1 / 19

Destruction Year 10

Destruction Year 10. ARTISTS. Here is a series of slides which represent the work of a number of artists which are relevant to the theme of the unit, DESTRUCTION. You too can add to the list by researching others. DAMIEN HIRST.

sirius
Download Presentation

Destruction Year 10

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Destruction Year 10

  2. ARTISTS • Here is a series of slides which represent the work of a number of artists which are relevant to the theme of the unit, DESTRUCTION. • You too can add to the list by researching others.

  3. DAMIEN HIRST Here we see millions of cigarette remains and cigarette packets filling an enormous ashtray. The title,‘Party Time’ suggest something young and lively but the images contrast and suggest something which is destructive to health. Click here to see examples of the artists work

  4. http://www.flickr.com/photos/loop_oh/3055816315/sizes/z/in/photostream/http://www.flickr.com/photos/loop_oh/3055816315/sizes/z/in/photostream/ Damien Hirst is famous for putting animals which are already dead into a chemical called formaldehyde. This chemical preserves the animal for posterity. But why a shark?

  5. MarcellDuchamps Here we see one of the art world’s most famous pictures, The Mona Lisa, which has been destroyed by something as simple as a moustache and beard on her face. Graffiti perhaps? ‘L.H.O.O.Q’ 1919

  6. NEALE HOWELLS • Howells’s works are neither portraits or landscapes, rather they are pictures of the attitudes of our society – graffiti, slogans, the marks which we see on the walls in the streets of our valleys and cities. • His work is much more inventive that what it appears to be at first. Click here to see examples of the artists work

  7. Ray Johnston A famous star who destroyed his own life through drugs. During the Pop Art era, artists would often draw or adapt pictures of contemporary stars. ‘Elvis Presley 2’ 1955

  8. Ray Johnston Here is a picture of a famous actor from the era which has been destroyed by various symbols. ‘James Dean’ 1958

  9. http://www.flickr.com/photos/oddsock/100825567/ Roy Lichtenstein Whaam! 1963 Oil on Canvas Litchenstein uses paintings of tragic events such as war, fighting and divorce in American comic style. He uses strong and clear colours without any real detail. They are simple and effective images.

  10. PICASSO http://www.flickr.com/photos/erprofe/4754078275/ ‘Guernica’ 1937

  11. It is said that experts have analysed this picture in detail.Picasso painted this picture to represent the Spanish Civil War of the 1930s. It appears that the horse represents the people; the bull conveys the horrors of war, and the angular shape of the faces of the people and animals show the suffering. To add to this, the colours too are dreary.

  12. Rene Magritte ‘The Key to the Field’ 1933 Oil on Canvas Look carefully!! The glass perhaps has broken but has the scene on the glass disappeared? Surrealism Period http://www.flickr.com/photos/centralasian/5978422149/sizes/o/in/photostream/

  13. ‘The Discovery of Fire’ (Decouverte du feu) 1934-35 Rene Magritte destroying a tuba. Artists in the Surrealism Period would play tricks and create pictures with an element of magic or dream in them.

  14. Click here to see this example of the artists work Rene Magritte ‘The Labors of Alexander’ 1967; Bronze

  15. Click here to see this example of the artists work ‘An Exploded View’ 1991 mixed media Here is a piece of 3D work by Cornelia Parker. She took a shed, blew it up and then put it all back together again with wires and hung it from the ceiling and illuminated it.

  16. Rebbeca Horn ‘Concert for Anarchy’ 1990 Although the piano has not been destroyed to all intents and purposes, as in the previous piece, the fact that it is upside down means that it can’t be used and consequently it is worthless and therefore destroyed. Click here to see this example of the artists work

  17. Click here to see this example of the artists work Arnulf Rainer We see that the photograph has been destroyed in order to cover (enshroud) the body of this artist.

  18. Robert Rauschemburg We see a variety of pictures of Marilyn Monroe; the colourful life of the actress has been outlined and destroyed in one piece of finished work. Perhaps it is a symbol of her life. Click here to see this example of the artists work

  19. After seeing a variety o works by artists who use the theme of ‘destruction’ in their work, it is now your turn to show and to develop this theme in your own style. Choose either one of the artists which are included in the presentation and his/her work or find an artist who communicates the same type of message.

More Related