GRADE 9 ART HISTORY SLIDE LIST – Part I A CHRONOLOGICAL APPROACH: LOOKING AT ART MOVEMENTS IN PROGRESSION EGYPTIAN ART Paintings & Objects: 1. The Palette of Narmer (c. 3150-3125 BC) Siltstone. 2. Fowling Scene from the tomb of Nebamun (c.1450 BC) Wall painting. 3. Burial Mask of King Tut (1325 BC) Gold with inlaid semiprecious stones & coloured glass. Sculpture: 4. Ranofer (c.2500 B.C.) Stone. 5. Mycerinus and His Queen (2470 BC) Slate. 6. Queen Nefertiti (1360 BC) Painted Limestone. Architecture: 7. The Great Pyramids (2530-2470 BC) & The Great Sphinx (2500 BC) Limestone. Giza, Egypt.

GREEK ART Pottery: 8. Terracotta Krater Geometric terracotta krater. (c.750-735 BC) 9. Exekias. Achilles Slaying Penthesilea. Black figure Amphora. (530 BC) Sculpture: 10.Kouros (Statue of a Youth) (600 BC) Marble & Peplos Kore (c.530 BC) Marble 11.Polykleitos, Doryphorus (Spear-bearer). (450-440 BC) Marble. 12.Nike of Samothrace (c.190 BC) Marble 13.Alexandros of Antioch. Venus de Milo (c.100 BC) Marble 14.Laocoön and His Sons (c. 200-100 BC) Marble. Architecture: 15.Iktinos & Kallikrates. The Parthenon (448-432 BC) The Acropolis, Athens. 16.Temple of Athena Nike (c.420 BC) The Acropolis, Athens. ROMAN ART Wall Paintings & Mosaics: 17.Battle of Issus (c.100 BC) Marble Mosaic. 18.City of Pompeii (79 AD) Pompeii, Italy 19.Catacombs of Saint Callixtus (San Callisto) (2nd-3rd Century AD) Rome, Italy. Sculpture: 20.Augustus of Prima Porta (c.125 AD) Marble. 21.Portrait of an unknown Roman (mid-1st Century AD) Marble. 22.Constantine the Great (330 AD) Marble. Architecture: 23.Pont du Gard (c. 20 BC) Roman Aqueduct. Nimes, France. 24.The Colosseum (72-80 AD) Rome, Italy 25.The Pantheon (118-125 AD) Rome, Italy. GRADE 9 ART HISTORY SLIDE LIST – Part II

THREE ART APPROACHES: All artwork can be roughly classified into these three different approaches to creating art. Sometimes more than approach can occur, but one is usually dominant in a work. As we look at our Art History slides in this course, try to identify what approach is being taken.  Imitationalism – Imitating / capturing real life; somewhat photographic in nature.  Emotionalism – Attempting to capture or evoke an emotion (through a variety of methods).  Formalism – Focusing on creating visual interest through Elements & Principles of Design.

PART 1 – WHY DO PEOPLE CREATE ART? Throughout time, people have created art for a variety of reasons. The list below contains some of the most common reasons why people have created art. Let’s look at some famous examples from a variety of different art periods and movements to illustrate them more clearly.

Religious Ritual 26.Michelangelo. Pieta (1499-1500) Marble. 27.Caravaggio. Doubting Thomas. (1602-1603) Oil on Canvas.

Commemoration of an important event 28.Norval Morriseau Generations of Pain from Residential Schools. (1974) Oil on canvas. 29.Jacques-Louis David. Coronation of Napoleon (and Empress Josephine). (1806-7) Oil on canvas.

Propaganda / Social Commentary 30.Michelangelo. David. (1500) Marble. 31.Pablo Picasso. Guernica. (1937) Oil on canvas

Recording Visual Data (Recording Truth) 32.Andy Warhol. 100 Cans. (1962) Silkscreen on canvas. 33.Chuck Close. Mark (1978-79) Acrylic on Canvas.

Creating Beauty 34.Leonardo da Vinci. Mona Lisa. 35.Vincent Van Gogh. Starry Night (1889) Oil on canvas

Storytelling 36.Theodore Gericault. Raft of the Medusa. (1818-1819) Oil on canvas. 37.Auguste Rodin. The Kiss. (1840-1917) Marble.

Intense Emotion 38.Edvard Munch. The Scream. (1893) Oil and tempera on cardboard. 39.Frida Kahlo. The Broken Column. (1944) Oil on canvas. 40.Salvador Dali. The Persistence of Memory. (1931). Oil on canvas.