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Showing 31 to 45 of 228 results Save | Export
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Turner, Matthew – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2009
Recent theories of the aesthetic appreciation of nature or natural environments have done much to clarify what might be essential to such appreciation. Such accounts are incomplete, however, as they depend on a strict separation between works of art and nature itself. This paper shows how classical Chinese landscape painting offers a way to…
Descriptors: Painting (Visual Arts), Foreign Countries, Physical Environment, Aesthetics
Johnson, Mark M. – Arts & Activities, 2009
A new traveling exhibition and catalogue produced by the Smithsonian's American Art Museum features works by 31 artists from the United States who came to maturity in the mid-20th century. These artists have become the most significant and influential artists over the past 50 years as their works adorn the modern galleries of hundreds of museums.…
Descriptors: Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Painting (Visual Arts)
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Salia, Hannah – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2011
How is the natural environment in the neighborhood representative of the larger biosphere in which people live? Studying the local birds and flora of the Pacific Northwest in the context of the local parks and ponds provided a rich opportunity for third-grade students at St. Thomas School in Medina, Washington, to explore and learn about…
Descriptors: Studio Art, Art Activities, Elementary School Students, Grade 3
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Pellegrino, Linda – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2009
Art history can be a little dry at times, but the author is always trying to incorporate new ways of teaching it. In this article, she describes a project in which students were to create a place setting out of clay that had to be unified through a famous artist's style. This place setting had to consist of at least five pieces (dinner plate, cup…
Descriptors: Art History, Artists, Painting (Visual Arts), Art Activities
Chrzanowski, Rose-Ann C. – Arts & Activities, 2010
An art room should be a garden of visual stimulation, born of creativity, inquiry, critical thinking and intellectual conversation--and a little collaboration is not a bad thing either! When the author unpacked the new stools for her art room at the high school, she envisioned something more beautiful than the brown masonite circles that…
Descriptors: Art History, Artists, Art Activities, Studio Art
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Cameron, Louise – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2009
Missouri artist George Caleb Bingham (1811-1879) was both a painter and a politician. An exhibition of his work at the Saint Louis Art Museum in the fall of 2007 sponsored by Bank of America featured his painting "The County Election" along with its preparatory drawings. In anticipation of the exhibition, the museum's education…
Descriptors: Museums, Art History, Artists, Visual Aids
Herberholz, Barbara – Arts & Activities, 2009
Edgar Degas was not yet famous, but was on the point of aesthetic and commercial success when he left Paris in the fall for his New Orleans visit of about four months, during which time he painted 22 major works. It might be said that he was having a midlife crisis at this time. He had been painting ballet and horse pictures to assist his father's…
Descriptors: Art Education, Intellectual History, Artists, Phenomenology
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Nivens, Delana A.; Padgett, Clifford W.; Chase, Jeffery M.; Verges, Katie J.; Jamieson, Deborah S. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2010
Case studies and current literature are combined with spectroscopic analysis to provide a unique chemistry experience for art history students and to provide a unique inquiry-based laboratory experiment for analytical chemistry students. The XRF analysis method was used to demonstrate to nonscience majors (art history students) a powerful…
Descriptors: Spectroscopy, Chemistry, Case Studies, Art History
Sartorius, Tara Cady – Arts & Activities, 2009
How "could" one borrow a view? The works of artist, Ray Kass (b. 1944) are as much, if not more, about the experience and process of perception and art-making as they are about the final objects he creates. Kass is notorious for not solely his art making, but also for his thinking. He thinks, he writes, he teaches, he discusses, he organizes…
Descriptors: Artists, Art History, Painting (Visual Arts), Art Education
Johnson, Mark M. – Arts & Activities, 2009
Norman Rockwell was the quintessential painter of American life. His images reflect the history of America as told through the eyes of this idealistic and patriotic artist who sought to show America at its best, and to present the lives, hopes and dreams of the average American in the middle-20th century. Few artists have produced so many images…
Descriptors: Artists, Art Expression, Art History, Art Products
Sienkewicz, Julia A. – ProQuest LLC, 2009
This dissertation offers a study of the ways in which some artists active in the United States between 1790 and 1850 theorized that their work could participate in the process of creating and shaping the nation's citizens. Through the detailed analysis of four artists--Benjamin Henry Latrobe (1764-1820), Charles Willson Peale (1741-1827), Thomas…
Descriptors: Artists, Art Products, Citizenship, Identification
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Gebstaedt, Kate – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2009
"Appreciation" of the arts grows most abundantly when students immerse themselves in the making of art. In this article, the author describes how she made eighth graders appreciate some of the big names from the art of the past.
Descriptors: Art Appreciation, Studio Art, Middle School Students, Grade 8
Biggs, Louise M. – Arts & Activities, 2009
Many people have seen "The Kiss" (1907-08), an iconic artwork by Austrian Symbolist Gustav Klimt (1862-1918), but know little about its background. Since its creation, the sensual subject matter and lush golden patterns have been this culture's example of romantic love. The painting exemplifies Klimt's brand of Art Nouveau. Acceptance often eluded…
Descriptors: Artists, Internet, Art History, Intellectual History
Woo, Vila – Arts & Activities, 2009
In this article, the author describes a class project wherein preschoolers gained an enriched experience learning art history through engaging in various activities: (1) listening to a storybook; (2) viewing images; (3) doing movement; and (4) producing a masterpiece. The author describes how the children painted their interpretation of Mona Lisa…
Descriptors: Art History, Class Activities, Preschool Children, Story Reading
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Halsall, Francis – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2008
The "all-over" abstract canvases that Jackson Pollock produced between 1943 and 1951 present a pedagogical challenge in how to account for their apparently chaotic structure. One reason that they are difficult to teach about is that they have proved notoriously difficult for art historians to come to terms with. This is undoubtedly a consequence…
Descriptors: Art History, Artists, Art Expression, Painting (Visual Arts)
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