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Terra Teacher Lab 200708

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Yellow Hickory Leaves with Daisy. 1928. Oil on Canvas. Chicago Art Institute ' ... Messington, Lisa Marie, Georgia O'Keeffe, World of Art ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Terra Teacher Lab 200708


1
  • Terra Teacher Lab 2007-08
  • The Changing American Landscape
  • and Georgia OKeeffe
  • To create ones world in any of the arts takes
    courage.
  • Georgia OKeeffe
  • Bob Finn
  • Wildwood World IB Magnet School
  • Grade 8
  • Language Arts/ Humanities

2
We started with 3 representative pieces from
Georgia OKeeffes vast body of work.
  • 1 was chosen because it easily aesthetically
    linked to 19th century American landscape
    painting
  • 2 were chosen because they are in the Art
    Institute of Chicago collection
  • Please note What we are doing with OKeeffe has
    its roots in our lessons last semester when we
    studied 19th century American landscape painting
    through the lenses of both romanticism and
    realism

3
  • Georgia OKeeffe
  • Lake George, Autumn
  • 1927
  • oil on canvas
  • Milwaukee Art Museum

4
  • Georgia OKeeffe
  • Red Hills with Flowers
  • 1929
  • oil on canvas
  • Chicago Art Institute

5
  • Georgia OKeeffe
  • Black Cross,New Mexico
  • 1927
  • oil on canvas
  • Chicago Art Institute

6
The Changing American Landscape
  • Chama Again, Blue River
  • 1937
  • Oil on canvas
  • OKeeffe was an aesthetic descendant of 19th
    century Hudson River School. Nature inspired her
    and she expressed ecstatic feelings of nature in
    her minimalist style through
  • o Vibrant colors
  • o Organic forms
  • o Uninhabited, dramatic vistas
  • OKeeffes landscapes were representational and
    delicate. She eliminated the superfluous. During
    her marriage to renowned photographer Alfred
    Stieglitz, OKeeffe spent much time in the
    natural areas around Lake George in New York
    states Adirondacks as well as in New York City.
    But ultimately she could not resist the stark
    beauty, infinite space, and natural elements of
    New Mexico, which she called the faraway.
  • "Nothing is less real than realism ... It is only
    by selection, by elimination, by emphasis that we
    get at the real meaning of things.
  • Georgia
    OKeeffe

7
Modernism
  • In our study of modernism in early 20th century
    literature, we learned modernist authors sought
    to capture the essence of modern life in both the
    form and the content of their work. Themes were
    implied, not directly stated, forcing the
    observer to draw independent conclusions. To
    these authors, their fragmentary works reflected
    the fragmentation of the modern world.
  • OKeeffe I often painted fragments of things
    because it seems to make my statement as well as
    or better than the whole couldI had to create an
    equivalent for what I felt about what I was
    looking atnot copy it.

8
It was Arthur Dow who affected my start, who
helped me to find something of my own.I decided
to start anew, to strip away what I had been
taught. Georgia OKeeffe
  • OKeeffe was influenced by
    the ideas of Arthur Dow. Dows abstract
    methodology was to use geometric shapes to fill
    space in a beautiful way. Profoundly influenced
    by classical Japanese painting, Dow believed an
    artists subject matter was best realized through
    harmonious arrangements of line, color, and
    Notan- the Japanese system of lights/darks
  • A major figure in American art since
    the 1920s, OKeeffe was chiefly known for
    artwork in which she synthesized abstraction and
    representation in paintings of flowers, rocks,
    shells, animal bones and landscapes. Her
    paintings present crisply contoured forms that
    are replete with subtle tonal transitions of
    varying colors. She often transformed her subject
    matter into powerful abstract images.
  • Red Canna
  • 1923
  • Water color on paper
  • University of Arizona Museum of Art

9
Imagism provides a link
  • Imagist poets called for a return to what were
    seen as more classical values, such as directness
    of presentation and economy of language. These
    poets displayed a great willingness to
    experiment with non-traditional verse forms. They
    focused on the "thing" as "thing" in an attempt
    at isolating a single image to reveal its
    essence. Imagist Ezra Pound believed that
    Imagism isolated objects through what he called
    luminous details.
  • Pound was profoundly influenced by Japanese
    poetry which strove for vivid conciseness while
    linking emotions or ideas to natural objects.
    Although restrictive in form, the gem-like
    brilliance of Japanese poetry was exceedingly
    attractive to Pound.
  • When I read these words describing the
    influence of Japanese poetry on the American
    poets under study I was struck by the ideas of
    non-traditional, revealing essence, luminous
    details, vivid conciseness and gem-like
    brilliance. These terms seemed so relevant to
    Georgia OKeeffes body of work that logically,
    the next step was to utilize her amazing artwork
    to inspire my students to write poems in the
    Japanese forms of haiku and tanka.
  • Yellow Hickory Leaves with Daisy
  • 1928
  • Oil on Canvas
  • Chicago Art Institute

10
  • What I wanted students to learn
  • abstractcomposition...impressionism...framing
    elementsminimalism
  • I wanted students to meaningfully talk the talk
  • organic formsrealismreductivismrepr
    esentational art
  • I wanted them to understand how significant
    schools of thought (the isms) affect history,
    literature and the arts. They need to see these
    connections.
  • I wanted my students to apply their understanding
    of the vivid conciseness and unique style of
    Georgia OKeeffes art in order to create their
    own original
  • 1) tanka and haiku poetry
  • 2) artwork

11
A few major learning activities
  • 1 Talking the talk learning the
    vocabulary
  • 2 Study Modernist and Imagist poets in
    literature class
  • 3 Introduce Japanese haiku and tanka
    poetic forms to class and clarify their
    influence on American poetry
  • students
    create/illustrate original haiku utilizing themes
    from nature
  • 4 Open Room 104s OKeeffe gallery
  • read OKeefe paintings w/in gallery
  • students apply taught vocabulary correctly
  • 5 Students select their personal
    OKeeffe work and apply their reading skills
    to create an original tanka poem
  • 6 Publish poems
  • 7 Create original artwork in a choice of
    media

12
Student Work
  • Black Cross
  • Black, bold, discontent,
  • Graceful mountainous texture
  • Breathtaking darkness
  • Intriguing, illusional,
  • Haunting, different
  • Allan Ginden

13
  • Radiator Building
  • Skyscraper hanging
  • Sublime building in night skies
  • Glimmering, white peaks
  • Windows shining with bright light
  • Dark night sky glowers
  • Devin Lathan

14
  • White Pansy
  • Dainty white pansy
  • Petals opening, blooming
  • Bright yellow center
  • Baby violets surround
  • Beautiful contour
  • Andriana Mitrakos

15
  • Red Hills with Flowers
  • Bright, flames of crimson
  • Color Curving petals seem
  • Smooth against distant
  • Roughly reddish mountains frame
  • Near beauty, afar

  • Erick
    Marquez

16
  • Lake George, Early Morning
  • Greens. blues, yellowsSpring
  • Vibrant, verdant, bold nature
  • Glistening blue lake
  • Delicate whites, soft yellows
  • Refreshing spring scene
  • DeeDee Harvey

17
  • What my students learned
  • They are beginning to incorporatethe talk
    appropriately into relevant classroom activities
    and discussions.
  • They have learned about the characteristics of
    romanticism, realism, naturalism, imagism, and
    modernism in American art, literature and history
    and apply this knowledge to their analysis and
    interpretation of both art and literature.
  • They have learned to make the connections between
    art and the other curricula.
  • Japanese forms of poetry, such as haiku and
    tanka, are now tools in their toolboxes.
  • Students have learned to respond to American art
    through their own creative efforts.

18
  • What I learned
  • I learned that Georgia OKeeffes body of work
    was far more expansive than paintings of big
    flowers and bones in the desert.
  • I learned that I appreciated almost all the
    various stages of OKeeffes artLake GeorgeNew
    York CityNew Mexicothe flowers
  • Through reading several biographies and various
    articles about OKeeffe, I learned why she
    painted the way she did.
  • I learned that using appropriate American art in
    conjunction with our study of American history
    and literature memorably enlivens the curriculum
    for all concerned.
  • I learned that the isms are of great importance
    in literature and can provide fabulous segues
    into history and the arts as well.
  • Stressing the necessary vocabulary for these
    lessons improved by vocabulary too.
  • ? I reaffirmed my belief that high expectations
    for students prod them to achieve at a more
    advanced level.

19
Bibliography
  • Books
  • Bellavance-Johnson, Marsha, Full Bloom The Art
    and Life of Georgia OKeeffe
  • Drohojowska-Philp, Hunters, Full Bloom The Art
    and Life of Georgia OKeeffe
  • Lisle, Laurie, Portrait of an Artist A Biography
    of Georgia OKeeffe
  • Lynes, Barbara Buhler, Georgia OKeeffe and New
    Mexico A Sense of Place
  • Messington, Lisa Marie, Georgia OKeeffe, World
    of Art
  • Robinson, Roxana, Georgia OKeeffe A Life
  • DVD
  • Great Women Artists Georgia OKeeffe
  • Web Resources
  • Artcyclopedia
  • http//www.artcyclopedia.com/artists/okeeffe_georg
    ia.html
  • Art History Archive
  • http//www.arthistoryarchive.com/arthistory/modern
    /Georgia- OKeeffe.html
  • Artist.org
  • http//www.artst.org/okeeffe/bio/
  • Georgia OKeefe, a Bibliography
  • http//hubcap.clemson.edu/sparks/gokbib.html
  • Georgia OKeeffe, Biography
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