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Scheflan-Katzav, Hadara – Journal of Visual Literacy, 2021
The premise of the article is that the history of Western art as taught in most art curricula is fundamentally biased and patriarchal. It was primarily feminist scholars who demonstrated how modernist art paradigms are constructed by gender differences and thus reflect and reinforce gender power relations. My claim is that changing the power…
Descriptors: Art Education, Feminism, Power Structure, Visual Perception
Lori Anne Palmer – ProQuest LLC, 2022
Art Appreciation is often a course that undergraduate students take to meet their general education requirements. However, many students have little interest or value of art due to a lack of previous art experiences and often choose the course because they feel it will be relatively easy. This qualitative, naturalistic inquiry focused on students'…
Descriptors: Art Education, Art Appreciation, Teaching Methods, Aesthetics
Powell, Olivia – Journal of Museum Education, 2017
How can museum educators create dialogical experiences with European decorative arts? This question frames my essay and stems from the challenges I have faced introducing objects whose original functions seem to overshadow their aesthetic and interpretive value. Repeated efforts to spark rich dialogue and collective interpretation around pieces of…
Descriptors: Art Appreciation, Art Education, Art History, Art Products
Denmead, Tyler; Brown, Ruth-Nicole – Art Education, 2014
In this Instructional Resource, Denmead and Brown consider how "Ruffneck Constructivists," an exhibition curated by Kara Walker at the Institute for Contemporary Art (ICA), University of Pennsylvania, can disturb and provoke young creatives and art education more broadly. For this exhibition, Walker draws on the figure that MC Lyte…
Descriptors: Art Education, Instructional Materials, Art Appreciation, Art Materials
Prager, Phillip – American Journal of Play, 2013
Dada, an art movement that became well known in the late 1910s and early 1920s, challenged traditional notions of art and aesthetics. Dada artists, for example, tossed colored scraps of paper into the air to compose chance-based collages, performed sound poems devoid of semantic value, and modeled a headpiece fashioned of sardine cans. To most art…
Descriptors: Novelty (Stimulus Dimension), Artists, Art History, Play
Law, Sophia S. M. – New Horizons in Education, 2010
Background: Under the challenge of many post-modern theories and critics on art and art history, the boundaries and definition of art has becoming more diverse. Conventional art appreciation no longer covers all the debates and issues arising from the complex meaning of art in the modern world. Art education today must widen students' vision of…
Descriptors: Art Appreciation, Interaction, Art Expression, Art Products
Tuman, Donna M. – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2008
The National Endowment for the Humanities funded the Rembrandt Project for the purpose of developing an online teaching resource that can provide a means for accessing Rembrandt's art and his world. The Web site for the project includes numerous links that direct teachers to American museums that hold paintings, etchings, or drawings by Rembrandt…
Descriptors: Visual Arts, Art Education, Web Sites, Art Appreciation
Kent, Lori – Art Education, 2007
When displayed in museums and classrooms, Renaissance-era (1420-1600) painting, architecture, and drawing masterworks are often decontextualized from the social reality of the Academy system under which they were produced. For centuries, the artworks of the Italian Renaissance have seduced viewers with technical mastery, exquisite pigments, and…
Descriptors: Visual Arts, Content Analysis, Art Education, Hermeneutics
Hallam, Jenny; Lee, Helen; Das Gupta, Mani – International Journal of Art & Design Education, 2007
This article presents an analysis of the way art is conceptualised in the British primary school curriculum and provides an historical framework that maps an evolution of ideas that have shaped the way art is presented in the modern day primary curriculum. In order to achieve this a Foucauldian style genealogical analysis is utilised to trace the…
Descriptors: Elementary School Curriculum, Art Education, Art Appreciation, Art History
Barton, Sara – National Middle School Association (NJ3), 2007
Most students in America can graduate from high school without ever analyzing a piece of art. Perhaps these students will take an art history or an art appreciation course in college that may incorporate a few references to literature and history. Math or science connections will most likely remain entirely absent. Why do we treat art analysis…
Descriptors: Core Curriculum, Art History, Art Appreciation, Art Education

Mittler, Gene – School Arts, 1982
Describes how two approaches to learning in art--art history and art criticism--can enable high school students to learn a great deal about, and from, a work of art. The article also discusses what an art historian does and then compares this to what a critic does. (AM)
Descriptors: Art Appreciation, Art Education, Art History, High Schools
Kamhi, Michelle Marder – Arts Education Policy Review, 2006
Numerous incidents have been reported in recent years wherein a work of art is mistaken as trash. The question is, how have people reached the point in the civilized world where a purported work of art cannot be distinguished from a pile of rubbish or a grid of condensation pipes? The answer to that question lies in the basic assumption of nearly…
Descriptors: Creativity, Art Education, Artists, Art Appreciation

Arndt, Tina – School Arts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2004
The author of this article is an art specialist at Whiteford Elementary School in Sylvania, Ohio. Following a visit to a Paul Klee exhibition, she cut out all the miniature examples from the exhibition flyer in order to make six art pins. She then wore a different pin each day at both her elementary and high school assignments with amazing…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Artists, Art Education, Art Products

Paine, Sheila – Journal of Art and Design Education, 1987
Reviews the life of Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (1864-1901) and examines how his early experiences influenced his art. (BSR)
Descriptors: Art, Art Appreciation, Art Education, Art Expression

Wetzler, Pat – School Arts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2004
This article describes a project that introduces students in grades K-8 to new artistic styles, giving them an appreciation for an artist's work, as well as teaching them some art history. The teacher introduced this lesson to each grade by presenting examples of the artist's works either from posters or books. They discussed the distinctive…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Artists, Art History, Art Education