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Assignment

Stone Age
Stone Age art, also called prehistoric art, was created between
the period of 40,000 BCE to 3000 BCE ending with the
Bronze Age.

Pre Historic art


prehistoric art is all art produced in
preliterate, prehistorical cultures
beginning somewhere in very late
geological history, and generally
continuing until that culture either
develops writing or other methods of
record-keeping, or makes significant
contact with another culture that has, and
that makes some record of major historical
events

Paleolithic arts
Paleolithic art concerned itself with either
food (hunting scenes, animal carvings) or
fertility (Venus figurines). Its predominant
theme was animals.

Neolithic arts
the term "Neolithic art" describes all
arts and crafts created by societies
who had abandoned the semi-
nomadic lifestyle of hunting and
gathering food in favour of farming
and animal husbandry.

Egyptian arts
Egyptian art refers to art
produced in ancient Egypt
between the 6th
millennium BC and the
4th century AD, spanning
from Prehistoric Egypt
until the Christianization
of Roman Egypt.
Geometric arts
Geometric art is
the use of one
or several
geometric
shapes, meant
to create a
visual sensory
experience.

Archaic art
archaic art defines and combines the most
readily. observable aspects of things, using
elementary con- figurations or gestalts.

Classical art
Classical is the term generally used
to refer to the style of the ancient
Greek and Roman periods.

Hellenistic art
The Hellenistic period in both history and in art refers to the era of the conquests
of Alexander the Great and the subsequent spreading of Greek culture
throughout the major cities and nations of Southern Europe, the Mediterranean,
and Near East.

Renaissance art
is the painting, sculpture, and decorative arts of the
period of European history known as the Renaissance,
which emerged as a distinct style in Italy in about AD
1400, in parallel with developments which occurred in
philosophy, literature, music, science, and technology.

Mannerism arts
Derived from the Italian
maniera, meaning simply
“style,” mannerism is sometimes
defined as the “stylish style” for
its emphasis on self-conscious
artifice over realistic depiction.
Baroque and Rococo
Arts
The subjects and themes of
Rococo and Baroque art are
almost polar opposites.
Baroque art usually depicts
religious themes while the
Rococo period is deeply
rooted in secular culture.

Neoclassicism
Neoclassicismin
the arts is an
aesthetic attitude
based on the art of
Greece and Rome
in antiquity,which
invokesharmony,cl
arity,
restraint,universali
ty, and idealism.

Romanticism
Romanticism was an art
movement that emerged
during the mid 18th or early
19th century. Romanticism can
be defined as an opposition to
classism and neoclassicism .
Where harmony, calm colors,
balanced compositions and
accurate divisions were much
more important than human
feelings, emotions and
expressions.

Realism
Realism Art Definition. Realism is defined as
a nineteenth-century art movement. It is
characterized by everyday subjects painted
from everyday life in a naturalistic way.
Realism can refer to both the specific art
movement that introduced this style of
painting and the contemporary style of
hyper-realistic paintings that mimic
photographs.

Impressionism
Impressionism was a radical art
movement that began in the late
1800s, centered primarily around
Parisian painters. Impressionists
rebelled against classical subject
matter and embraced modernity,
desiring to create works that
reflected the world in which they
lived.

Art Nouveau
a style of decorative art,
architecture, and design
prominent in western Europe
and the US from about 1890 until
World War I and characterized
by intricate linear designs and
flowing curves based on natural
forms.
Fauvism
Fauvism, style of painting
that flourished in France
around the turn of the 20th
century. Fauve artists used
pure, brilliant colour
aggressively applied straight
from the paint tubes to create
a sense of an explosion on the
canvas.

Cubism
ubism was a revolutionary new
approach to representing reality
invented in around 1907–08 by
artists Pablo Picasso and Georges
Braque. They brought different
views of subjects (usually objects
or figures) together in the same
picture, resulting in paintings
that appear fragmented and
abstracted.

Futurism
Futurism was an artistic and
social movement that
originated in Italy, and to a
lesser extent in other
countries, in the early 20th
century. It emphasized
dynamism, speed, technology,
youth, violence, and objects
such as the car, the airplane,
and the industrial city.

Minimalism
Minimalism or
minimalist art can be seen
as extending the abstract
idea that art should have
its own reality and not be
an imitation of some
other thing.

Expressionism
Expressionism is a
modernist movement,
initially in poetry and
painting, originating in
Northern Europe around
the beginning of the 20th
century. Its typical trait is
to present the world
solely from a subjective
perspective, distorting it
radically for emotional
effect in order to evoke
moods or ideas.

Pop Art
Pop art is an art movement
that emerged in the United
Kingdom and the United
States during the mid- to
late-1950s. The movement
presented a challenge to
traditions of fine art by
including imagery from
popular and mass culture,
such as advertising, comic
books and mundane mass-
produced objects.
Photorealism
Photorealism is an
extremely realistic style of
painting and drawing, in
which the artwork is based
entirely on a photograph.
Photorealist art is most
appreciated for its huge
WOW! factor. People often
mistake photorealist
paintings for actual
photographs.

Op art
Op art, short for optical art,
is a style of visual art that
uses optical illusions. Op
artworks are abstract, with
many better-known pieces
created in black and white.
Typically, they give the
viewer the impression of
movement, hidden images,
flashing and vibrating
patterns, or swelling or
warping.

Surrealism
Surrealism is a cultural movement that
developed in Europe in the aftermath of
World War I in which artists depicted
unnerving, illogical scenes and de
Surrealismveloped techniques to allow the
unconscious mind to express itself.

Figurative art
Figurative art, sometimes
written as figurativism,
describes artwork that is clearly
derived from real object
sources and so is, by definition,
representational.

Typography arts
Typography is the art of
arranging letters and text
in a way that makes the
copy legible, clear, and
visually appealing to the
reader. It involves font
style, appearance, and
structure, which aims to
elicit certain emotions
and convey specific
messages.

Abstract art
Abstract art uses visual
language of shape,
form, color and line to
create a composition
which may exist with a
degree of
independence from
visual references in
the world.
Conceptualism Art
Conceptual art, also referred to as
conceptualism, is art in which the
concept or idea involved in the work
take precedence over traditional
aesthetic, technical, and material
concerns.

Submitted By:
David Bryan B. Salino
Carl Rosales

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