AMI Final handout

Final exam preview

There will be 50 multiple choice questions.  About 40 will cover Chapters 13, 14 & 15 and about 10 will be cumulative.  (Remember Hildegarde & Artemisia Gentileschi).  Review the periods in order and reflect on what changes define these periods. 

 

KEY IMAGES Ch 13

Realism                                    KEY IMAGE: Manet, p. 352.  know artist, title & style

§   “Realism in the arts aimed to give a truthful and objective representation of the social world, without illusion or imaginative alteration.” P. 351, emphasis added.

§   response to urban life

 

Impressionism                         KEY IMAGE: Monet, p. 370know artist, title, date & style

§   1874 exhibition

§   Monet, Renoir, Cassatt, Morisot, others (see p. 370-371)

§   “sought to capture fleeting effects of light and color” (p. 370-371)

§   used color theory

§   open air, rather than studio painting

§   direct application of unmixed colors

 

Post-Impressionism 1880-1890s

KEY IMAGE: Van Gogh p. 378. know artist, title & style

KEY IMAGE: Cezanne p. 376, (13.31 & 13.32) know artist & significance

§   extended impressionist techniques

§   various steps toward modernist painting

§   (some works) less spontaneous, more composed

§   the picture dissolves into planes, brushstrokes, etc. – a consciousness of artistic  techniques

 

KEY IMAGES Ch 14 (know artist & title)

Expressionism, p. 395, Nolde

Abstraction,  p. 396 Kandinsky

Picasso, primitivism & cubism, p. 388

Duchamp, Surrealism, Da-Da, p. 394 “The only thing that is not art is inattention.”

 

Be familiar with the “ism” list in box p. 397

 

Abstract –– considered apart from concrete existence; the genre of painting whose intellectual and affective content depends solely on intrinsic form (Amer Heritage Dict.).  Roots of the term: removed from (as in “removed from concrete reality”); to pull away from

 

Abstract art – art which is either completely non-representational, or which converts forms observed in reality into patterns which are read by the spectator primarily as independent relationships, rather than with reference to the original source. –   Thames & Hudson Dictionary of Art Terms

 

Key images of Ch 15: 

p. 420, know artist & style (abstract expressionism) (still considered modernist)

p. 436, know artist, title & identify it as an earth work or link it with conceptual art
p. 440, know artist, title & identify it as a multimedia installation [post-modern]

Frank Gehry, architect, post-modernist

 

know the list of traits of post-modernism, p. 431

 

Music

RECOGNIZE the Stravinsky & Schoenberg examples from the textbook CD

KNOW facts in bold – the exam will identify the examples other than the Stravinsky & Schoenberg

 

Richard Wagner (1813-1883), prelude to the opera Tristan und Isolde (1865)

-- expanding use of unstable chromatic harmony over long spans of time

-- Wagner develops the idea of "leitmotif," in which a brief musical idea is associated with a character, idea, or object in an opera; this idea intensifies the interrelatedness of material in instrumental music in the 20th Century

-- opera expands in size: larger orchestra, longer operas (The Ring takes four evenings to perform)

-- sophisticated orchestration

-- opera is now continuous: the aria/recitative concept is replaced by "continuous melody"

-- Romantic nostalgia in the use of an ancient tale

-- ancient tale well-edited to project proto-psychological issues relating love, death, and desire; a notion of the sub-conscious before Freud?

 

Igor Stravinsky (1882-1971) – a section of Rite of Spring (Le Sacre du printemps) (1913; for very large orchestra)  ON TEXTBOOK CD

-- a ballet with a story line written in part by an anthropologist

-- interested in primitive or exotic materials; what is behind the mask of civilization?

-- radically new: non-tonal, harsh unresolved dissonance, percussive, brilliant orchestral effects, extreme ranges, rhythmically and metrically very irregular and quite innovative

-- a riot (somewhat staged) at its premiere; much publicity ensues

-- Modernist:  Inner order, outer chaos.

 

Arnold Schoenberg

Ø  created alternate ways of organizing music; atonal (as is the textbook CD example) and serial (as in his Piano Concerto, described in the textbook)

Ø  these ideas and techniques attracted a small but international group of composers, performers and theorists; relatively few use them today, but the intellectual methods are still widely influential

Ø  modernist; expressionist

 

John Cage (1912-1992), Sonata II from Sonatas and Interludes for Prepared Piano (19 pieces composed 1946-1948) video on YouTube of Sonata X video of Sonata IV being prepared

-- invented prepared piano (1935).  The classic American crazy tinkerer (Cage loved to say, "My father was an inventor.")  EXPERIMENTATION a key value in 20th Century music.

-- the unpredictability of the prepared piano and his study of Zen and Indian aesthetics lead him to develop chance (random) procedures as a compositional method or process

-- viewed by some as a charlatan or as important only because of his philosophy

-- many value his music and thought today (although many misinterpret his disciplined openness as a philosophy of "anything goes")

-- influenced by gamelan and other non-Western music

-- eventually came to be viewed as Post-Modernist because of his relinquishing of compositional control

 

Steve Reich, (b. 1936) – brief excerpt from Music for 18 Musicians (1976) video clip on YouTube

-- steady pulse a welcome break from the rhythmic complexity of Post-World War II concert music

-- diatonic but not tonal; sort of a return to modal music (Reich claims to be influenced by the music of Perotin)

-- process-oriented; the process should be audible

-- influenced by gamelan and polyrhythmic West African music (he studied in Ghana)

-- had to form his own ensemble to play his music because it requires an entirely different set of skills than those of conventionally trained "Classical" musicians

-- many early performances took place in art galleries, not concert halls

-- briefly lived in the San Francisco Bay Area in the late '60s/early '70s; part of the "Downtown" scene in New York City

-- Minimalist (although Reich hates the term) and therefore considered Post-Modern, but some modernist characteristics in his music (it is all about its “materials”)

 

May 2009

DC Meckler

Art, Music & Ideas