Humanities: ART Appreciation
Humanities: ART Appreciation
Humanities: ART Appreciation
ART
APPRECIATION
including beautification and Sanitation
HUMANITIES
• A versatile subject which consists of the seven arts:
painting, sculpture, architecture, music and dance,
literature, theater and cinema. These seven arts are the
branches of learning that will help you understand the study
of humanities.
• It comes from the word “humanus” meaning humane,
cultured and refined. To be human is to posses the qualities
and attributes of man and have the feelings and dispositions
proper to man. It is also a study of the different cultural
aspects analyzes man’s frailties in life and how this can be
improved.
• Culture basically includes speech, knowledge, beliefs,
arts, technologies, ideals and rules. To be cultured means to
be refined and well-versed in the arts, philosophy and
languages. It is also a means of misunderstanding man and
his affairs.
ARTS
• Art is very vital in our daily existence. The arts
the concrete evidences in the study of
humanities.
• The body of arts consists of ideas, beliefs and
values of the past, present and even of the
future.
• It comes from the Aryan root word, “AR” which
means to join or to put together. The Latin terms
“ARS” means everything that is artificially made
or composed by man.
FUNCTION OF ART
• Visual art is not
produced with words but
with formal artistic
elements.
• It communicates ideas
but is not intended to
convey information in
verbal form.
• Art creates subtle
emotional states or
moods and broadens the
aesthetic range of
experience of all who
perceive it.
• It can be, it has been,
and it often still is done
by means of visual art.
PICTORIAL ART
Paleolithic
Evidence of artistic expression is known only from the Upper Paleolithic, created
by Homo sapiens. The symmetry and attention given to the shape of a tool has
led authors to see Middle Palaeolithic hand axes and especially laurel points as
artistic expressions as well.
Blombos cave, situated in South Africa, stones
were discovered engraved with grid or cross-hatch
patterns, suggesting that early Homo sapiens were
capable of abstraction and production of abstract
art or symbolic art. These impressive works date to
70,000 years ago, which makes them about 40,000
years older than the Lascaux - type cave paintings.
Upper Paleolithic period (broadly 40,000 to 10,000 years ago)
Pyramid building was also revived, but much humbler then in the old kingdom.
This rise was followed by the ultimate downfall and the country fell into the
hands of foreign rulers.
Early Renaissance, mostly in Italy, bridges the art period during the fifteenth
century, between the Middle Ages and the High Renaissance in Italy. It is
generally known that Renaissance matured in Northen Europe later, in 16th
century.
Shenzhen museum
Contemporary art is exhibited by commercial contemporary art galleries,
private collectors, corporations, publicly funded arts organizations,
contemporary art museums or by artists themselves in artist-run spaces.
Contemporary artists are supported by grants, awards and prizes as well as
by direct sales of their work.
Methods in Presenting Art
Subject
1. Realism – presentation
of subjects as it is. It is
also the portrayal of
objective reality.
Gustace Courbet:“The Stone-
Breaker”
Methods in Presenting Art
Subject
2. Abstraction – it means to
move away or to separate. The
artist is more concerned about
the presentation of a part or a
portion of a subject.
Types of Abstraction
Elongation – subjects are lengthened or
stretched out.
Ex. El Greco:“the Resurrection”
“St Martin and the Beggar”
Distortion – subjects are in a mishappen
condition
Ex. Henry Moore: “Recumbent Figure”
Cubism – the use of geometrical shapes and
forms.
Ex. Pablo Picasso: “The Three Musicians”
“Nude in a Rocking Chair”
George Brake: “Violet and Palette”
ELONGATION
EL GRECO
“ THE
RESURRECTION”
“ ST.
MARTIN
AND THE
BEGGAR”
DISTORTION
“ RECUMBENT
FIGURE”
CUBISM