School Project on an Artist - Help! | the Fashion Spot

School Project on an Artist - Help!

yellowetpink

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I have an essay to do on an artist, and am having severe difficulty choosing one :(

I was doing Roy Lichtenstein, but my teacher told everyone and now they are all doing him :rolleyes: so I want someone else.
Preferably someone with the same style as him who is not Andy Warhol or David Hockney.

Please help :)
 
I just realised that the name is quite misleading, so feel free to change it :) :flower:
 
Does it need to be a pop artist?
How about James Rosenquist?
 
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gustav klimt

lichtenstein is great, i have one of the NY 10 prints that my grandpa snagged when the series was done. hangs about 20 ft away in my kitchen. i'll snap a pic one of these days.

there are so many great artists that its hard to chose one. instead of chosing a specific artist, why not chose a movement so you can discuss important artists of that movement, how the movement related to the time period, the aesthetic, the style, etc. writing about art and culture go hand in hand, so it shouldn't be a hard assignment.

try Dada, or Bauhaus, they're both interesting styles and periods for art. i'm a bigger fan of the former than the latter.

art is hard.
 
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Yellowetpink you might keep in mind that Lichtenstein's comic style is pretty unique to him however, if it is a pop artist that you are wishing to cover others you might chose are Ed Rusha, James Rosenquist,George Segal, Jasper Johns (Cross over of pop art and abstract Expressionism), Rauschenberg (forgot his first name)
Jeff Koons is a contemporary artist whose work has similar ideals to pop art....whew can you write about any artist in the history of the world? or just pop art?

I have extensive notes on Modern American Art if you need any help as I just finished it last year:flower:

 
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I can write about any artist, but they have to be after the 1700's for some reason.

Thank you so much everyone!
I'll be looking up some of these now :)
 
gustav klimt

lichtenstein is great, i have one of the NY 10 prints that my grandpa snagged when the series was done. hangs about 20 ft away in my kitchen. i'll snap a pic one of these days.

there are so many great artists that its hard to chose one. instead of chosing a specific artist, why not chose a movement so you can discuss important artists of that movement, how the movement related to the time period, the aesthetic, the style, etc. writing about art and culture go hand in hand, so it shouldn't be a hard assignment.

try Dada, or Bauhaus, they're both interesting styles and periods for art. i'm a bigger fan of the former than the latter.

art is hard.
Urgh I know :lol:
It has to be a specific artist I'm afraid, we have to :
  • Introduce them
  • Introduce their theme of art (that make sense?)
  • Evauate 5 of their paintings.
:unsure:
 
Wow, any painter post 1700. That's pretty broad. If you want to stick with pop art, you could do it from the Japanese perspective. Example:

Takashi Murakami (村上隆 Murakami Takashi?, born 1 February 1962 in Tokyo) is a prolific contemporary Japanese artist who works in both fine arts media, such as painting, as well as digital and commercial media. He attempts to blur the boundaries between high and low art. He appropriates popular themes from mass media and pop culture, then turns them into thirty-foot sculptures, "Superflat" paintings, or marketable commercial goods such as figurines or phone caddies.
Murakami attended the Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music, initially studying more traditionalist Japanese art. He pursued a doctorate in Nihonga, a mixture of Western and Eastern styles dating back to the late 19th century. However, due to the mass popularity of anime and manga, Japanese styles of animation and comic graphic stories, Murakami became disillusioned with Nihonga, and became fixated on otaku culture, which he felt was more representative of modern day Japanese life.
This resulted in Superflat, the style that Murakami is credited with starting. It developed from Poku, (Pop + otaku). Murakami has written that he aims to represent Poku culture because he expects that animation and otaku might create a new culture. This new culture being a rejuvenation of the contemporary Japanese art scene. This is what it is all about to Murakami; he has expressed in several interviews in the last five or six years the frustration that his art has risen from. It is a frustration rooted in the lack of a reliable and sustainable art market in post-war Japan, and the general view of Japanese art in and outside the country as having a low art status. He is quoted as saying that the market is nothing but "a shallow appropriation of Western trends". His first reaction was to make art in non-fine arts media, but decided instead to focus on the market sustainability of art and promote himself first overseas. This marks the birth of KaiKai Kiki, LLC.

wikipedia.org
 
Thanks everyone, I am still looking but I fell in love with this artist from the North of England. I'll post a few pics of his soon.

:flower:
 

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