Assignment: Critic of the Art

Assignment: Critic of the Art

Assignment: Critic of the Art

Instructions

Select a work of art from any of the chapters in our textbook, and write a response that analyzes the art through the lens of a descriptive critic, an interpretive critic, and an evaluative critic. What different things would these critics have to say? Use the following guidelines: Assignment: Critic of the Art

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  • Descriptive Critic: Address at least 3 different elements of art and/or principles of design.
  • Interpretive Critic: This will require research so that you can understand the subject, meaning, and intent of the work.
  • Evaluative Critic: Use the standards of perfection, insight, and inexhaustibly (as described in the text).

Writing Requirements

. 1 full page

. Minimum of 2 sources cited (assigned readings/online lessons and an outside source)

. APA format for in-text citations and list of references

  • attachment

    HumanitiesthroughtheArts9thEditioneBook-PDFVersion978-0073523989NQh3KPPBx7dCs.pdf

    THE HUMANITIES THROUGH THE ARTS

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    THE HUMANITIES THROUGH THE ARTS

    N i n t h E d i t i o n

    F. David Martin Professor of Philosophy Emeritus

    Bucknell University

    Lee A. Jacobus Professor of English Emeritus

    University of Connecticut

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    THE HUMANITIES THROUGH THE ARTS, NINTH EDITION

    Published by McGraw-Hill Education, 2 Penn Plaza, New York, NY 10121. Copyright © 2015 by McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. Previous editions © 2011, 2008, and 2004. No part of this publication may be reproduced or distributed in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education, including, but not limited to, in any network or other electronic storage or transmission, or broadcast for distance learning. Assignment: Critic of the Art

    Some ancillaries, including electronic and print components, may not be available to customers outside the United States.

    This book is printed on acid-free paper.

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    ISBN 978-0-07-352398-9 MHID 0-07-352398-4

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    All credits appearing on page or at the end of the book are considered to be an extension of the copyright page.

    Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

    Martin, F. David, 1920– author. The humanities through the arts / F. David Martin, Bucknell University; Lee A. Jacobus, University of Connecticut–Storrs.—Ninth Edition. pages cm Includes index. ISBN 978–0–07–352398–9 — ISBN 0–07–352398–4 (hard : alk. paper) 1. Arts–Psychological aspects. 2. Art appreciation. I. Jacobus, Lee A., author. II. Title. NX165.M37 2014 700.1’04–dc23 2013041627

    The Internet addresses listed in the text were accurate at the time of publication. The inclusion of a website does not indicate an endorsement by the authors or McGraw-Hill Education, and McGraw-Hill Education does not guarantee the accuracy of the information presented at these sites. Assignment: Critic of the Art

    www.mhhe.com

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    v

    ABOUT THE AUTHORS

    F. David Martin (PhD, University of Chicago) taught at the University of Chicago and then at Bucknell University until his retirement in 1983. He was a Fulbright Research Scholar in Florence and Rome from 1957 through 1959, and he has received seven other major research grants during his career as well as the Christian Lindback Award for Distinguished Teaching. In addition to more than 100 articles in professional journals, Dr. Martin is the author of Art and the Religious Experience (Associated University Presses, 1972); Sculpture and the Enlivened Space (The University Press of Kentucky, 1981); and Facing Death: Theme and Variations (Associated University Presses, 2006).

    Lee A. Jacobus (PhD, Claremont Graduate University) taught at Western Connecticut University and then at the University of Connecticut (Storrs) until he retired in 2001. He held a Danforth Teachers Grant while earning his doctorate. His publications include Hawaiian Tales (Tell Me Press, 2014); Substance, Style and Strategy (Oxford University Press, 1999); Shakespeare and the Dialectic of Certainty (St. Martin’s Press, 1992); Sudden Apprehension: Aspects of Knowledge in Paradise Lost (Mouton, 1976); John Cleveland: A Critical Study (G. K. Hall, 1975); and Aesthetics and the Arts (McGraw-Hill, 1968). Dr. Jacobus writes poetry, drama, and fi ction. He is the editor of The Bedford Introduction to Drama (Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2013). His A World of Ideas (Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2013) is in its ninth edition. Assignment: Critic of the Art

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    We dedicate this study to teachers and students of the humanities.

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    vii

    BRIEF CONTENTS

    PREFACE xiii

    Part 1 FUNDAMENTALS

    1 The Humanities: An Introduction 1 2 What Is a Work of Art? 18

    3 Being a Critic of the Arts 47

    Part 2 THE ARTS

    4 Painting 63 5 Sculpture 95

    6 Architecture 126 7 Literature 171 8 Theater 199 9 Music 225

    10 Dance 256 11 Photography 278

    12 Cinema 304 13 Television and Video Art 333

    Part 3 INTERRELATIONSHIPS

    14 Is It Art or Something Like It? 352 15 The Interrelationships of the Arts 379

    16 The Interrelationships of the Humanities 400 GLOSSARY G-1

    CREDITS C-1

    INDEX I-1

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    viii

    CONTENTS

    PREFACE xiii

    Part 1 FUNDAMENTALS

    1 Th e Humanities: An Introduction 1

    The Humanities: A Study of Values 1 Taste 4 Responses to Art 4 Structure and Artistic Form 9

    EXPERIENCING: The Mona Lisa 10

    Perception 12

    Abstract Ideas and Concrete Images 13 Summary 16

    2 What Is a Work of Art? 18 Identifying Art Conceptually 19 Identifying Art Perceptually 19 Artistic Form 20 Participation 24 Participation and Artistic Form 26 Content 27 Subject Matter 29 Subject Matter and Artistic Form 30 Participation, Artistic Form, and Content 30 Artistic Form: Examples 32

    Subject Matter and Content 38

    EXPERIENCING: Interpretations of the Female Nude 44

    Further Thoughts on Artistic Form 44 Summary 45

    3 Being a Critic of the Arts 47 You Are Already an Art Critic 47 Participation and Criticism 48 Three Kinds of Criticism 48 Descriptive Criticism 49

    Interpretive Criticism 53

    Evaluative Criticism 56

    EXPERIENCING: The Polish Rider 60 Summary 61

    Part 2 THE ARTS

    4 Painting 63 Our Visual Powers 63 The Media of Painting 64 Tempera 64

    Fresco 66

    Oil 67

    Watercolor 69

    Acrylic 69

    Other Media and Mixed Media 70

    Elements of Painting 72 Line 73

    Color 76

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    CONTENTS ix

    6 Architecture 126 Centered Space 126 Space and Architecture 127 Chartres 128 Living Space 131 Four Necessities of Architecture 132 Technical Requirements of Architecture 132

    Functional Requirements of Architecture 133

    Spatial Requirements of Architecture 137

    Revelatory Requirements of Architecture 137

    Earth-Rooted Architecture 139 Site 140

    Gravity 140

    Raw Materials 142

    Centrality 143

    Sky-Oriented Architecture 145 Axis Mundi 148 Defi ance of Gravity 149

    Integration of Light 150

    Earth-Resting Architecture 151 Earth-Dominating Architecture 153 Combinations of Types 154 Guggenheim Museum Bilbao and Sydney Opera House 155

    High-Rises and Skyscrapers 157

    EXPERIENCING: Sydney Opera House 158

    FOCUS ON: Fantasy Architecture 163

    Urban Planning 166 Summary 170

    7 Literature 171 Spoken Language and Literature 171 Literary Structures 174 The Narrative and the Narrator 174

    The Episodic Narrative 176

    The Organic Narrative 179

    The Quest Narrative 182

    The Lyric 184

    EXPERIENCING: “Musée des Beaux Arts” 187

    Literary Details 188 Image 189

    Texture 77

    Composition 77

    The Clarity of Painting 80 The “All-at-Onceness” of Painting 81 Abstract Painting 81 Intensity and Restfulness in

    Abstract Painting 83 Representational Painting 84 Comparison of Five Impressionist Paintings 84

    FOCUS ON: The Self-Portrait: Rembrandt van Rijn, Gustave Courbet, Vincent van Gogh, and Frida Kahlo 90

    Frames 92 Some Painting Styles of the Past 150 Years 92

    EXPERIENCING: Frames 93 Summary 94

    5 Sculpture 95 Sensory Interconnections 96 Sculpture and Painting Compared 96 Sculpture and Space 98 Sunken-Relief Sculpture 98 Low-Relief Sculpture 99 High-Relief Sculpture 100 Sculpture in the Round 101 Sculpture and Architecture Compared 103 Sensory Space 104 Sculpture and the Human Body 105 Sculpture in the Round and the

    Human Body 106 EXPERIENCING: Sculpture and Physical Size 108

    Contemporary Sculpture 109 Truth to Materials 109 Protest against Technology 112 Accommodation with Technology 115 Machine Sculpture 116 Earth Sculpture 117

    FOCUS ON: African Sculpture 119

    Sculpture in Public Places 122 Summary 125

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    x CONTENTS

    Tonal Center 235 Musical Structures 237 Theme and Variations 237

    Rondo 238

    Fugue 238

    Sonata Form 238

    Fantasia 239

    Symphony 240

    FOCUS ON: Beethoven’s Symphony in E♭ Major, No. 3, Eroica 245

    Blues and Jazz: Popular American Music 250 Blues and Rock and Roll 252 Summary 254

    10 Dance 256 Subject Matter of Dance 256

    EXPERIENCING: Feeling and Dance 258

    Form 259 Dance and Ritual 259 Ritual Dance 261

    Social Dance 261

    The Court Dance 262

    Ballet 262 Swan Lake 264

    Modern Dance 267 Alvin Ailey’s Revelations 269 Martha Graham 271

    Pilobolus and Momix Dance Companies 272

    Mark Morris Dance Group 273

    FOCUS ON: Theater Dance 275

    Popular Dance 276 Summary 277

    11 Photography 278 Photography and Painting 278

    EXPERIENCING: Photography and Art 282

    Photography and Painting: The Pictorialists 283

    Straight Photography 286 Stieglitz: Pioneer of Straight Photography 287

    Metaphor 191

    Symbol 194

    Irony 195

    Diction 196 Summary 198

    8 Th eater 199 Aristotle and the Elements of Drama 200 Dialogue and Soliloquy 201

    Archetypal Patterns 203 Genres of Drama: Tragedy 205 The Tragic Stage 205

    Stage Scenery and Costumes 207

    Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet 209

    Comedy: Old and New 212 Tragicomedy: The Mixed Genre 215 A Play for Study: The Swan Song 215

    EXPERIENCING: Anton Chekhov’s The Swan Song 219

    FOCUS ON: Musical Theater 220

    Experimental Drama 223 Summary 224

    9 Music 225 Hearing and Listening 225 The Elements of Music 226 Tone 226

    Consonance 227

    Dissonance 227

    Rhythm 228

    Tempo 228

    Melodic Material: Melody, Theme, and Motive 228

    Counterpoint 229

    Harmony 229

    EXPERIENCING: “Battle Hymn of the Republic” 230

    Dynamics 231

    Contrast 231

    The Subject Matter of Music 231 Feelings 232

    Two Theories: Formalism and Expressionism 234 Sound 234

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    CONTENTS xi

    Part 3 INTERRELATIONSHIPS

    14 Is It Art or Something Like It? 352

    Art and Artlike 352 Illustration 355 Realism 355

    Folk Art 356

    Popular Art 358

    Propaganda 363

    EXPERIENCING: Propaganda Art 364

    FOCUS ON: Kitsch 364

    Decoration 366 Idea Art 369 Dada 369

    Duchamp and His Legacy 371

    Conceptual Art 372

    Performance Art 374 Shock Art 375 Virtual Art 376 Summary 378

    15 Th e Interrelationships of the Arts 379

    Appropriation 379 Synthesis 381 Interpretation 382 Film Interprets Literature: Howards End 382 Music Interprets Drama: The Marriage of Figaro 385 Poetry Interprets Painting: The Starry Night 388 Sculpture Interprets Poetry: Apollo and Daphne 390

    EXPERIENCING: Bernini’s Apollo and Daphne and Ovid’s The Metamorphoses 392

    FOCUS ON: Photography Interprets Fiction 393

    Architecture Interprets Dance: National Nederlanden Building 395

    Painting Interprets Dance and Music: The Dance and Music 396

    EXPERIENCING: Death in Venice: Three Versions 398 Summary 399

    The f/64 Group 288

    The Documentarists 290 The Modern Eye 296

    FOCUS ON: Digital Photography 300 Summary 303

    12 Cinema 304 The Subject Matter of Film 304 Directing and Editing 305 The Participative Experience and Film 308 The Film Image 309

    EXPERIENCING: Still Frames and Photography 310

    Camera Point of View 312 Violence and Film 315 Sound 316 Image and Action 318 Film Structure 319 Cinematic Signifi cance 321 The Context of Film History 322 Francis Ford Coppola’s The Godfather 323 The Narrative Structure of The Godfather Films 324 Coppola’s Images 325

    Coppola’s Use of Sound 326

    The Power of The Godfather 326

    FOCUS ON: Alfred Hitchcock’s Vertigo 327

    Experimentation 330 Summary 332

    13 Television and Video Art 333 The Evolution of Television 333 The Subject Matter of Television and Video. Assignment: Critic of the Art