Grade 10 Arts PPT Quarter 1 Complete W Assessment 1
Grade 10 Arts PPT Quarter 1 Complete W Assessment 1
Grade 10 Arts PPT Quarter 1 Complete W Assessment 1
GUERRERO
MAPEH Teacher
In all of human history, art has mirrored life in the community,
society, and the world in all its colors, lines, shapes, and forms. The
same has been true in the last two centuries, with world events
and global trends being reflected in the art movements.
The decades from 1900 to the present have seen the human
race living in an ever shrinking planet. The 20th century saw a
boom in the interchange of ideas, beliefs, values, and lifestyles
that continues to bring the citizens of the world closer together.
Technological breakthroughs
Social, Political and environmental changes
Impressionism was an art movement that emerged in the
second half of the 19th century among a group of Paris-
based artists.
The duration of the impressionist movement itself was
quite short, less than 20 years from 1872 to the mid-1880s.
But it had a tremendous impact and influence on the
painting styles that followed, such as neo-impressionism,
post-impressionism, fauvism, and cubism—and even the
artistic styles and movements of today.
The name impressionism was coined from the title of a
work by French painter Claude Monet, Impression, soleil
levant (in English, Impression, Sunrise).
Impression, Sunrise
Claude Monet, 1872
Oil on canvas
The term precisely captured what this group
of artists sought to represent in their works:
the viewer’s momentary “impression” of an
image. It was not intended to be clear or
precise, but more like a fleeting fragment of
reality caught on canvas, sometimes in mid-
motion, at other times awkwardly
positioned—just as it would be in real life.
As with all emerging art movements,
impressionism owed its inspiration to earlier
masters. One major influence was the work of
French painter Eugène Delacroix.
Delacroix was greatly admired and emulated by
the early impressionists—specifically for his use
of expressive brushstrokes, his emphasis on
movement rather than on clarity of form, and
most of all his study of the optical effects of
color.
French art into one of its richest periods:
impressionism.
In particular,
Delacroix’s painting,
The Barque of Dante,
contained a then
revolutionary
technique that
would profoundly
influence the
coming
impressionist
movement.
And it involved
something as simple
as droplets of water.
1. Color and Light
-painting with freely brushed colors conveyed more of a
visual effect
-broken strokes (intentionally made)
2. “Everyday” Subjects
-capturing scenes of life around them, household objects,
landscapes and seascapes, houses and buildings.
3. Painting Outdoors
4. Open Composition – experimented unusual visual
angles, off-center placement, lacks of proportion and
empty spaces on the canvas
Edouard Manet (1832-1883)
- was one of the first 19th century artists to
depict modern-life subjects. He was a key
figure in the transition from realism to
impressionism, with a number of his works
considered as marking the birth of modern
art.
Argenteuil
Edouard Manet, 1874