Post the title and short description of your favorite work from the museum exhibit.
For those of you that weren't able to go, find a a work online and add a full description along with the title.
Monday, February 25, 2013
Art One - High Museum trip
Post the title and short description of your favorite work from the museum exhibit.
For those of you that weren't able to go, find a a work online and add a full description along with the title.
For those of you that weren't able to go, find a a work online and add a full description along with the title.
Ceramics - High Museum
Post the title and short description of your favorite work from the museum exhibit.
For those of you that weren't able to go, find a a work online and add a full description along with the title.
For those of you that weren't able to go, find a a work online and add a full description along with the title.
Wednesday, February 20, 2013
Ceramics - Tour Casa Azul
Opening: A virtual tour of Casa
Azul (URL: http://www.recorridosvirtuales.com/frida_kahlo/museo_frida_kahlo.html)
Tour the Casa Azul and tell me what you think. Click on all of the green dots to tour each room.
Art One - Tour Casa Azul
Opening: A virtual tour of Casa
Azul (URL: http://www.recorridosvirtuales.com/frida_kahlo/museo_frida_kahlo.html)
Visit the tour and tell me what you think. Click on all of the green dots to tour each room.
Tuesday, February 12, 2013
All Art students
Don't forget to comment on your blog by FRIDAY.
Remember also to get your permission slip signed and returned by FRIDAY.
If you forgot yours, you can click on the form below, copy it and paste to a Word document to print at home.
I still need more chaperones too!
Remember also to get your permission slip signed and returned by FRIDAY.
If you forgot yours, you can click on the form below, copy it and paste to a Word document to print at home.
I still need more chaperones too!
Monday, February 11, 2013
Art One - Casa Azul
Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo’s House-Studio is one of the most important cultural landmarks in Mexico City, for being the place of residence and work of two of the most important artists in the 20th Century, Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo, as well as for being the first construction of the modern movement built in the American continent.
This construction, built in 1931 by the architect Juan O’Gorman, represented the breaking of every aesthetic paradigm in Mexican architecture up to that time, strongly incorporating the most forward theories and thoughts which architects like Le Corbusier were developing simultaneously in Europe. Thoughts like the rational use of materials, the analysis of each space’s function and the adjustment of each space to the activities that took place within it; ideas that were radical in the beginning but that, with time, were taken in by architecture all around the world.
This building was designed and constructed based upon the 5 points proposed by Le Corbusier: structure supported by pilotis, open floor plan, free façade, roof garden (to compensate the green area consumed by the building) and long strips of windows; but it’s also a Mexican house with strong colours, textured floors and a cactus fence. It’s an honest house that shows us its steel skeleton, its pipes, its staircases, its economic materials; it’s a house that could be in any town, not afraid of letting us know it’s a factory, a machine for living, an art machine in which Diego and Frida produced an aesthetic world nurtured by Mexico, its history, its people, its problems and its biggest dreams.
This interesting space is composed by two blocks or main houses, a red one that represents Diego Rivera and a blue one, Frida Kahlo, both joined by a bridge, a bond of passion between them. Within them we can see their bedrooms, their workshops and other spaces that have been visited by characters like André Bretón, María Félix, Pablo Neruda, Dolores Del Río, Nelson Rockefeller and Lázaro Cárdenas, among others.
Since 1986 this House-Studio has been open to the public, showing how these two artists used to live and work. It’s a must-see place for art and architecture lovers who are visiting the city.
Ceramics - Kahlo/Rivera House - Casa Azul
Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo’s House-Studio is one of the most
important cultural landmarks in Mexico City, for being the place of residence
and work of two of the most important artists in the 20th
Century, Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo, as well as for being the first
construction of the modern movement built in the American continent.
This construction, built in 1931 by the architect Juan O’Gorman,
represented the breaking of every aesthetic paradigm in Mexican architecture up
to that time, strongly incorporating the most forward theories and thoughts
which architects like Le Corbusier were developing simultaneously in Europe.
Thoughts like the rational use of materials, the analysis of each space’s
function and the adjustment of each space to the activities that took place
within it; ideas that were radical in the beginning but that, with time, were
taken in by architecture all around the world.
This building was designed and constructed based upon the 5 points
proposed by Le Corbusier: structure supported by pilotis, open floor
plan, free façade, roof garden (to compensate the green area consumed by the
building) and long strips of windows; but it’s also a Mexican house with strong
colours, textured floors and a cactus fence. It’s an honest house that shows
us its steel skeleton, its pipes, its staircases, its economic materials; it’s a
house that could be in any town, not afraid of letting us know it’s a factory, a
machine for living, an art machine in which Diego and Frida produced an
aesthetic world nurtured by Mexico, its history, its people, its problems and
its biggest dreams.
This interesting space is composed by two blocks or main houses, a
red one that represents Diego Rivera and a blue one, Frida Kahlo, both joined by
a bridge, a bond of passion between them. Within them we can see their bedrooms,
their workshops and other spaces that have been visited by characters like André
Bretón, María Félix, Pablo Neruda, Dolores Del Río, Nelson Rockefeller and
Lázaro Cárdenas, among others.
Since 1986 this House-Studio has been open to the public, showing how
these two artists used to live and work. It’s a must-see place for art and
architecture lovers who are visiting the city.
Tuesday, February 5, 2013
Ceramics - Rivera
Follow the link to view a gallery of paintings by Diego Rivera. Click on the first one and then scroll through all of them. There are about 45. Choose your favorite and tell us why.
http://www.diego-rivera.com/diego-rivera-paintings.jsp
http://www.diego-rivera.com/diego-rivera-paintings.jsp
Art One - Rivera
Follow the link to view a gallery of paintings by Diego Rivera. Click on the first one and then scroll through all of them. There are about 45. Choose your favorite and tell us why.
http://www.diego-rivera.com/diego-rivera-paintings.jsp
http://www.diego-rivera.com/diego-rivera-paintings.jsp
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