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Art Education | 9 |
Author
Smith, Peter | 9 |
Pinto, Walter | 1 |
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Journal Articles | 9 |
Historical Materials | 4 |
Opinion Papers | 3 |
Reports - General | 2 |
Guides - Classroom - Teacher | 1 |
Reports - Descriptive | 1 |
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Smith, Peter – Art Education, 1987
Examines the "picture study" movement which began in the late 1800s and faded during the 1920s. Focuses especially on the work of Oscar Neal, a leading picture study advocate. Attempts to show how the aesthetic theory, beliefs about art, social assumptions, educational limitations, educational beliefs, and technology of the time interacted to make…
Descriptors: Art Education, Art History, Higher Education, Photographs

Smith, Peter – Art Education, 1985
Smith replies to Matoba's earlier art/sports analogy (Art Education, v38 n4 p30-31,46). Smith's basic disagreement is that art is not a sport. (RM)
Descriptors: Art, Art Education, Comparative Analysis, Elementary Secondary Education

Smith, Peter – Art Education, 1988
Examines Viktor Lowenfeld's activities as an instructor at the Hampton Institute, Virginia (1939-1946), an essentially Black school in a pre-civil rights movement southern setting. Discusses his theoretical statements and his behaviors in relation to teaching art to Black adults. (GEA)
Descriptors: Art Education, Black Education, Black Students, Educational History

Smith, Peter – Art Education, 1991
Reviews Natalie Robinson Cole's contribution to the field of art education by contrasting her philosophies with those of other art educators. Compares her teaching style with Viennese art educator, Franz Cizek. Concludes that Cole's life and work can be examined within as many frames for understanding as can be devised. (KM)
Descriptors: Art Activities, Art Education, Art History, Art Teachers

Smith, Peter – Art Education, 1984
Lowenfeld was incorrect in equating the work of Cole with that of Franz Cizek, the Viennese art educator. Despite similarities in rhetoric, their teaching approaches and careers in art education were very different. Cole's emphasis on freeing the individual, her California exuberance, and holistic approach are more reminiscent of Isadora Duncan.…
Descriptors: Art Activities, Art Education, Biographies, Childrens Art

Smith, Peter – Art Education, 1989
Proposes an art curriculum framework that reduces aesthetics to three theories of art: imitationalist, formalist, and emotionalist. Fits each theory into the curriculum at the appropriate developmental stage of the student. Applies these theories to art criticism, art history, and studio production. (LS)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Art Activities, Art Criticism, Art Education

Smith, Peter – Art Education, 1985
Contradictions in the literature abound concerning Franz Cizek's role in fostering creative art. Researchers should turn to student recollections to determine what Franz Cizek's contribution to art education really was. A former Cizek student who today is prominent in design work is interviewed. (RM)
Descriptors: Art Education, Art History, Childrens Art, Creative Art

Pinto, Walter; Smith, Peter – Art Education, 1999
Describes the history of the Chautauqua Industrial Art Desk, a teaching machine that was created around 1913, and the two teaching guides, "The Home Teacher" and "Child Life," that accompany the desk. Explains that the desk was a response to the industrialization and urbanization of society in the early twentieth-century. (CMK)
Descriptors: Art Education, Art History, Art Products, Childrens Art

Smith, Peter – Art Education, 1994
Asserts that multiculturalism is an inevitable feature of future curriculum development. Describes four approaches to multiculturalism: (1) attack multiculturalism; (2) escape multiculturalism; (3) transformative multiculturalism; and (4) repair multiculturalism. (CFR)
Descriptors: Art Education, Blacks, Cultural Differences, Cultural Pluralism