Contemporary Visual Art

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Contemporary

Visual Art and I


Contemporary art?
• “the art of today”
• refers to art—namely, painting, sculpt
ure, photography, installation, perfor
mance, and video art—produced toda
y. 
• is to challenge the nature of artwork i
Chihuly Garden and Glass in the Seattle Center
tself

View of the exhibition Liz Deschenes: Gallery 7, 2014


History: Major Movements and Artists

Given its “art of today” definition, you may be surprise


d to hear that contemporary art actually has a relati
vely long history. To trace its evolution, let's take a l
ook at the major movements and important artists t
hat compose its history.
POP ART

Intended as a reaction to preceding modern art


movements, contemporary art is thought to have
begun on the heels of Pop Art. In post-war Britain
and America, Pop Art was pioneered by artists
like Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein. Andy Warhol, “Flowers” 

Roy Lichtenstein, “comic”


PHOTOREALISM

Much like artists working in the Pop Art


style sought to artistically reproduce
objects, those involved with Photorealism—a
concurrent movement—aimed to create hyper
realistic drawings and paintings. Photorealists Portrait of Chuck Close
often worked from photographs, which enabled
them to accurately reproduce portraits,
landscapes, and other iconography.

Gerhard Richter
CONCEPTUALISM

In turn, Pop Art also helped shape Conceptualism,


which rejected the idea of art as a commodity. In
conceptual art, the idea behind a work of art takes
precedence. Major conceptual artists
include Damien Hirst, Ai Wei Wei, and Jenny
Ai Wei Wei, “Circle of Animals/ Zodiac Heads,” 2010 
Holzer. Though this experimental movement
is rooted in art of the early 21st century, it emerged
as a formal movement in the 1960s and remains a
major contemporary art movement today.

Jenny Holzer, Unspoken Artist


MINIMALISM

Like Conceptualism, Minimalism materialized in
the 1960s and is still prevalent today. According to
the Tate, both movements “challenged the existing
structures for making, disseminating and viewing
art.” What sets Minimalism apart, however, is that
its simple, abstract aesthetic invites viewers to Donald Judd, “Untitled,” 1973

respond to what they see—not what they think a


given work of art represents. 

LeWitt, Wall Drawing 2004


PERFORMANCE ART

Another movement with Conceptualist roots is 


Performance Art. Beginning in the 1960s and retaining
its popularity today, performance art is a drama-
inspired approach to art. While the art form is
performed by artists (as the name suggests), it is not Wikimedia Commons Public Domain
solely intended as entertainment. Instead, its goal is to
convey a message or idea. Predominant performance
artists include Marina Abramović, Yoko Ono,
and Joseph Beuys.

Marina Abramović: The Artist Is Present is the first major


retrospective of the groundbreaking performance artist,
INSTALLATION ART

Like performance pieces, installation art is an


immersive medium of art. Installations are three-
dimensional constructions that transform their
surroundings and alter viewers' perceptions of space.
Often, they're large-scale and site-specific, enabling
artists to transform any space into a customized, Yayoi Kusama, “Gleaming Lights of the Souls,” 2008

interactive environment. Well-known installation


artists include Yayoi Kusama, Dale Chihuly,
and Bruce Munro.
 

Dale Chihuly, Persian Ceiling 


EARTH ART

A unique spin on installation art, Earth Art (or Land


Art) is a movement in which
artists transform natural landscapes into site-specific
Robert Smithson, “Spiral Jetty” 
works of art. Robert
Smithson, Christo and Jeanne-Claude, and Andy
Goldsworthy are celebrated for their avant-garde
earthworks.

Andy Goldsworthy, Touching North, 1989


STREET ART
Keith Haring, “The Pisa's Mural, 1989

As one of the most recent contemporary art


movements, street art is a genre that gained
prominence with the rise of graffiti in the 1980s.
Often rooted in social activism, street art includes
murals, installations, stenciled images, and stickers
erected in public spaces. Key street artists include
figures from the 1980s, like Jean-Michel
Basquiat and Keith Haring, as well as practicing
artists like Banksy and Shepard Fairey.

Jean-Michel Basquiat, “head” 1981


THANK YOU

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