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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
51

Bilden av den andra bilden : - en undersökning i manligt och kvinnligt uttryck med den abstrakta expressionismen som studieobjekt / The Image of the Second Image : - a research in male and female expression with Abstract Expressionism as object of study

Frisk, Mattias January 2009 (has links)
Uppsatsen syftar till att undersöka huruvida begrepp som maskulint och feminint kan uppfattas i den nonfigurativa bilden. Med exempel ur den abstrakta expressionismen studeras detta utifrån genus och semiotisk teori. Även konstvärldens roll i producerandet av genus undersöks. En mindre enkätundersökning och bildanalys ingår i studien. / This thesis purpose is to examine whether notions as masculine and feminine can be understood in a nonfigurative picture. Thru gender theories and semiotics some examples from the Abstract Expressionist movement are studied. The art world’s participation in construction of gender is also examined. A picture analysis supported by a small survey is also included in the study.
52

Birth and Women in Mythology

Lee, Chanju 21 November 2008 (has links)
The Birth is a multi-media video installation inspired by my personal experiences of a miscarriage and the births of my two children. The work is influenced by the mythologies found in Korean culture that focus on the mother figure as a ¡°Great Mother¡±. She is an ¡°ideal woman¡±, a ¡°good mother¡± and a ¡°sincere wife¡±. Working abstractly across the media of painting, video, digital animation, and the paintings of my son, The Birth exploits metaphors and symbols, to tell the story of women, especially the stories of mothers. The work speaks to motherly love and my own identity as an artist and a mother.
53

Beyond the easel : the dissolution of abstract expressionist painting into the realm of architecture / Dissolution of abstract expressionist painting into the realm of architecture

Costello, Eileen Elizabeth 05 April 2013 (has links)
A defining feature of American abstract expressionist painting is its enormous size and scale. Heroic ambition, the vast American landscape, and the sense of "something big" happening in American painting are often cited as determining factors in this phenomenon. This dissertation examines how Jackson Pollock, Barnett Newman, and Mark Rothko not only painted large-scale canvases but, following trends in modern architecture, shifted their painting towards the construction of architectural environments, thus promoting the transformation of painting from a window in the wall to a wall without a window. The artist and architect Tony Smith, a close friend and colleague of these painters, played an active role in encouraging their interest in modern architecture. As a result of their investigations into the physical, as well as conceptual, limits of the canvas, these artists shifted the viewer’s experience from a perceptual experience of pictorial space to a physical encounter with actual space. In contradiction to the notion of the purely optical, one could describe this as a somatic viewing experience, tactile and active, which anticipated specific concerns of 1960s minimalism. This achievement redefines Pollock's, Newman's, and Rothko's legacy to the subsequent generation of artists and places their production into a broader historical framework. / text
54

Processen som motiv : Att samarbeta med materialet

Höglund, Mathias January 2021 (has links)
This master essay is about the process as a motive and how I collaborate with the material. How the paintings go from being constructions to becoming paintings where the color, gestures and mark making creates a content in itself. The fiction of materials.   The essay begins with me in my studio working on a painting. Trying to solve the problems in the painting. This section ends with me flipping the painting upside-down, realising that the problem I had was gone.   The next chapter is about what happens during the process from the first idea to the finished painting. How visual ideas appear in front of me in my everyday life in small details. I compare the ideas with the miracles in the 2006 movie Wristcutters a Love Story and how all the characters see small miracles; no one cares, exact the main character Zia. I also write about the Art Concrete-movment from the 1930s and there attitude towards painting.    In the end of this chapter I write about Günther Förgs artistry; his fascination of the early modernist painters and how he break their rules.    The next chapter is about the importens of AbEx (abstract expressionism), the artistry of Joan Mitchell and how the rapper MF DOOM influens my way of working with painting.   The essay end with me talking about Maria Lassnigs influence over my own artistry. How she haunts me. In this chapter I also write about my background; my home town Gävle, the importens of the HipHop subculture and feeling a bit odd in my hometown.The very last thing is a quote about painting by Amy Sillman from her essay ”On color” and how that quote led me to where I am now as a painter.
55

How Active Engagement in Art Assists the Artist in the Process of Self-awareness

Ahmadi, Mohamad Javad January 2021 (has links)
This dissertation is a phenomenological study on the origin of expressive arts as an innate human need rooted deeply in the psyche in order to grasp and relate to the human condition. Carl Gustav Jung said, “Life has no rules and that is its mystery.” Art compensates for the chaos that originates and often rules life. The history of art and its evolution in society was explored to paint a picture of the experiences that dominate and leave permanent etchings of the complexities, attachments, and traumas on the psyche. I explored the history of art and its ability to stimulate curiosities, discoveries, and learning. Additionally, I followed the birth of art education and its crossroads within the discovery of the unconscious mind and Jungian psychology. I followed the effects of the unconscious mind and psychology on art and art education, the ecological agents of the Industrial Revolution, the birth of the middle class, and the new accessibility of art. I also discussed the Industrial Revolution and its impact on pushing the artist to new interior boundaries of altered states and the birth of abstract art. Moreover, I looked at expressive art, painting, poetry, and sculpture as the foreground to discover the psychic energy and complexes that stimulate and inspire the artist. I presented eight artist interviews randomly chosen from different backgrounds, specialties, and age. The data analysis process allowed me to gain insights into the artists’ perceptions of how art has enriched the development of their psyches and their lives.
56

“I Do This, You Do That:” mass consumption and subversive protopolitics in Frank O’Hara’s poetry

Germain, Gabriel 04 1900 (has links)
No description available.
57

<p>"The Cult of Cézanne:" Marcel Duchamp, Clyfford Still, and Banksy</p>

Miller, Shelby E. 17 July 2017 (has links)
No description available.
58

The Formless Self

Neishi, Miwa 31 May 2016 (has links)
No description available.
59

Jackson Pollock, 1930-1955 : the influence of the Old Masters

Roncone, Natalie Maria January 2011 (has links)
The imagery in Jackson Pollock's three extant sketchbooks which date from c.1934-1939 is dependent on that of other artists, especially El Greco, Rubens and Tintoretto. By 1947 however, the painter achieved a mature synthesis, distinctly his, which influenced contemporary painting, and was seminal for the work of a number of artists of the succeeding era. This dissertation is an attempt to document the phases of Pollock's artistic style from the early 1930s through to the middle 1950s, and to investigate the forces which may have catalyzed his temperament and precipitated his late style. The early sketchbooks begun in c.1934 represent Pollock's engagement with the art of the Old Masters and the teaching techniques of Thomas Hart Benton that utilized works from the Renaissance. The third sketchbook from c.1937-1939 induced him to re-examine the work of the Old Masters in a dialectical approach which incorporated new masters with old, but remained preoccupied with the sacred imagery found in the first two books. It is a resolution of these seemingly opposing modes of representation which produced several influential paintings in the early 1940s, including Guardians of the Secret and Pasiphae. At the same time these works display structural emulations related to those of Old Master paintings that would become increasingly prominent in Pollock's art. The canvases of 1947-1950, produced in what is commonly termed the “Classic Poured Period,” appear to represent a quantum leap beyond the concerns of Old Master works and European precedents. By this point Pollock had developed a fluency and assurance in his use of color and line that seems to extend further than the studied paradigmatic repetitions of his early sketchbooks. However, despite the radically new technique his paintings still exhibit pictorial and formal infrastructures derived from Renaissance paintings which were absorbed into Pollock's new idiom with surprising ease. In 1951 Pollock enters what Francis V.O'Connor termed as ‘his fourth phase'. The Black paintings of 1951-1953 betray a further exploration and adaptation of Old Master ideas, both iconographic and aesthetic and were created in Triptychs and Diptychs, typical altarpiece formats. With these paintings Pollock's forms acquired a confident plasticity and invention derived from the sculptural practices of Michelangelo, and progressively fewer individual images are quoted verbatim. An understanding of Pollock's early preoccupation with old Master painting is essential to comprehend the formation of the aesthetics of much of his later art. Significantly the underlying infrastructure remains fixed to old Master precedents and it was precisely these models of Renaissance and Baroque art which became the medium through which his mature synthesis was achieved.
60

Die Erfindung der Moderne: Das Manifest Refus global und die identitätsstiftende Rezeption von Surrealismus und Automatismus in Québec

Grzonka, Sabine Alice 14 March 2003 (has links) (PDF)
The manifesto of the Quebecer art movement Automatism, the Refus global (Montreal, 1948), is today one of the best known socio-political writings of Quebec. It is considered to have been the beginning of Quebec's cultural modernity and an early sign of its political modernity. In the early 1940's the manifesto's author Paul-Émile Borduas (1905-1960) had already been praised for his art later named &amp;quot;Automatism&amp;quot;. It was seen by the automatists as the evolution of Surrealism (like Abstract Expressionism). Many art critics called this the first Canadian painting that followed the modern aesthetics of the time. According to the surrealist program the automatists aspired to create a new Quebec society. In 1948, the fact that their manifesto differed greatly from the conservative political and social ideas of Maurice Duplessis (Prime Minister of Quebec from 1936 to 1939 and from 1944 to 1959) made Borduas and the manifesto famous. It was considered to be an attack against the traditionalistic institutions because it not only required pictorial but also general liberty. Maurice Duplessis' death in 1959 was the beginning of the Quiet Revolution. During this eventful time the Quebecois began officially to identify with the modern state they were creating. The end of the old regime was also the beginning of a new Quebec nationalism which is important for the new reception of Automatism. The intellectuals discovered the Refus global and saw in Borduas their spiritual father in their claim for an original Quebec culture and a greater political autonomy. In the former condemnation of the manifesto they found the proof that the old political system in Quebec prevented modernity. This thesis traces the reception of Surrealism, Automatism and the Refus global in Quebec throughout the period from the 1940's to the turn of the century. It shows how modern (cultural and national) identity has been established, which groups have been interested in its construction and how the commemoration of the manifesto still helps today to support the nationalist project in Quebec. / Das Manifest des Automatismus, der Refus global (Montreal, 1948), zählt heute zu den bedeutendsten soziopolitischen Schriften Québecs und wird als Beginn der kulturellen und als Vorzeichen der politischen Moderne Québecs angesehen. Die Dissertation untersucht die Rezeption des Manifests und der quebecer Kunstströmung, die sich als eine Weiterentwicklung des europäischen Surrealismus sah, sowie den Wandel in der Sinnzuweisung. Der Untersuchungskorpus besteht aus Artikeln, Ausstellungskatalogen, Monografien, Dokumentarfilmen etc., die in den letzten 50 Jahren über den Automatismus bzw. den Refus global in Québec erschienen sind. Für ihre Analyse wurden literarische Rezeptionstheorien und &amp;quot;Gedächtnistheorien&amp;quot; (u.a. von Jauß, Assmann und Nora) herangezogen. Mit ihrer Hilfe wird der Weg nachgezeichnet, wie die Schrift und die Kunstbewegung in das kollektive quebecer Gedächtnis eingingen, um dem Aufbau einer modernen quebecer Identität zu dienen und den politischen Diskurs des Souveränismus in Québec zu stützen. Die Ergebnisse werfen auch ein Licht auf die Gruppen, die an diesem Prozess beteiligt waren und noch immer sind. Bereits zu Beginn der 1940er Jahre hatte der Autor des Manifests, Paul-Émile Borduas (1905-1960), die Aufmerksamkeit der Intellektuellen auf sich gezogen: Zahlreiche Kunstkritiker erkannten in seiner Malerei den Beginn einer originären kanadischen Kunst der Moderne, die nicht mehr die europäischen Vorbilder kopierte, sondern mit der zeitgenössischen Ästhetik (s. Abstrakter Expressionismus) aufschloss. Wie den Surrealisten, so ging es auch den Automatisten um die Schaffung einer neuen Gesellschaft. Ihr im Refus global dargelegtes Programm kontrastierte denn auch aufs Schärfste mit dem konservativen politischen und sozialen Diskurs von Maurice Duplessis (Premierminister von Québec von 1936 bis 1939 und von 1944 bis 1959), der zudem vom Antikommunismus in den USA beeinflusst wurde. Der Tod Duplessis' im Jahr 1959 war zugleich der Beginn der Révolution tranquille. Während dieser ereignisreichen Zeit identifizierten sich zahlreiche Quebecer mit dem modernen Staat, den sie schufen. Durch die Kontrastierung des Traditionalismus Duplessis' mit den Neuerungen der 1960er Jahre entstand der Eindruck, Québec trete erst jetzt in seine politische Moderne ein. Vor dem Hintergrund dieser Geschichtsinterpretation entstand ein neuartiger quebecer Nationalismus, der auf eine größere Autonomie Québecs abzielte und entscheidend für die Wahrnehmung des Automatismus war: Die Intellektuellen entdeckten den Refus global wieder und sahen in seinem Autor den geistigen Vater ihres Rufes nach einer originären quebecer Kultur der Moderne als Grundlage einer größeren politischen Autonomie. In den folgenden Jahren bedienten sie sich des Automatismus zur Schaffung einer neuen quebecer (Kultur-)Geschichte, in die der Ruf nach kollektiver Selbstbestimmung eingeschrieben wurde. So avancierten Borduas und die anderen Automatisten zu Vorvätern des modernen Québec. Diese Wahrnehmung der Bewegung wird begleitet von einer Abwertung der Leistungen anderer moderner quebecer Künstler und Immigranten und dient bis heute der Stärkung des nationalen Ichs

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