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Showing 1 to 15 of 28 results Save | Export
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
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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
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Walker, Keith; Smith, Liz – International Journal of Art and Design Education, 2004
This paper examines the value of a task-based approach to engaging with original works of art and focuses in particular upon the experiences of a group of PGCE Art and Design trainees when they visited an exhibition entitled, Air Guitar: Art Reconsidering Rock Music, to carry out given tasks. The extent to which a task-based approach might…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Rock Music, Arts Centers, Art Criticism
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Zurmuehlen, Marilyn – Art Education, 1992
Examines postmodernist art and its impact on architecture and visual art in the United States. States that this genre of art has affected dramatically object art, such as furniture design. Contends that postmodernism can be traced through societal and personal histories. (CFR)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Values, Architecture, Art, Art Appreciation
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Jensen, Heather – Interdisciplinary Humanities, 1998
Addresses the reasons why students resist learning about modern art within humanities courses. Provides strategies for encouraging students to appreciate and critique modern art, such as using comic strips to illuminate beliefs about modern art, studying the theory and practice of a particular artist, or utilizing group critiques of an artwork.…
Descriptors: Art, Art Appreciation, Art Criticism, Higher Education
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Stinespring, John A; Steele, Brian D. – Art Education, 1993
Recommends using an activity-based approach to art history similar to that of the "new social studies" movement of the 1960s. Provides suggestions for activities related to art criticism, style, and inductive learning. Concludes that student activities can help integrate art history and studio art in art education programs. (CFR)
Descriptors: Art Activities, Art Appreciation, Art Criticism, Art Education
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Venable, Bradford B. – Art Education, 1998
Examines three assumptions evident in the practice of art criticism models: (1) the connection of first impressions with the viewer's past experience; (2) the connection between sequential procedures and learning; and (3) the use of judgment as a necessary step in understanding. Describes a new criticism model that stresses understanding and…
Descriptors: Art Appreciation, Art Criticism, Art Education, Audience Response
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Geahigan, George – Art Education, 1998
Identifies the essential features of critical inquiry and shows how it differs from the critical procedures often recommended by educators. Explains the implications of the inquiry process for teaching criticism. Provides a model of critical-inquiry instruction by suggesting three basic instructional strategies for teachers and describing an…
Descriptors: Art Appreciation, Art Criticism, Art Education, Concept Formation
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Kindler, Anna – Journal of Art and Design Education, 1992
Describes an secondary art education course using the principles of discipline-based art education (DBAE). Argues that art production techniques and studio art must be included with the DBAE approach for a successful program. Provides an overview of the course content and teaching methods used in the program. (CFR)
Descriptors: Art Activities, Art Appreciation, Art Criticism, Art Education
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Lee, Sun-Young – Art Education, 1993
Presents an instructional unit containing five activities centered around paintings by Leon Golub. Helps students understand the processes of art criticism and the social context in which art works are analyzed and criticized. Provides guidelines and questions for a comparative analysis of three contemporary art critics. (CFR)
Descriptors: Art Appreciation, Art Criticism, Art Education, Cultural Context
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Cole, Elizabeth; Schaefer, Claire – Young Children, 1990
Presents a teaching approach developed by Edmund Feldman that encourages young children to talk about art through guided discussion. A dialogue with a small group of four- and five-year-olds about the painting, "The Countess of Sussex and Her Daughter," by Thomas Gainsborough, is included. (BB)
Descriptors: Art Appreciation, Art Criticism, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Preschool Children
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Vallance, Elizabeth – Art Education, 1991
Seeks to introduce elementary and middle school students to cultural differences in artistic styles, and to develop students' critical skills by examining four different cultures' interpretations of a common subject, the fish. Provides several instructional strategies to strengthen students perception of works of art. (KM)
Descriptors: Art Appreciation, Art Criticism, Art Education, Art History
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Arenas, Amelia – Art Education, 1990
Provides six lesson outlines to help teachers motivate high school students to discuss basic questions about the meaning and function of art, aesthetic responses cultural context, and artistic skill. Illustrates artwork from the Museum of Modern Art by Marcel Duchamp, Pablo Picasso, Jackson Pollock, and Meret Oppenheim. (KM)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Art Activities, Art Appreciation, Art Criticism
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McCarty-Procopio, Cathy; And Others – Art Education, 1991
Provides four sample activities and illustrations to develop students' perceptual skills. Seeks to help teach students that (1) understanding art takes time and effort; (2) personal reactions are important; (3) understanding the culture in which artworks are created is useful; and (4) many different approaches are available for understanding art.…
Descriptors: Art Activities, Art Appreciation, Art Criticism, Art Education
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Guilfoil, Joanne K. – Art Education, 1992
Defines the environment as both subject and context for art education and art as historical visual record of culture. Recommends that art education should include study of built environments such as schools and public buildings. Describes programs in which students designed and built sidewalks in Oregon and Kentucky. (CFR)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Values, Architecture, Art, Art Appreciation
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