Paleolithic, 22000 BCE
Transcription
Paleolithic, 22000 BCE
Paleolithic, 22,000 BCE Neolithic plastered skull, from Jericho ca. 7000 BCE. Lifesize Archeological Museum, Amman, Jordan Trefoils Robed male figure, from Mohenjo-daro, Pakistan, ca. 2600–1900 BCE. Steatite, 6 7/8” high. National Museum of Pakistan, Karachi. Figurine of a woman, From Syros (Cyclades), Greece ca. 2500-2300 BCE. Marble, approx. 1’6” high. National Archaeological Museum, Athens. Menkaure and Khamerernebty(?), Gizeh, Egypt, Fourth Dynasty, ca. 2490-2472 BCE. Graywacke, 4’ 6 1/2” high. Museum of Fine Arts Boston. Seated statue of Gudea, 2150-2100 BCE. southern Mesopotamia, Diorite, H. 17.5” Dogu Earthenware height 10" (25.2 cm) Jomon period, c. 2500–1500 BCE Kurokoma, Yamanashi Prefecture. / Tokyo National Museum Dogu JOMON ca.11,000 - 400 BCE Japanese Dogu Jomon period, ca. 2500–1500 BCE Statuettes of two worshipers, from the Square Temple at Eshnunna, Iraq. ca. 2700 BCE. Gypsum inlaid with shell and black limestone, male figure approx. 2’6” high. Iraq Museum, Baghdad. Haniwa warrior, from Gunma Prefecture, Japan, Kofun period, fifth to midsixth century. Low-fired clay, 4’3 1/4” high. Tokyo National Museum, Tokyo. Army of the First Emperor of Qin in pits next to his burial mound, Lintong, China, Qin dynasty, ca. 210 BCE. Painted terracotta, average figure 5’ 10 7/8” high. Local Hero Wanxin Zhang Waiting Wanxin Zhang Skateboarder Wanxin Zhang View of the West Wanxin Zhang Wanxin Zhang Standing figure, from Sanxingdui, China, ca. 1200-1050 BCE. Bronze, 8’5” high, including base. China Cultural Relics Promotional Center, Beijing. Seated Buddha, Cave 20, Yungang Stone height 45' Northern Wei dynasty, c. 460 CE Datong, Shanxi Kosho Kuya Preaching Painted wood with inlaid eyes height 46½" (117.5 cm) Kamakura period, before 1207 Rokuhara Mitsu-ji, Kyoto Portrait statue of the priest Shunjobo Chogen, Todaiji, Nara, Japan, Kamakura period, early 13th century. Painted cypress wood, statue 2’8 3/8”high; detail 1’9”high. Female Figure (Kore) c. 650 BCE. Limestone, height 24 1/2” Kore from Chios, c. 520 BCE. Marble height 21” Etruscan head of Hermes Terracotta 500 BCE. Etruscan Portrait Head from Delos ca. 80 BCE. Bronze, height 12” Roman Patrician with Busts of His Ancestors, detail late first century BCE. Marble, life-size, Museo Capitolino, Rome Roman Sculpture, 250 CE Head of a Roman patrician from Otricoli, Italy ca. 75-50 BCE. Marble approx. 1’2” high. Museo Torlonia, Rome. Portrait bust of a Flavian woman, Rome, Italy ca. 90 CE. Marble approx. 2’1” high Museo Capitolino, Rome Young Flavian Woman, marble, 90 CE, 25” H Roman Sculpture, 193 CE. Faustina the Younger, Marble, 147 BCE, 23” H Which way is she looking? New technique to show which way the figure is looking. This helped to create a more expressive, specific look. Portrait bust of Livia, from Faiyum, Egypt, early 1st century CE. Marble, approx. 1’ 1 1/2” high. Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek, Copenhagen. Portrait of Caracalla, ca. 211-217 CE. Marble, approx. 1’2” high. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Head of Boy, Roman, 250 CE.. Constantine (306-337 CE) Portrait of Constantine, from the Basilica Nova, Rome, Italy, ca. 315-330 CE. Marble, approx. 8’6” high. Palazzo dei Conservatori, Rome. Portrait of Constantine, from the Basilica Nova, Rome, Italy, ca. 315-330 CE. Marble, approx. 8’6” high. Palazzo dei Conservatori, Rome. Portrait bust of Hadrian as general, from Tel Shalem, Israel, ca. 130-138 CE. Bronze, approx. 2’11” high. Israel Museum, Jerusalem. MICHELANGELO BUONARROTI, David, from Piazza della Signoria, Florence, Italy, 1501– 1504. Marble, 17’ high. Galleria dell’Accademia, Florence. Binocular 13.5x8x8 Flutter 9x5x4.5 Kicki Masthem Sleepy Head 12.5x7.5x5 Trumpet and Nag Better a Bird in Hand 9 x 7 x 7.5 personal floating device 8x8x5 Kicki Masthem Cluck 36" x 24" x 24" Ceramic Misty Gamble Panopticon 36" x 26" x 26" Misty Gamble Succulent 21" x 19" x 20" 2007 Christina West Succulent Christina West untitled, 25" tall x 21" wide x 15" deep Christina West untitled, 25" tall x 21" wide x 15" deep Christina West Christina West "two boys" 46"x25"x18" 2007 fired clay and glaze 46"x25"x18" "june in the fall" 2007 fired clay, glaze and luster size variable matt wedel HARIN LEE HARIN LEE HARIN LEE JEFF KOONS, Pink Panther, 1988. Porcelain, 3’ 5” x 1’ 8 1/2” x 1’ 7”. Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago (Gerald S. Elliot Collection). ROBERT ARNESON, California Artist, 1982. Glazed stoneware, 5’ 8 1/4” x 2’ 3 1/2” x 1’ 8 1/4”. San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (gift of the Modern Art Council). Art © Estate of Robert Arneson/ Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY. Robert Arneson Robert Arneson Robert Arneson A Robert Arneson self portrait -Benicia Bench (1991), courtesy George Adams Gallery Portrait of George (Moscone), sculpture by Robert Arneson, 1981 (7'-10" x 29") Jackson Pollock, sculpture by Robert Arneson, 1983. Robert Arneson 'Pablo Ruiz with Itch' 1980, Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, Missouri A huge bust of Lei Feng currently situated under the Mount Taishan in China. In the front of the stand is a quotation of Chairman Mao,"To Learn from comrade Lei Feng". Nan Smith Margaret sculpture3 Nan Smith A Reliquary 2003 airbrushed and glazed earthenware, photo decals Tip Toland whistlers Tip Toland "Dive" Stoneware Clay, Paint, Chalk Pastels, 19" H x 16"W x 19" D 2007 Tip Toland Tip Toland "Painting the Burning Fence" Stoneware, paint, pastels, synthetic hair 28” H x 19” W x 22” D 2007 Tip Toland "Pretty Pretty Baby" Stoneware, paint, pastels, wax, lipstick 40” H x 28” W x 29” D 2007 Tip Toland Viola Frey Standing Woman III 2003 Ceramic, glaze 92 x 29 x 21 inches Viola Frey Woman with Small World 1999 Viola Frey Family Portrait, 1995 Ceramic with glazes 84 x 79 x 29 1/2 inches Collection of the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC, Gift of Rena Bransten, 1996 Joe Kowalczyk The Bride of Thalidomide 46"H x 25"W Ceramic, Wood and Moldy Tea Beth Cavener Strichter Beast (working shot) Beth Cavener Strichter Strange Attraction Strichter I Am No One Beth Cavener Strichter Olympia Beth Cavener Strichter Inquisitors Robbie Conal’s painting of Ronald Reagan is one of the most recognizable political images of the 1980s. Painted in 1988, Contra Diction references the Reagan administrations illegal funding and arming of Nicaragua’s right-wing contras fighting the leftist Sandinista regime. The painting was turned into a poster that volunteers plastered on walls across the country and around the world. Robert Rauschenberg’s 1964 silkscreen painting, Retroactive 1, mixes a media-generated image of President Kennedy from a televised news conference with a parachuting astronaut and other found objects to create a visual overview of the times and a memorial for the recently slain leader. John Singer Sargent’s 1903 painting of Theodore Roosevelt was the first official portrait of the president. Painted from life in countless sessions at the White House, the portrait reveals the intelligence and determination of the “Rough Riding” statesman. Andy Warhol reportedly raised more than $40,000 for the Democratic Party with his 1972 satirical portrait of Richard Nixon with the campaign slogan “Vote McGovern.” Made to support Democratic presidential candidate George McGovern, the silkscreen piece paints Nixon is a bad light — showing the incumbent leader as a green-faced monster with a head too big for his body. Robert Colescott turned the table on issues of race with his ironic 1975 painting George Washington Carver Crossing the Delaware. Based on Emanuel Gottlieb Leutze’s 1851 canvas Washington Crossing the Delaware, which hangs at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, Colescott controversial painting depicts the African American inventor George Washington Carver leading the charge with an army of minstrel-like black characters drinking moonshine, catching catfish, and strumming the banjo— representing stereotypical, racist views of black citizens at the time. British artist Jonathan Yeo was commissioned by the George W. Bush Presidential Library to paint an official portrait of the 43rd president in 2007, but when the invitation was suddenly withdrawn, Yeo went ahead and made an unofficial portrait of “W” — crafted from porn. Snipping bits of naked bodies from skin magazines, Yeo constructed a dark image of the controversial but steadfast leader. While not technically a work on canvas, it would make a funny Paint by Number kit. David Humphrey’s 2006 painting, Ike Paints From Life, reference’s Dwight D. Eisenhower love of landscape painting. The president is seen sitting at his easel with brush and paint, but the scene goes topsy-turvy from there — as trees are uprooted, rivers turn oily black, and an observing clown-faced, rabbit-eared figure drops his trousers. Strikingly surreal, Humphrey’s canvas portrays a greatly changed American landscape from the president’s time — revealing a place Ike most likely would no longer recognize. Chuck Close’s 2007 portrait of Bill Clinton began with a photograph that Close made in 2005 for the cover of New York Magazine. Two years later, the artist asked the president if it was OK to make a painting from one of the shots and Clinton approved. Gridding the surface of the photo, Close mapped out a plan for transferring the image to canvas and filled each module with abstract marks that together form an uncanny likeness of the 42nd president. “Clinton is very seductive,” Close told a Telegraph reporter in 2007. “When he looks directly into your eyes, he has an almost laser-beam-like lock-on thing that he does. He makes you feel like he’s really connected to you.” Folk artist Rev. Howard Finster painted Abraham Lincoln several times in his lifetime. This charming version features a young Abraham rendered in Finster’s simple, signature style with the Biblical scripture “How beautiful/upon the mountains/ that are the feet of him/ that bringeth Good Tidings” inscribed on the surface of the painting on wood and “Purpose of these/ paintings is to/ get the truth to/ people before the/ end of the world/ the end is pressing/ time now” prophetically written on the back. We know that Shepard Fairey’s Hope portrait of Barack Obama is the most recognizable image of the president, but it’s so ingrained in our minds we don’t even have to see it to remember it. Kurt Kauper’s portrait of the president is full of hope yet strange in the way it depicts Obama waving from a serene suburb. Part of a pair of paintings that Kauper made of the president and first lady (she’s waving in a suburban parking lot) after the election, the pieces were only works on view in Kauper’s 2009 solo show at New York celebrated Deitch Projects.
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