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Lesson 2; Top 20 Art Styles Around the World

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“Top 20 Art Styles
To Explore”
Lesson’s Objective:
To identify suitable art style and develop a
comprehensive understanding of artistic choices
and how they contribute to visual
communication.
Success Criterial
Recognize and identify major art movements and
their top characteristics.
Keywords:
Art | style | movement | age | technique |
artist | date | media | Choice
ARTISTIC STYLES: THE TOP 20
1. Realism: Depicting subjects realistically, often emphasizing detail and
accuracy to portray scenes as they appear in reality.
(Naturalism, Attention to details, Capturing everyday life)
2. Impressionism: Emphasizing light, colours, and spontaneous
brushstrokes to capture the essence of a scene. (Quick Brushstrokes,
Light & Colour, Outdoor Scenes, and Perspective)
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ARTISTIC STYLES: THE TOP 20
3.
Cubism: Fragmenting subjects into geometric shapes, presenting
multiple viewpoints simultaneously. (Geometric Shapes, Multiple
Perspectives, Interlocking Planes, Limited Colour Palette)
4. Surrealism: Exploring the subconscious, creating dreamlike and
fantastical imagery. (Automatism; spontaneous and unpremeditated
creation, Dreamlike, Unusual imagery)
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ARTISTIC STYLES: THE TOP 20
5. Abstract Expression: Emphasizing spontaneous, intuitive expression,
often involving large-scale, gestural brushstrokes. (Lack of Figurative
Representation, Gesture & Action)
6. Abstract Art: Distilling subjects to essential forms, shapes, or colours,
often devoid of recognizable representation.
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ARTISTIC STYLES: THE TOP 20
7. Renaissance: Marked by a revival of classical art, emphasizing
proportion, perspective, and realistic representation.
8. Romanticism: Emphasizing emotion, nature, and imagination, often
depicting powerful scenes and heightened emotion.
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ARTISTIC STYLES: THE TOP 20
9. Baroque: Dramatic, dynamic, and ornate style, often associated with
grandeur and emotional intensity.
10. Rococo: Characterized by ornate and decorative elements, soft
colours, and playful themes.
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ARTISTIC STYLES: THE TOP 20
11. Pop Art: Incorporating popular culture and consumerism, using bold
colours and everyday objects. (Bold colour, Contrast, Flat Colour, Graphic
Style, Popular Culture)
12. Minimalism: Reducing art to its essential elements, often
characterized by simplicity and geometric forms.
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ARTISTIC STYLES: THE TOP 20
13. Fauvism: Using bold colours and brushwork to express emotion,
often distorting colours for expressive effect.
14. Gothic: Architectural and artistic style emphasizing pointed arches,
ribbed vaults, and flying buttresses.
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ARTISTIC STYLES: THE TOP 20
15. Neoclassicism: Reviving classical themes and forms, emphasizing
order, simplicity, and idealized beauty.
16. Art Nouveau: Characterized by decorative, flowing lines and organic
forms, often seen in architecture and design.
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ARTISTIC STYLES: THE TOP 20
17. Post-Impressionism: Extending Impressionist ideas, artists
experiment with colours, form, and symbolism.
18. Dadaism: Rejecting traditional art, embracing chaos, absurdity, and
anti-establishment attitudes.
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ARTISTIC STYLES: THE TOP 20
19. Expressionism: Conveying emotional intensity through distorted
forms, bold colours, and exaggerated brushwork.
20. Graffiti Art: Emerging from street culture, artists use public spaces
for colourful, often politically charged, self-expression.
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TOP 5 ARTISTS: ART STYLES
Classical Art:
Leonardo da Vinci
Michelangelo
Raphael
Caravaggio
Titian
Rococo Art:
Jean-Antoine Watteau
François Boucher
Jean-Honoré Fragonard
Thomas Gainsborough
Canaletto
Realism:
Gustave Courbet
Édouard Manet
Jean-François Millet
Honoré Daumier
Winslow Homer
Renaissance Art:
Sandro Botticelli
Albrecht Dürer
Jan van Eyck
Hieronymus Bosch
Giorgione
Neoclassical Art:
Jacques-Louis David
Angelica Kauffman
Antonio Canova
Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres
Élisabeth Louise Vigée Le Brun
Impressionism:
Claude Monet
Edgar Degas
Pierre-Auguste Renoir
Camille Pissarro
Mary Cassatt
Baroque Art:
Rembrandt van Rijn
Peter Paul Rubens
Diego Velázquez
Artemisia Gentileschi
Gian Lorenzo Bernini
Romanticism:
William Turner
Eugène Delacroix
Francisco Goya
Caspar David Friedrich
John Constable
Post-Impressionism:
Vincent van Gogh
Paul Cézanne
Georges Seurat
Paul Gauguin
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
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TOP 5 ARTISTS: ART STYLES
Expressionism:
Edvard Munch
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner
Egon Schiele
Emil Nolde
Wassily Kandinsky
Symbolism:
Gustav Klimt
Odilon Redon
Fernand Khnopff
Edvard Munch
Aubrey Beardsley
Fauvism:
Henri Matisse
André Derain
Raoul Dufy
Kees van Dongen
Maurice de Vlaminck
Dadaism:
Marcel Duchamp
Hannah Höch
Tristan Tzara
Jean Arp
Man Ray
Art Nouveau:
Alphonse Mucha
Gustav Klimt
Émile Gallé
René Lalique
Charles Rennie Mackintosh
Abstract Expressionism:
Jackson Pollock
Willem de Kooning
Mark Rothko
Clyfford Still
Helen Frankenthaler
Surrealism:
Salvador Dalí
René Magritte
Max Ernst
Joan Miró
André Masson
Cubism:
Pablo Picasso
Georges Braque
Juan Gris
Fernand Léger
Robert Delaunay
Pop Art:
Andy Warhol
Roy Lichtenstein
Jasper Johns
Claes Oldenburg
Robert Rauschenberg
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TOP 5 ARTISTS: ART STYLES
Minimalism:
Donald Judd
Frank Stella
Agnes Martin
Sol LeWitt
Dan Flavin
Contemporary Art:
Damien Hirst
Jeff Koons
Yayoi Kusama
Ai Weiwei
Cindy Sherman
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Discuss:
Which of the above art styles or artists would
you consider as the best, why?
THE BOMBSHELL…
Expression of Emotion: Many art styles, such as Romanticism, Expressionism, and Abstract
Expressionism, focus on expressing emotions and personal feelings through art.
Innovation and Experimentation: Movements like Cubism, Futurism, and Surrealism often
involve innovative and experimental approaches to artistic representation, challenging
traditional norms.
Social Commentary: Some art styles, including Social Realism, Pop Art, and Street Art, engage
with social and political issues, providing commentary on the times in which they were created.
Nature and Landscape: Several styles, such as Romanticism, Impressionism, and Realism, draw
inspiration from nature and the surrounding environment.
Cultural Influence: Art movements like Regionalism, Fauvism, and Art Nouveau are influenced
by cultural elements, whether regional identities, vivid colors, or decorative forms.
Abstraction: Abstract art, seen in movements like Abstract Expressionism and Geometric
Abstraction, focuses on non-representational forms and shapes.
Symbolism: Symbolic elements can be found in Symbolism, Art Nouveau, and even Surrealism,
where artists incorporate symbolic imagery to convey deeper meanings
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Thank you!
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