (1901) http://www.pptpalooza.net/PPTs/EHAP/EarlyModernEuropeanArt.ppt#267,2,Slide 2 Ms. Ramos

  18. Gustav Klimt: The Kiss (1907-8) http://www.pptpalooza.net/PPTs/EHAP/EarlyModernEuropeanArt.ppt#267,2,Slide 2 Ms. Ramos

  19. Gustav Klimt: Danae (1907-8) http://www.pptpalooza.net/PPTs/EHAP/EarlyModernEuropeanArt.ppt#267,2,Slide 2 Ms. Ramos

  20. Henri Matisse: Carmelina(1903) FAUVE • The use of intense colors in a violent, and uncontrolled way. • “Wild Beast.” http://www.pptpalooza.net/PPTs/EHAP/EarlyModernEuropeanArt.ppt#267,2,Slide 2 Ms. Ramos

  21. Henri Matisse: Open Window(1905) http://www.pptpalooza.net/PPTs/EHAP/EarlyModernEuropeanArt.ppt#267,2,Slide 2 Ms. Ramos

  22. Georges Braque: Violin & Candlestick (1910) CUBISM • The subject matter is broken down, analyzed, and reassembled in abstract form. • Cezanne  The artist should treat nature in terms of the cylinder, the sphere, and the cone. http://www.pptpalooza.net/PPTs/EHAP/EarlyModernEuropeanArt.ppt#267,2,Slide 2 Ms. Ramos

  23. Georges Braque: Woman with a Guitar(1913) Ms. Ramos http://www.pptpalooza.net/PPTs/EHAP/EarlyModernEuropeanArt.ppt#267,2,Slide 2

  24. Georges Braque: Still Life: LeJeur (1929) http://www.pptpalooza.net/PPTs/EHAP/EarlyModernEuropeanArt.ppt#267,2,Slide 2 Ms. Ramos

  25. Pablo Picasso: Les Demoiselles d’Avignon (1907) http://www.pptpalooza.net/PPTs/EHAP/EarlyModernEuropeanArt.ppt#267,2,Slide 2 Ms. Ramos

  26. Picasso: Studio with Plaster Head (1925) http://www.pptpalooza.net/PPTs/EHAP/EarlyModernEuropeanArt.ppt#267,2,Slide 2 Ms. Ramos

  27. Pablo Picasso: Woman with aFlower(1932) http://www.pptpalooza.net/PPTs/EHAP/EarlyModernEuropeanArt.ppt#267,2,Slide 2 Ms. Ramos

  28. Paul Klee: Red & White Domes (1914) http://www.pptpalooza.net/PPTs/EHAP/EarlyModernEuropeanArt.ppt#267,2,Slide 2 Ms. Ramos

  29. Paul Klee: Senecio (1922) http://www.pptpalooza.net/PPTs/EHAP/EarlyModernEuropeanArt.ppt#267,2,Slide 2 Ms. Ramos

  30. George Grosz Grey Day(1921) DaDa • Ridiculed contemporary culture & traditional art forms. • The collapse during WW I of social and moral values. • Nihilistic. http://www.pptpalooza.net/PPTs/EHAP/EarlyModernEuropeanArt.ppt#267,2,Slide 2 Ms. Ramos

  31. George Grosz: Daum Marries Her Pedantic AutomatonGeorge in May, 1920, John Heartfield is Very Glad of It(1919-1920) http://www.pptpalooza.net/PPTs/EHAP/EarlyModernEuropeanArt.ppt#267,2,Slide 2 Ms. Ramos

  32. George Grosz The Pillarsof Society(1926) http://www.pptpalooza.net/PPTs/EHAP/EarlyModernEuropeanArt.ppt#267,2,Slide 2 Ms. Ramos

  33. Raoul Hausmann: ABCD (1924-25) http://www.pptpalooza.net/PPTs/EHAP/EarlyModernEuropeanArt.ppt#267,2,Slide 2 Ms. Ramos

  34. Marcel Duchamp: Fountain (1917) http://www.pptpalooza.net/PPTs/EHAP/EarlyModernEuropeanArt.ppt#267,2,Slide 2 Ms. Ramos

  35. Marcel Duchamp: Nude Descending a Staircase(1912) http://www.pptpalooza.net/PPTs/EHAP/EarlyModernEuropeanArt.ppt#267,2,Slide 2 Ms. Ramos

  36. Salvador Dali: Soft Construction with Boiled Beans (Premonition of Civil War), 1936 Surrealism • Late 1920s-1940s. • Came from the nihilistic genre of DaDa. • Influenced by Feud’s theories on psychoanalysis and the subconscious. • Confusing & startling images like those in dreams. http://www.pptpalooza.net/PPTs/EHAP/EarlyModernEuropeanArt.ppt#267,2,Slide 2 Ms. Ramos

  37. Salvador Dali: The Persistence of Memory (1931) http://www.pptpalooza.net/PPTs/EHAP/EarlyModernEuropeanArt.ppt#267,2,Slide 2 Ms. Ramos

  38. Salvador Dali: The Apparition of the Face and Fruit Dish on a Beach (1938) http://www.pptpalooza.net/PPTs/EHAP/EarlyModernEuropeanArt.ppt#267,2,Slide 2 Ms. Ramos

  39. Salvador Dali: Geopoliticus Child Watching the Birth of a New Man (1943) http://www.pptpalooza.net/PPTs/EHAP/EarlyModernEuropeanArt.ppt#267,2,Slide 2 Ms. Ramos

  40. Walter Gropius: Bauhaus Building (1928) Bauhaus • A utopian quality. • Based on the idealsof simplified formsand unadornedfunctionalism. • The belief that the machine economy could deliver elegantly designed items for the masses. • Used techniques & materials employed especially in industrial fabrication & manufacture  steel, concrete, chrome, glass. http://www.pptpalooza.net/PPTs/EHAP/EarlyModernEuropeanArt.ppt#267,2,Slide 2 Ms. Ramos

  41. Walter Gropius: Lincoln, MA house (1938) http://www.pptpalooza.net/PPTs/EHAP/EarlyModernEuropeanArt.ppt#267,2,Slide 2 Ms. Ramos

  42. More art after WWI: • 1914-18 war - Art of the First World War - List of painters Ms. Ramos

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