Jonathan Morgan
Adjunct Professor of Art at Lone Star College & South Dakota State University, PhD candidate at IDSVA
Rococo luxury & excess in France
The false narratives of Neoclassicism
Nicolas Poussin
Landscape with St. John on Patmos
1640 CE | Oil on canvas
Peter Paul Rubens
The Disembarkation of Marie de' Medici
1600 CE | Oil on canvas
Germain Boffrand
Salon de la Princesse
Paris, France, 1737-1740 CE
François Boucher
Le Chinois Galant
1742 CE | Oil on canvas
François Boucher
Cupid a Captive
1754 CE
Oil on Canvas
Jean-Honore Fragonard
The Bathers
1761-1765 CE, Oil on canvas
Jean-Honore Fragonard
The Swing
1766 CE
Oil on canvas
Angelica Kauffman
Cornelia, Pointing to her Children as her Treasures
1785 CE | Oil on canvas
Jacques Louis David
The Death of Marat
1793 CE | Oil on canvas
Thomas Jefferson
Monticello
Charlottesville, VA, 1772 CE
Intensity & Subjectivity within Romanticism
Realism and the Rise of Empiricism
Francisco Goya
Saturn Devouring One of His Sons
1820-1822 CE
Oil mural transferred to canvas
Francisco Goya
Saturn Devouring One of His Sons
1820-1822 CE
Oil mural transferred to canvas
Eugène Delacroix
Odalisque
1845-1850 CE | Oil on canvas
Eugène Delacroix
Liberty Leading the People
1830 CE | Oil on canvas
Théodore Géricault
The Raft of the Medusa
1819 CE | Oil on canvas
Caspar David Friedrich
Wanderer above a Sea of Mist
1817-1818 CE
Oil on canvas
Caspar David Friedrich
Monk by the Sea
1809-1810 CE | Oil on canvas
Whereas the beautiful is limited, the Sublime is limitless, so that the mind in the presence of the Sublime, attempting to imagine what it cannot, has pain in the failure but pleasure in contemplating the immensity of the attempt.
Immanuel Kant,
Critique of Pure Reason, 1781
Frederic Edwin Church
The Heart of the Andes
1859 CE | Oil on canvas
Frederic Edwin Church
The Heart of the Andes
1859 CE | Oil on canvas
Eugène Delacroix
Liberty Leading the People
1830 CE | Oil on canvas
Ernest Meissonier
The Barricade (Memory of Civil War)
1850 CE
Oil on canvas
Gustave Courbet
Burial at Ornans
1849 CE | Oil on canvas
Honoré Daumier
Rue Transnonain, April 15, 1934
1834 CE | Lithograph
Honoré Daumier
Fight between Schools
1855 CE | Lithograph on newsprint
Edouard Manet
Olympia
1863 CE | Oil on canvas
Edouard Manet
Olympia
1863 CE | Oil on canvas
Impressionism
& Ephemerality
The Goals of the
Post-Impressionists
Claude Monet
Impression-Sunrise
1872 CE | Oil on canvas
Auguste Renoir
La Moulin de la Galette
1876 CE | Oil on canvas
Berthe Morisot
Reading
1873 CE | Oil on canvas
Claude Monet
Bridge Over a Pool of Lilies
1899 CE
Oil on canvas
Vincent Van Gogh
The Sower
1888 CE | Oil on canvas
Vincent Van Gogh
The Red Vineyard
1888 CE | Oil on canvas
Vincent Van Gogh
The Night Café
1888 CE | Oil on canvas
George Seurat
The Bathers
1883-1884 CE | Oil on canvas
Paul Cézanne
Mont Sainte-Victoire
1902-1904 CE | Oil on canvas
When you go out to paint, try to forget what objects you have before you, a tree,
a house, a field, or whatever. Merely think, here is a little square of blue, here an
oblong of pink, here a streak of yellow, and paint it just as it looks to you, the
exact color and shape, until it gives your own naïve impression of the scene before you.-Claude Monet
Paul Cézanne
The Large Bathers
1906 CE | Oil on canvas
Ways of Seeing: Cubism to Surrealism
Futurism vs. Dada
THEO VAN DOESBURG
Composition VIII (The Cow) | 1917 CE
PIET MONDRIAN
Grey Tree
1911 CE
PIET MONDRIAN
Tableau I
1921 CE
PABLO PICASSO
Les Demoiselles d’Avignon
1907 CE
Oil on canvas
PABLO PICASSO
Gertrude Stein
1906–1907 CE
Oil on canvas
GEORGES BRAQUE
The Portuguese
1911 CE
Oil on canvas
GEORGES BRAQUE
Houses at l'Estaque
1908 CE
Oil on canvas
In the year 1906, Braque, Derain, Matisse and many others were still striving for expression through color, using only pleasant arabesques, and completely dissolving the form of the object.
Cezanne's great example was still not understood. Painting threatened to debase itself to the level of ornamentation; it sought to be 'decorative,' to 'adorn' the wall.
Years of research had proved that closed form did not permit an expression sufficient for the two artists' aims. Closed form accepts objects as contained by their own surfaces, i.e., the skin; it then endeavors to represent this closed body, and, since no object is visible without light, to paint this 'skin' as the contact point between the body and light where both merge into color.
This chiaroscuro can provide only an illusion of the form of objects.
In the actual three dimensional world the object is there to be touched even after light is eliminated.
Thus the painters of the Renaissance, using the closed form method, endeavored to give the illusion of form by painting light as color on the surface of objects. It was never more than 'illusion.'
GEORGES BRAQUE
Violin & Palette
1908 CE
Oil on Canvas
GEORGES BRAQUE
Violin & Palette
1908 CE
Oil on Canvas
PABLO PICASSO
Still Life with Chair-Caning
1912 CE | Oil and oilcloth on canvas
PABLO PICASSO
Violon
1911-1912 CE
Oil on canvas
SALVADOR DALÍ
The Persistence of Memory
1931 CE | Oil on canvas
RENÉ MAGRITTE
The Treachery (or Perfidy) of Images
1928–1929 CE | Oil on canvas
MERET OPPENHEIM
Object (Le Déjeuner en fourrure)
1936 CE | Fur-covered cup
JOAN MIRÓ
Painting
1933 CE | Oil on canvas
GIACOMO BALLA
Dynamism of a Dog on a Leash
1912 CE | Oil on canvas
UMBERTO BOCCIONI
Unique Forms of Continuity in Space
1913 CE (cast 1931 CE)
Bronze
GINO SEVERINI
Armored Train
1915 CE
Oil on canvas
MARCEL DUCHAMP
L.H.O.O.Q.
1919 CE
Pencil on paper color reproduction of Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa
MARCEL DUCHAMP
Nude Descending a Staircase, No. 2
1912 CE
Oil on canvas
MARCEL DUCHAMP
Fountain
1917 CE
Porcelain
MARCEL DUCHAMP
Fountain, (second version)
1950 CE
Porcelain
Sold in 1964 at Sotheby's auction house to the Tate Britain museum...
...for $1.7 million
That's equal to $16.6 million in 2023.
Sartre, Greenberg, & Expressionism
Minimalism vs. Pop Art
ALBERTO GIACOMETTI
Man Pointing (no. 5 of 6)
1947 CE
Bronze
The less you eat, drink and buy books; the less you go to the theatre, the dance hall, the public house; the less you think, love, theorise, sing, paint, fence, etc., the more you save – the greater becomes your treasure which neither moths nor rust will devour – your capital.
The less you are, the less you express your own life, the more you have, i.e., the greater is your alienated life, the greater is the store of your estranged being.
-Karl Marx, Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts, 1844
FRANCIS BACON
Painting
1946 CE
Oil and pastel on linen
FRANCIS BACON
Figure with Meat
1945 CE
Oil on canvas
BARNETT NEWMAN
Vir Heroicus Sublimis
1950–1951 CE | Oil on canvas
JACKSON POLLOCK
Number 1, 1950 (Lavender Mist)
1950 CE | Oil, enamel, and aluminum paint on canvas
LEE KRASNER
The Seasons
1957 CE | Oil and house paint on canvas
HELEN FRANKENTHALER
The Bay
1963 CE | Acrylic on canvas
JACKSON POLLOCK
No. 30 (Autumn Rhythm)
1950 CE | Enamel paint on canvas
MARK ROTHKO
No. 14
1961 CE
Oil on canvas
MARK ROTHKO
No. 12
1954 CE
Oil on canvas
“I'm interested only in expressing basic human emotions—tragedy, ecstasy, doom, and so on. The fact that a lot of people break down and cry when confronted with my pictures shows that I can communicate those basic human emotions. If you…are moved only by their color relationships, then you miss the point.”
-Mark Rothko
MARK ROTHKO
Rothko Chapel
1964-1971 CE
MARK ROTHKO
Orange, Red, Yellow
1961 CE
Acrylic on canvas
DONALD JUDD
Untitled
1969 CE
Brass and colored fluorescent Plexiglass on steel brackets
DAN FLAVIN
The Nominal Three (to William of Ockham)
1963 CE | Fluorescent lights
"It is what it is, and it ain’t nothin’ else. . . . There is no overwhelming spirituality you are supposed to come into contact with. . . . It’s in a sense a “get-in-get-out” situation. And it is very easy to understand. One might not think of light as a matter of fact, but I do. And it is, as I said, as plain and open and direct an art as you will ever find."
- Dan Flavin
FRANK STELLA
Mas o Menos (More or Less)
1964 CE | Metallic powder in acrylic emulsion on canvas
FRANK STELLA
Untitled
1966 CE
TONY SMITH
Die
1962 CE | Steel
"I just picked up the phone and ordered it."
-Tony Smith on the making of Die
RICHARD HAMILTON
Just What Is It That Makes Today’s Homes So Different, So Appealing?
1956 CE
Collage
ROY LICHTENSTEIN
Hopeless
1963 CE | Oil on canvas
ROY LICHTENSTEIN
Oh, Jeff … I Love You, Too … But …
1964 CE | Oil on canvas
ANDY WARHOL
Green Coca-Cola Bottles
1962 CE
Oil on canvas
ANDY WARHOL
Campbell's Soup Cans
1962 CE | Synthetic polymer paint on paper
Silkscreen printing is an old wallpaper making technique
ANDY WARHOL
Campbell's Soup Cans (Tomato Soup)
1962 CE
Synthetic polymer paint on paper
ANDY WARHOL
Marilyn Diptych
1962 CE | Synthetic polymer paint on paper
ANDY WARHOL
Gold Marilyn
1962 CE
Synthetic polymer paint on paper
CLAES OLDENBURG
Lipstick (Ascending) on Caterpillar Tracks
1969 CE (reworked, 1974) | Painted steel, aluminum, and fiberglass
CLAES OLDENBURG
Lipstick (Ascending) on Caterpillar Tracks
ROBERT RAUSCHENBERG
Canyon
1959 CE
ANDY WARHOL
Brillo Soap Pads Box
1964 CE
ANDY WARHOL
Heinz Tomato Ketchup Box
1964 CE |
Sold at Sotheby's auction house for $1 million...
...the same year as this reproduction of Duchamp's Fountain.
Jacques-Louis David
Napoleon Crossing Saint-Bernard
1800-1801 CE | Oil on canvas
Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres
Napoleon on His Imperial Throne
1806 CE | Oil on canvas
Pierre-Alexandre Barthélémy Vignon
La Madeleine
Paris, France, 1807-1842 CE
Jacques-Louis David
Coronation of Napoleon
1805-1808 CE | Oil on canvas
Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres
Grand Odalisque
1814 CE | Oil on canvas
By Jonathan Morgan
ARTH 212, South Dakota State University, Prof. Morgan
Adjunct Professor of Art at Lone Star College & South Dakota State University, PhD candidate at IDSVA