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Sarah Eisen – Journal of Museum Education, 2024
In response to the Harvard Art Museums' ReFrame Initiative and the publication of the "Harvard & the Legacy of Slavery" report, the author reevaluates the display and discussion of images of enslaved people in ancient Greek art in the museum gallery. Ancient Greece relied heavily on the labor and crafts produced by enslaved people,…
Descriptors: Museums, Educational Facilities, Art Education, Greek Civilization
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Uysal, Huseyin; Yilmaz, Adem – International Journal of Educational Methodology, 2019
Art is one of the most powerful ways of expressing an individual's internal state, expectations and needs with an aesthetic attitude. Different materials can be used during the expression process including colour, line, sound, movement, word, object and so on. Although the materials used in these branches of art are different from each other, the…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Student Attitudes, Aesthetics, Evaluation Criteria
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Stephens, Shannon Sweny – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2012
Children of all ages love painting to music. Aside from discovering the natural correlation between music and art, the author's students learned about Mozart's life and work in music class. In this article, students discover the influence that music can have on their art. (Contains 1 online resource.)
Descriptors: Music, Studio Art, Art Activities, Painting (Visual Arts)
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Fisher, Stacy – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2007
In this article, the author profiles Pierre-Auguste Renoir and describes Renoir's work of art, "Woman with Parrot". Renoir gained a reputation among peers for taking exceptional pleasure in painting, and his style was said to celebrate beauty and sensuality. He is recognized for showing significant empathy for the sitters in his portraits, and for…
Descriptors: Empathy, Art Education, Artists, Aesthetics
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Hubard, Olga M. – International Journal of Art & Design Education, 2006
This article explores the way young people's responses to an image evolve when they engage with it repeatedly. An analysis of the sequential encounters of six adolescents with a Renaissance painting reveals that, as they gained experience with the picture, the youngsters probed for increasingly deeper layers of meaning in the work. Specifically,…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Art Education, Art Products, Art Criticism
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Gandelman, Claude – Visible Language, 1989
Defines the scope of research concerning "inscriptions in painting" from a semiotic point of view. Shows that in cases from medieval pictograms to modern new concreteness inscriptions are used to subvert the pictorial content of art works. (RS)
Descriptors: Art Criticism, Art History, Art Products, Painting (Visual Arts)
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Hubert, Renee Riese – Visible Language, 1989
Argues that Fernand Leger avoids the mimetic use of literary elements in order to subvert the conventions of the illustrated book and subordinates meaning to a graphic interplay where word and image can, on occasion, become interchangeable. States that Leger subverts the borderline between readable and nonreadable, lyric and painterly. (RS)
Descriptors: Art Criticism, Art History, Art Products, Painting (Visual Arts)
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Gandelman, Claude – Visible Language, 1989
Notes that Jules Kirschenbaum, a modern American artist whose work integrates inscriptions and figurative painting, studied under the masters of abstract expressionism yet exhibited with protagonists of "magic realism." States that his later work took a wholly different turn--it became art about meaning and the "meaning of…
Descriptors: Art Criticism, Art History, Art Products, Painting (Visual Arts)
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Roque, Georges – Visible Language, 1989
Argues that Rene Magritte's experiments with words and images are preceded by other experiments with his surrealist friends in Brussels. States that the surrealists' failure to adequately represent women causes Magritte to treat both images and words as mere representations, subject to an equally radical splitting from the "real" thing…
Descriptors: Art Criticism, Art History, Art Products, Painting (Visual Arts)
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Levinger, Esther – Visible Language, 1989
States that the painted words in Jasper Johns' art act in two different capacities: concealed words partake in the artist's interrogation of visual perception; and visible painted words question classical representation. Argues that words are Johns' means of critiquing modernism. (RS)
Descriptors: Art Criticism, Art History, Art Products, Modernism
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Maclure, Maggie – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2006
What can postmodernism do for, or to, educational research? The article discusses its potential for resisting closure and simplification. Developing a "preposterous", anachronistic postmodern method that is caught up with surrealism and the baroque, the article plays with "trompel'oeil" paintings and outmoded popular entertainments such as magic…
Descriptors: Postmodernism, Educational Research, Research Methodology, Art Expression
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White, Mark Andrew – Great Plains Quarterly, 2006
In 1939, Texas artist Alexandre Hogue completed "The Crucified Land," a striking comparison of water erosion on a Denton, Texas, wheat farm to the martyrdom of Jesus of Nazareth. "The Crucified Land" was originally intended as the final canvas of Hogue's "Erosion" series, which the artist began in 1932 as a…
Descriptors: Artists, Ecology, Painting (Visual Arts), Religion
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Barasch, Moshe – Visible Language, 1989
Identifies two major groups of pseudoinscriptions: distinguished inscriptions which do not convey text but appear to be real things; and proper pseudoinscriptions which may have clearly delineated individual letters that taken together make no sense. Identifies Venice and the Netherlands as centers of Arabic and Hebrew pseudoinscriptions in the…
Descriptors: Art Criticism, Art History, Art Products, Foreign Countries
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Marin, Louis – Visible Language, 1989
Attempts a semiotic experiment to explore the fluctuations of meaning produced by interferences between textual and figurative representation within one picture. Discusses examples such as the portrait with its presentation of the subject and the topographical city plan. Provides an in-depth exploration of Philippe de Champaigne's "Ex-voto of…
Descriptors: Art Criticism, Art History, Art Products, Painting (Visual Arts)
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Lussier, Mark – Visible Language, 1989
Argues that William Blake's illustrations for Thomas Gray's "Ode on the Death of a Favourite Cat" testify to the contradictions in Gray's poetry. States that Blake's designs offer another language, a contra-diction, that deconstructs Gray's conscious discourse and liberates his unconscious discourse. (RS)
Descriptors: Art Criticism, Art History, Art Products, Illustrations
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