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APAH Style 21-52

  1. Fauvism: From the French word fauve, “wild beast;” Early-20th-century art movement led by Henri Matisse, for whom color became the formal element most responsible for pictorial meaning; expressive power of color

  2. Feminist Art: explored the accomplishments of women artists and focused on subject matter related to women’s issues, or historical women

  3. German Expressionism: Early-20th century art movement; characterized by bold, vigorous brushwork, rough/jagged line, and bright color; Two important groups: Die Brücke and Der Blaue Reiter; create a new universal art form

  4. Gothic: popular in the 13th and 14th centuries; characterized by rib vaults, pointed arches, flying buttresses, and stained glass

  5. Gothic Revival/Neo-Gothic: 19th century – predominantly English – architectural movement to revive medieval Gothic architecture

  6. Harlem Renaissance: A rich period of cultural production for African Americans in the 20th century; celebrated their heritage and culture and redefined artistic forms of expression

  7. Hellenistic Greek: Sculptural forms reveal greater emotion and movement in the body; subject matter expands to show unusual subjects, all of which utilize drama; departure from the previous period

  8. Italian Renaissance: Highly influenced by classical styles with a great emphasis on humanism, organization, modeling, balance; figures are calm and do not exhibit emotion; artists in guilds utilized chiaroscuro in tempera paint

  9. Impressionism: interested in Parisian leisure and modern life; focused on light and its reflections while painting outside; influenced by Japonisme

  10. International Style: Early 20th century architectural movement that rejected all historical ornamentation and utilized clean, straight lines

  11. Italian Baroque: theatrical multi-media art that retained an interest in classicism but added complex movement to the compositions; characterized by drama, intensity, engagement with the audience; often associated with Counter-Reformation propaganda

  12. Mannerism: a style of European art that emerged in Italy after the 16th c. Renaissance; characterized by elongation, artifice, tension, and instability; no central organization; dramatic and exaggerated in such a way that creates a visual puzzle for the viewer

  13. Neoclassicism: A style of art and architecture that emerged in the later 18th century. Part of a general revival of interest in classical cultures; characterized by the utilization of themes and styles from ancient Greece and Rome

  14. Neo-Expressionism: An art movement that emerged in the 1970s and that reflects the artists’ interest in the expressive capability of the human body; characterized by rough handling and intensity

  15. Northern Renaissance: Eventually, interest in classicism like the South develops but early artwork in this style retained Gothic elongation; known for use of brilliant colors in oil paint; extraordinary realism with minute details; religious subject matter is humanized

  16. Prairie Style: Early 20th-century architectural style that submerged architecture into nature; materials, colors, and light integrated nature as well

  17. Prehistoric: often utilized found objects; focused on animals, life cycles, fertility and typically used for rituals/religious ceremonies

  18. Pop art: 1950s art that incorporated elements from consumer culture, the mass media, and popular culture, such as images from motion pictures and advertising

  19. Post-Impressionism: retains Impressionism’s interest in color, but focused on exploration of structure and form; additionally, at times emotional content was added; move towards abstraction

  20. Post-Modernism: Art after the 1970s that transformed traditional practices and focused on challenging the traditional art world, the art object and the identity of the artist

  21. Proto-Renaissance: characterized by a growing interest in reality; returned to bodies with mass-like forms and realistic modeling to achieve roundness; primarily a movement utilizing frescos made with tempera

  22. Realism: rejection of anything that was not real or that was elite; focus on lower classes and their plight; favored accurate or objective depictions of ordinary world

  23. Rococo: 18th-century artistic style focused on asymmetry, decoration, grace, detail, and frivolity; included interior design; interest in aristocratic leisure

  24. Roman Republic: veristic sculpture portrayed civic pride, honor, intelligence, and merit

  25. Roman Empire (Early/High): rounded arch and vault created; new building shapes achieved through the use of concrete; figures are idealized, in contrapposto, and display heroism, civic pride, and status

  26. Roman Empire (Late): compositions become chaotic and abandon the idealism of the previous period; no central focus as figures are jumbled and start to stack on top of one another; figures lose idealism and rationalism

  27. Romanesque: primarily an architectural movement in the 11th-13th centuries in Western Europe; large, monumental, solid, and dark interiors; constructed with ambulatories and reliquaries that accommodated and attracted pilgrims

  28. Romanticism: explored scenes from the past, intense imagery, scenes of nature, and exotic subjects; glorification of emotion and feeling

  29. Surrealism: 20th-century movement; grew out of automatism and depicted dream-like states and hypnotic trances (all techniques for liberating the individual unconscious); meant to puzzle or challenge the viewer; often, there existed a multiplicity of interpretations

  30. Symbolism: 19th-century movement that depicted extreme emotion; often left up to the viewer’s interpretation; embodied a world of fantasy, sensation, imagination, emotion

  31. Venetian: Early use of (and characterized by) wet-in-wet technique to create glazes with oil paint; known for rich and lustrous skin tones acquired by vibrant pigments through Silk Road trade; also first consistent use of canvas

  32. Video Art: relies on new technologies that include moving pictures

SV

APAH Style 21-52

  1. Fauvism: From the French word fauve, “wild beast;” Early-20th-century art movement led by Henri Matisse, for whom color became the formal element most responsible for pictorial meaning; expressive power of color

  2. Feminist Art: explored the accomplishments of women artists and focused on subject matter related to women’s issues, or historical women

  3. German Expressionism: Early-20th century art movement; characterized by bold, vigorous brushwork, rough/jagged line, and bright color; Two important groups: Die Brücke and Der Blaue Reiter; create a new universal art form

  4. Gothic: popular in the 13th and 14th centuries; characterized by rib vaults, pointed arches, flying buttresses, and stained glass

  5. Gothic Revival/Neo-Gothic: 19th century – predominantly English – architectural movement to revive medieval Gothic architecture

  6. Harlem Renaissance: A rich period of cultural production for African Americans in the 20th century; celebrated their heritage and culture and redefined artistic forms of expression

  7. Hellenistic Greek: Sculptural forms reveal greater emotion and movement in the body; subject matter expands to show unusual subjects, all of which utilize drama; departure from the previous period

  8. Italian Renaissance: Highly influenced by classical styles with a great emphasis on humanism, organization, modeling, balance; figures are calm and do not exhibit emotion; artists in guilds utilized chiaroscuro in tempera paint

  9. Impressionism: interested in Parisian leisure and modern life; focused on light and its reflections while painting outside; influenced by Japonisme

  10. International Style: Early 20th century architectural movement that rejected all historical ornamentation and utilized clean, straight lines

  11. Italian Baroque: theatrical multi-media art that retained an interest in classicism but added complex movement to the compositions; characterized by drama, intensity, engagement with the audience; often associated with Counter-Reformation propaganda

  12. Mannerism: a style of European art that emerged in Italy after the 16th c. Renaissance; characterized by elongation, artifice, tension, and instability; no central organization; dramatic and exaggerated in such a way that creates a visual puzzle for the viewer

  13. Neoclassicism: A style of art and architecture that emerged in the later 18th century. Part of a general revival of interest in classical cultures; characterized by the utilization of themes and styles from ancient Greece and Rome

  14. Neo-Expressionism: An art movement that emerged in the 1970s and that reflects the artists’ interest in the expressive capability of the human body; characterized by rough handling and intensity

  15. Northern Renaissance: Eventually, interest in classicism like the South develops but early artwork in this style retained Gothic elongation; known for use of brilliant colors in oil paint; extraordinary realism with minute details; religious subject matter is humanized

  16. Prairie Style: Early 20th-century architectural style that submerged architecture into nature; materials, colors, and light integrated nature as well

  17. Prehistoric: often utilized found objects; focused on animals, life cycles, fertility and typically used for rituals/religious ceremonies

  18. Pop art: 1950s art that incorporated elements from consumer culture, the mass media, and popular culture, such as images from motion pictures and advertising

  19. Post-Impressionism: retains Impressionism’s interest in color, but focused on exploration of structure and form; additionally, at times emotional content was added; move towards abstraction

  20. Post-Modernism: Art after the 1970s that transformed traditional practices and focused on challenging the traditional art world, the art object and the identity of the artist

  21. Proto-Renaissance: characterized by a growing interest in reality; returned to bodies with mass-like forms and realistic modeling to achieve roundness; primarily a movement utilizing frescos made with tempera

  22. Realism: rejection of anything that was not real or that was elite; focus on lower classes and their plight; favored accurate or objective depictions of ordinary world

  23. Rococo: 18th-century artistic style focused on asymmetry, decoration, grace, detail, and frivolity; included interior design; interest in aristocratic leisure

  24. Roman Republic: veristic sculpture portrayed civic pride, honor, intelligence, and merit

  25. Roman Empire (Early/High): rounded arch and vault created; new building shapes achieved through the use of concrete; figures are idealized, in contrapposto, and display heroism, civic pride, and status

  26. Roman Empire (Late): compositions become chaotic and abandon the idealism of the previous period; no central focus as figures are jumbled and start to stack on top of one another; figures lose idealism and rationalism

  27. Romanesque: primarily an architectural movement in the 11th-13th centuries in Western Europe; large, monumental, solid, and dark interiors; constructed with ambulatories and reliquaries that accommodated and attracted pilgrims

  28. Romanticism: explored scenes from the past, intense imagery, scenes of nature, and exotic subjects; glorification of emotion and feeling

  29. Surrealism: 20th-century movement; grew out of automatism and depicted dream-like states and hypnotic trances (all techniques for liberating the individual unconscious); meant to puzzle or challenge the viewer; often, there existed a multiplicity of interpretations

  30. Symbolism: 19th-century movement that depicted extreme emotion; often left up to the viewer’s interpretation; embodied a world of fantasy, sensation, imagination, emotion

  31. Venetian: Early use of (and characterized by) wet-in-wet technique to create glazes with oil paint; known for rich and lustrous skin tones acquired by vibrant pigments through Silk Road trade; also first consistent use of canvas

  32. Video Art: relies on new technologies that include moving pictures