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Mary Soylu – Art Education, 2023
African American artists have participated in every major art style and movement since before the founding of this nation. However, until recent decades, this "grand epic" had been marginalized within the traditional survey canon of American art. Art historians have undertaken considerable scholarship (Bearden & Henderson, 1993;…
Descriptors: African Americans, Art History, Black Colleges, Instructional Innovation
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Bobick, Bryna; DiCindio, Carissa – Art Education, 2012
Advocacy is not new to art education. Over the years, Goldfarb (1979), Hodsoll (1985), and Erickson and Young (1996) have written about the importance of arts advocacy, but the concept of advocacy has evolved with the times. For example, in the 1970s, arts advocacy was described as a "movement" and brought together art educators,…
Descriptors: Art History, Visual Arts, Elementary Secondary Education, Art Activities
Goldman, Shifra M. – Aztlan--International Journal of Chicano Studies Research, 1982
Traces the history of Mexican muralism (1920s to 1970s) as an art of advocacy intended to change consciousness and promote political action; shows how it can still be used in an educative manner in schools. Emphasizes the effects of three great muralists (Diego Rivera, Jose Clemente Orozco, and David Alfaro Siqueiros). (LC)
Descriptors: Advocacy, Art Education, Art Expression, Art History
Pena, Lydia M. – 1984
In the past 15 years, women have made substantial strides in remedying several longstanding injustices towards women in art. Through considerable pressure and discussion, a small group of women succeeded in convincing the Brooklyn Museum of Art to host an exhibition of women artists in the 1970s. Women art professors also staged a successful…
Descriptors: Advocacy, Art Education, Art History, Artists