• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 3
  • 2
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 6
  • 6
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 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.
1

The clarification and analysis of transparency and reflection as an artistic concept

Patten, Benton Penrod. Gregor, Harold, January 1974 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ed. D.)--Illinois State University, 1974. / Title from title page screen, viewed Oct. 13, 2004. Dissertation Committee: Harold Gregor (chair), Jack Hobbs, Kenneth Holder, Harold Boyd. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 139-141) and abstract. Also available in print.
2

Allusions

Unknown Date (has links)
Allusions explores the volatile nature of intimate relationships by revisiting and recovering my memory of dramatic experiences in my own intimate relationships then translating them into painted psychological scenes. These scenes are activated by symbolically charged objects and interrupted by openings or portals serving as points of entry or exit. The people involved are referred to by pieces of carefully chosen furniture situated in a space that has shifting perspectives and illogical planes, referencing the complexity of memory and the subjectivity of experience. Discordant color, texture, and layered information are used to heighten the drama of the moment. These painted panels and ceramic structures are a manifestation of my mental processing of interpersonal exchanges and remembered experiences through the development of a unique visual vocabulary in paint. / Includes bibliography. / Thesis (M.F.A.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2016. / FAU Electronic Theses and Dissertations Collection
3

Une abstraction perceptuelle. Seuils de la vision et phénoménologie dans l’art optique et cinétique depuis 1950 / A Perceptual Abstraction : Limits of Vision and Phenomenology in Optical and Kinetic Art Since 1950

Poirier, Matthieu 12 December 2012 (has links)
La notion d’« abstraction perceptuelle (perceptual abstraction) » apparaît dans le domaine de la psychologie cognitive avant d’être associée à l’art optique et cinétique dans les pages du catalogue de l’exposition « The Responsive Eye » au Museum of Modern Art en 1965. Ce lien tissé entre abstraction et phénoménologie de la perception, bien qu’il ait connu une résonance historiographique modeste, traduit avec justesse certains enjeux et complète les catégories du mouvement et de l’effet, sur lesquelles le débat et la réflexion se sont le plus souvent orientés. À partir de ce cadre initial des années 1950 et 1960 est établi un second cadre, plus vaste, allant des avant-gardes historiques à nos jours, d’un « art perceptuel ». Au sein de ce corpus transhistorique sont rassemblées des oeuvres caractérisées par leur oscillation constante entre surface et volume, fait et effet, matière et vibration. Le phénomène de palpitation et de dissolution, qui se substitue à la composition et à la polychromie, rend impossible la saisie d’oeuvres tantôt incandescentes, tantôt évanescentes. Dans cette exploration constante des seuils du visible, la perception est traitée comme un médium à part entière. À travers oeuvres et textes, cette étude entend mettre en avant les résonances thématiques entre les époques et les courants afin, précisément, d’établir un panorama, le plus large possible, des pratiques relevant de ce que Jean Clay présenta comme « une prise de conscience de l’instabilité du réel ». / The term “perceptual abstraction” appears within the field of cognitive psychology before being associated, in the catalogue of the exhibition "The Responsive Eye" at the MoMA in New York in 1965, with Optical Art and Kinetic Art, two parallel trends around which debate and reception were focused for about a decade. At the same time, this link between abstraction et perception, despite the modest resonance of its term, is relevant for understanding these kinds of artistic practices with the potential of covering a wider historical and aesthetic field. Beyond this narrow chronological frame of the 1950s and 1960s, this concept describes a type of Perceptual Art that is based on an oscillation between fact and effect, matter and flux, surface and volume—an art in which composition and polychromy give way to vibration and dissolution, from the historical avant-gardes until today. Through an analysis of diverse artworks and texts, this study approaches perception beyond the commonly used categories of mechanical movement and optical effect. Considered as a medium in itself by some artists, perception is driven to its limits and the spectator’s capacity to grasp form and space is questioned. Thematic echoes between periods and trends are highlighted, precisely in order to define the field as broadly as possible—to reflect on what Jean Clay aptly described as “an awareness of the instability of the real.”
4

Hippocampus: seahorse; brain-structure; spatial map; concept

Armstrong, Beth Diane January 2010 (has links)
Through an exploration of both sculptural and thought processes undertaken in making my Masters exhibition, ‘Hippocampus’, I unpack some possibilities, instabilities, and limitations inherent in representation and visual perception. This thesis explores the Hippocampus as image (seahorse) and concept (brain-structure involved in cognitive mapping of space). Looking at Gilles Deleuze’s writings on representation, I will expand on the notion of the map as being that which does not define and fix a structure or meaning, but rather is open, extendable and experimental. I explore the becoming, rather than the being, of image and concept. The emphasis here is on process, non-representation, and fluidity of meaning. This is supportive of my personal affirmation of the practice and process of art-making as research. I will refer to the graphic prints of Maurits Cornelis Escher as a means to elucidate a visual contextualization of my practical work, particularly with regard to the play with two- and three-dimensional space perception. Through precisely calculated ‘experiments’ that show up the partiality of our visual perception of space, Escher alludes to things that either cannot actually exist as spatial objects or do exist, but resist representation. Similarly I will explore how my own sculptures, although existing in space resist a fixed representation and suggest ideas of other spaces, non-spaces; an in-between space that does not pin itself down and become fixed to any particular image, idea, objector representation.
5

Op art et cinéma : fascination visuelle et imaginaire social (1960-1975) / Op art and cinema : Visual fascination and social fantasy (1960-1975)

Mari, Pauline 26 January 2016 (has links)
Adulé ou détesté, l’op art a marqué les esprits par son incroyable réception populaire. Damiers à renflements, moirage, jeux de trompe-l’œil, clignotements épileptiques… Avec son insatiable appétit scopique, cette avant-garde a fait l’objet de nombreux réemplois dans la publicité, le design, la mode, à la télévision, et plus que jamais au cinéma. Art de l’œil et du mouvement, sa géométrie illusionniste avait matière à s’y épanouir – la moindre caméra décuple ses vertus de métamorphose. A l’inverse, ses gadgets sophistiqués ont sublimé à moindre coût les décors de science-fiction, son économie pulsatile a piloté des mises en scène d’horreur et de suspense, et le cinéma réaliste en a fait un puissant miroir de la société. Pourtant, l’histoire de l’art a longtemps ignoré voir blâmé ces reprises. Comme à l’époque, on les ravalait au rang de la récupération. C’étaient sinon le symptôme d’un art décérébré, décadent, vulgairement rétinien. Il importe aujourd’hui de les reconsidérer. Comment ces « œuvres de prolongement » travaillent les imaginaires de l’op art ? Au cours de ses réemplois, que perd et gagne une œuvre d’art ? A travers trois capitales, Paris, Londres et Rome, cet essai décrypte les enjeux d’une fascination visuelle dans un après-guerre hanté, bouleversé par l’imagerie médiatique (guerre froide, fabrication du consentement) et les technologies engageant l’œil et le cerveau (contre-espionnage, cryptanalyse). Cette thèse se réclame des « factual studies », une approche nouvelle, non moins iconographique que les visual studies, mais davantage sensible à une pensée de l’événement. Soit la rencontre des faits historiques avec les refoulés de l’histoire. / Worshiped or hated, op art is famous for its amazing popularity. Raised checkboards, moiré patterns, trompe l’oeil games, epileptic flashes… Because of its insatiable scopic appetite, this artistic movement was abundantly used in advertising, fashion, television and, above all, in movies. Art of the eye and the motion, its illusionist geometry could find a large expression in cinema – a shaking camera could increase its metamorphic power. Its sophisticated gadgets magnified science-fiction sets at minimal cost, its stroboscopic aesthetic fuelled the staging of horror films and thrillers, and realistic cinema has used it as a faithful mirror of society. However, history of art has always condemned this kind of reuse and was reluctant to study it. As in the sixties, one considered it as an enterprise of looting, or even as the sign of a decadent, enervated and strictly retinal art. Visiting three capitals, Paris, London and Rome, this thesis aims at decrypting issues related to visual fascination in a post-war time challenged by the media imagery (Cold War, manufacturing consent) and the new technologies such as counter-espionage and cryptanalysis. What does an artwork win or lose through its transformations? To what extent do these “objects of extension” reflect the fantasy of op art and even of society? While taking into account the historical dimension, this study experiments a new research method : the “factual studies” – that is however equally iconographic as the “visual studies”. In other words, the encounter of historical events and repulsed history.
6

Hannes Beckmann (1909-1977). Desava - Praha - New York / Hannes Beckmann (1909-1977). Dessau - Prague - New York

Kuzica Rokytová, Bronislava January 2018 (has links)
Hannes Beckmann (1909-1977). Dessau - Prague - New York This PhD thesis is dedicated to an exceptional, though still forgotten personality, an artist of German descent, Hannes Beckmann |1909-1977|. A graduate of Germany's Bauhaus, he was one of the refugees fleeing Nazism to Czechoslovakia, and among many other achievements, he later became the director of the photography department of the Guggenheim Museum in New York. Through his work, he fulfilled avant-garde ideas on the synthesis of artistic fields: he was a painter, stage designer, art theorist and pedagogue, but also a creator of abstract objects moving along the boundaries of minimalistic and kinetic constructions. His fate in life and created body of work began gaining a clearer form in the framework of research on visual artists, who found sanctuary in interwar Czechoslovakia from demagogic political systems. Until that time, Hannes Beckmann had been utterly unknown to Czech art history and elsewhere. This is seen in the absence of his name in Czech technical literature, but also because he was never mentioned even in publications published by the Bauhaus with which he had been involved for some time. There was only sketchy information on his pedagogical and artistic work in the area of Op-Art (optical art) from the 1960s to 1970s in the United...

Page generated in 0.0693 seconds