Spanish%20Art - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Spanish%20Art

Description:

Title: Spanish Art and Architecture Author: Karen Guffey Last modified by: k_guffey Created Date: 12/14/2002 6:42:48 AM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:159
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 19
Provided by: Karen800
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Spanish%20Art


1
Spanish Art
2
Artists
  • El Greco
  • Diego Velázquez
  • Francisco de Goya
  • Pablo Picasso
  • Salvador Dalí

3
El Greco
  • El Greco was born in 1541 on the Greek
    island of Crete. His real name is Domenikos
    Theotocopoulos the name by which he is
    universally known, El Greco, means the Greek.
    Little is known of his younger years. When he
    was in his 20s, he spent time studying with
    Italian artists in Venice and Rome. Most of his
    works consist of religious paintings and
    portraits.
  • This is El Grecos self-portrait.

4
  • In 1577 El Greco moved to Spain. He settled
    in Toledo and spent the rest of his life there.
    Many of his paintings are still located in
    Toledo, although the Prado also houses quite a
    few. The painting here is well-known and is
    called The Burial of Count Orgaz. It hangs in the
    Church of San Tomé in Toledo.

5
  • While El Greco, unlike most other Spanish
    artists, probably doesnt have a single painting
    for which he is best known, he does have a
    distinctive style. Notice the elongated face and
    fingers in this painting, entitled The Repentant
    Peter.

6
Diego Velázquez
  • Diego Velázquez, born in Seville in 1599, was
    a more conventional painter than most of the
    other well-known Spanish artists. At the age of
    11 or 12, he was apprenticed to a master painter,
    and at the age of 18 he became qualified as a
    master painter himself.

7
  • During his youth he did religious paintings
    and a type of scene paintings called bodegones.
    At the age of 24 he became court painter, and
    from then on he became known for his portraits.
    He remained a court favorite for the rest of his
    life. His most famous painting, Las Meninas
    (The Maids of Honor), hangs in the Prado in
    Madrid.

8
Francisco de Goya
  • Francisco de Goya, frequently called the
    father of modern art, was born in a village in
    the province of Zaragoza in 1746. Goya followed
    a more traditional path than Dalí and Picasso.
    As a teenager, he entered the service of a local
    artist. He later enrolled in the royal academy
    and then became the court painter.

9
  • Later, however, he became disillusioned with
    the vanity of court life, and his paintings
    became darker and more violent. In 1808
    Spaniards rose up against French domination, and
    many were executed. Goyas most famous painting
    is called El 2 de mayo.

10
  • When he was in his 70s, he became very ill,
    and after he recovered, his works became even
    darker. His most famous work from that period is
    Saturn Devouring One of His Children. Goya died
    in 1828.

11
Pablo Picasso
  • Picasso, born in Málaga in 1881, was a rebel
    from the start and, as a teenager, began to
    frequent the Barcelona cafés where intellectuals
    gathered. He soon went to Paris, the capital of
    art, and soaked up the works of Manet, Gustave
    Courbet, and Toulouse-Lautrec, whose sketchy
    style impressed him greatly.

12
  • Picasso went through several periods before
    striking upon Cubism, the style for which he is
    best known. Cubism is essentially the
    fragmenting of three-dimensional forms into flat
    areas of pattern and color, overlapping and
    intertwining so that shapes and parts of the
    human anatomy are seen from the front and back at
    the same time.
  • This painting is called Portrait de
    Ambroise Vollard.

13
  • The bombing that resulted in the total
    destruction of the town of Guernica during
    Spains 1936-1939 civil war is the subject of
    Picassos best-known work, entitled simply
    Guernica. Picasso, completely opposed to Franco
    (dictator from 1937 until his death in 1975),
    refused to allow his painting into Spain as long
    as Franco lived. For years it was housed in New
    Yorks Museum of Modern Art, but now its in the
    Reina Sofia museum in Madrid.

14
Salvador Dalí
  • Salvador Dalí was born in 1904 in Figueras,
    Spain, a small town about two hours from
    Barcelona in the province of Catalonia. Although
    Dalí excelled in his academic pursuits, he never
    took final examinations, deeming that he had no
    need for the type of education offered by formal
    schooling.

15
  • Dalí came under the influence of two forces
    that shaped his philosophy and his art. The first
    was Sigmund Freud's theory of the unconscious,
    introduced to Dalí in Freud's book The
    Interpretation of Dreams. The second was his
    association with the French surrealists. When
    Dalí visited Paris for the first time, he was
    introduced to the leading surrealists in the
    movement, but because of his lack of interest in
    politics, he was eventually shunned by this group.

16
  • Under the influence of the surrealist
    movement, Dalí's artistic style crystal-ized into
    the disturbing blend of precise realism and
    dream-like fantasy that became his trade- mark.
    Dalí often de-scribed his pictures as
    hand-painted dream photographs and had certain
    favorite and recur-ring images, such as the human
    figure with half-open drawers protruding from it,
    burning giraffes, and watches bent and flowing as
    if made from melting wax.
  • This painting is called Woman with
    Drawers.

17
  • My personal favorite is Swans Reflecting
    Elephants, which is on display at the Dalí museum
    in Paris.

18
  • Dalís most famous painting is called The
    Persistence of Memory.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com