Tuesday, March 31, 2009


Our team Assignment "Picture This"
Theme is: Winter

Monday, March 9, 2009

Keith Haring?
May 4,1958-February 16,1990
Born in Reading, Pennsylvania
Died in New York City, New York
Died of AIDS
Interested in art at an early age
Studied graphic design for 2 years
At the Ivy School of Professional Art
Inspired by graffiti
Studied at the School of Visual Arts
First public attention
Chalk draws in the New York Subways

Bold lines, vivid colors, and active figures carry a strong message
Meaning life and unity
Keith Haring created a tag called the radiant ( Christ ) Child.
He said the child was a meaning “the purest and most positive experience of human existence.”
In drawing his child with energized rays emanating from its body, Haring was mimicking a well‐known convention in religious art, popular in medieval and Renaissance painting. One example can be seen in the many Mexican representations of the Virgin of Guadalupe
The Radiant Child, the powerful rays emanate from the Virgin's body, emphasizing her holiness.
Similar to this image of the Virgin, Haring said, these “lines radiating from the baby indicate spiritual light glowing from within, as though the baby were a holy figure from a religious painting, only the glow is rendered in the visual vocabulary of a cartoon.”
As a teenager, he drew straightforward Nativity scenes, complete with the traditional rays of divine light radiating from the baby Jesus.
These scenes were later transformed into unique representations of the Nativity in his emerging cartoon style, such as a drawing he completed during his subway years over the Christmas season.
Haring started organizing exhibits in 1980
1981
Sketched his first chalk drawings
On:
Black paper
Painted plastic
Metal
Found objects
Andy Warhol
Theme of several of Haring’s pieces
Even after Haring was well known, he preferred to still draw in subways.
Haring didn’t have to worry about police so much rather than the people who wanted to take his artwork in the subways of New York.
Expressionism is the tendency of an artist to distort reality for an emotional effect
it is a subjective art form.
Expressionism is exhibited in many art forms, including
painting
literature
theatre
film
architecture
music
The term is applied mainly to 20th century works.
Originated in Germany
Started after the first World War
Took inspiration from
Symbolism
Fauvism
Cubism
Abstract Expressionism
Developed in the united states after the end of world war 2
New York Figurative Expression
of the fifties represented American figurative artists such as:
Willem de Kooning
Grace Hartigan
Lester Johnson
Alex Katz
George McNeil
Jan Muller
Jackson Pollock
Fairfield Porter
Larry Rivers
Bob Thompson
Lyrical Expressionism Tachisme
of the 1940s and 1950s in Europe represented by artists such as
Georges Mathieu
Hans Hartung
Nicolas de Staël and others
North American Lyrical Expression
Started in the late 1960s and the 1970s. Characterized by the work of
Dan Christensen
Peter Young
Ronnie Landfield
Ronald Davis
Walter Darby Bannard
Charles Arnoldi,
Pat Lipsky and many others.
Neo-expressionism
An international revival movement beginning in the late 1970s and centered around artists across the world:
Germany:
Anselm Kiefer
Georg Baselitz and others;
USA
Jean-Michel Basquiat
Eric Fischl
David Salle
Julian Schnabel
France
Rémi Blanchard
Hervé Di Rosa and others
Italy
Francesco Clemente
Sandro Chia
Enzo Cucchi
England
David Hockney
Frank Auerbach
Leon Kossoff
Christopher Le Brun