Chapter 14 Art Lesson Plans

Similar documents
PMEA Model Curriculum Framework Strand: Music Technology PA Big Ideas and National Standards Artistic Processes

How do we assign value to knowledge in art? Madison Roberts, Elli Ward, Julia Payne

Morse Peckham manuscript for variorum text of The Origin of Species by Charles Darwin

REVIEW ARTICLE IDEAL EMBODIMENT: KANT S THEORY OF SENSIBILITY

K Use kinesthetic awareness, proper use of space and the ability to move safely. use of space (2, 5)

Aristotle on the Human Good

Jacek Surzyn University of Silesia Kant s Political Philosophy

The Debate on Research in the Arts

For m. The numbered artworks referred to in this handout are listed, with links, on the companion website.

How to use this handout:

National Standards/Artistic Processes/Enduring Understandings

What counts as a convincing scientific argument? Are the standards for such evaluation

VISUAL ARTS SL, YEAR 1

Syllabus for MUS 201 Harmony, Sight Singing, and Ear Training III Fall 1999

Early and Middle Childhood / Art. Component 1: Content Knowledge SAMPLE ITEMS AND SCORING RUBRICS

AESTHETICS. Key Terms

Curriculum Standard One: The student will use his/her senses to perceive works of art, objects in nature, events, and the environment.

High School Photography 1 Curriculum Essentials Document

IMPORTANCE OF ART EDUCATION

that would join theoretical philosophy (metaphysics) and practical philosophy (ethics)?

Kant: Notes on the Critique of Judgment

Second Grade Art Curriculum

Paulsboro Schools. Curriculum

Back to Basics: Appreciating Appreciative Inquiry as Not Normal Science

An Analytical Approach to The Challenges of Cultural Relativism. The world is a conglomeration of people with many different cultures, each with

4.1 Artists document ideas and observations through journals, sketchbooks, samples, models, photographs, and/or electronic files/portfolios.

Curriculum Standard One: The student will use his/her senses to perceive works of art, objects in nature, events, and the environment.

TCS VERTICAL ARTICULATION DOCUMENT FOR GROUP 6 VA DOCUMENT NEEDS TO MAP THE TEACHING & LEARNING EXPERIENCED BY THE STUDENT ACROSS THE DP PROGRAMME

107 Western Art Slide Show Part 2

National Standards/Artistic Processes/Enduring Understandings

West Windsor-Plainsboro Regional School District Band Curriculum Grade 11

Culture, Space and Time A Comparative Theory of Culture. Take-Aways

PHIL 480: Seminar in the History of Philosophy Building Moral Character: Neo-Confucianism and Moral Psychology

CURRICULUM FOR ADVANCED PLACEMENT MUSIC THEORY GRADES 10-12

CHAPTER ONE. of Dr. Scheiner s book. The True Definition.

Is Situational Analysis Merely Rational Choice Theory?

Comparative Study Self Assessment Criteria & Strategies

AU-6407 B.Lib.Inf.Sc. (First Semester) Examination 2014 Knowledge Organization Paper : Second. Prepared by Dr. Bhaskar Mukherjee

Objectivity and aesthetic judgment

General Standards for Professional Baccalaureate Degrees in Music

The Critique Handbook

BENTHAM AND WELFARISM. What is the aim of social policy and the law what ends or goals should they aim to bring about?

West Windsor-Plainsboro Regional School District String Orchestra Grade 9

8/28/2008. An instance of great change or alteration in affairs or in some particular thing. (1450)

National Standards for Visual Art The National Standards for Arts Education

Sarasota County Public Library System. Collection Development Policy April 2011

PH th Century Philosophy Ryerson University Department of Philosophy Mondays, 3-6pm Fall 2010

Learning Opportunities

Immanuel Kant Critique of Pure Reason

Instrumental Music Curriculum

SocioBrains THE INTEGRATED APPROACH TO THE STUDY OF ART

With prompting and support, ask and answer questions about key details in a text. Grade 1 Ask and answer questions about key details in a text.

Emotions from the Perspective of Analytic Aesthetics

The Teaching Method of Creative Education

TEST BANK. Chapter 1 Historical Studies: Some Issues

PHL 317K 1 Fall 2017 Overview of Weeks 1 5

Printing may distort margins: Check for accuracy!

Curriculum Framework for Visual Arts

Draft Date 10/20/10 Draft submitted for publication: Please do not cite without permission

UPHEAVALS OF THOUGHT The Intelligence of Emotions

A.1 Generate observational and emotional responses to diverse culturally and historically specific works of dance music theatre and visual art.

J.S. Mill s Notion of Qualitative Superiority of Pleasure: A Reappraisal

Culture and Art Criticism

PA Big Ideas and National Standards Artistic Processes. National Standards/Artistic Processes/Enduring Understandings

Collection Development Policy. Giovanni Mejia San Jose State University

Collection Development Policy

News English.com Ready-to-use ESL/EFL Lessons by Sean Banville Chinese writer to have Shakespeare s face

Literary Criticism. Literary critics removing passages that displease them. By Charles Joseph Travies de Villiers in 1830

College and Career Readiness Anchor Standards K-12 Montana Common Core Reading Standards (CCRA.R)

Jerome Bruner. Jerome believed in something called cognitive revolution. That is when psychologist

EXPERTS ARE PUZZLED. by LAURA RIDING

Medieval Art. artwork during such time. The ivory sculpting and carving have been very famous because of the

Orchestra Responding Unit, Proficient Level

THE ROOTS OF PROGRESSIVE ROCK

MERE EXPOSURE AND AESTHETIC REALISM A RESPONSE TO PERCEPTUAL LEARNING, THE MERE EXPOSURE EFFECT AND AESTHETIC ANTI-REALISM BY BENCE NANAY

Rethinking the Aesthetic Experience: Kant s Subjective Universality

"Classicism and Romanticism" by Robert Pirsig from Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance

Indicator 1A: Conceptualize and generate musical ideas for an artistic purpose and context, using

T.M. Porter, The Rise of Statistical Thinking, Princeton: Princeton University Press, xii pp

In collaboration with the National Gallery of Art. Page 1 of 12. Recovering the Golden Age: Activities

Humanities Learning Outcomes

Bell Ringer: November 15(16), 2017

The Concept of Nature

Standard 1: Understanding and Applying Media Techniques and Processes Exemplary

Approaches to teaching film

Hoboken Public Schools. Visual Arts Curriculum Grades Seven & Eight

S1C1-301 Contribute to a discussion about ideas for his or her own artwork. Assessed by performance assessment DOK 3

Copper Valley Community Library COLLECTION DEVELOPMENT POLICY

Communication Studies Publication details, including instructions for authors and subscription information:

Misc Fiction Irony Point of view Plot time place social environment

Course Objectives The objectives for this course have been adapted and expanded from the 2010 AP Music Theory Course Description from:

THE NEW YORK CITY UNDERGROUND

Shrewsbury Borough School Visual and Performing Arts Curriculum 2012 Visual Arts Grade 7

ISU: Comparative Art History Essay (10%)

LOOKING AT ART BY LAURIE SCHNEIDER ADAMS DOWNLOAD EBOOK : LOOKING AT ART BY LAURIE SCHNEIDER ADAMS PDF

Chorus Responding Unit, Proficient Level

Enduring Understanding. Resources/ Mentors/ Texts. Essential. How do musicians. Spring Lake High School Curriculum Map 9 th -12th Grade Vocal Music

8 Reportage Reportage is one of the oldest techniques used in drama. In the millenia of the history of drama, epochs can be found where the use of thi

National Standards/Artistic Processes/Enduring Understandings

CONTENTS. part 1: premises and inspirations. Acknowledgments

Transcription:

Theory of Knowledge Mr. Blackmon Chapter 14 Art Lesson Plans Bastian, Sue et al. Theory of Knowledge. Edinborough, UK: Pearson Educational, 2008. Pp. 257-277 I. Its s just a question of taste.... A. Handout: TOK Subject Guide, pp. 42-43 1. Reading: Abel, Man Is the Measure: Chapter 21 Form in Art a. Written Homework: Questions to Abel Chapter 21 2. Reading: Abel, Man Is the Measure: Chapter 22 Creativity a. Written Homework: Questions to Abel Chapter 22 3. Exercise: How do you judge art? a. [#1 Cannot find source with Google or Bing] b. [#2 Cannot find source with Google or Bing] c. [# 3 Shakespeare, Sonnet 29 When in disgrace with fortune and men s eyes ] d. [# 4 Byron, When we two parted ] e. Class Jig Saw Activity # 6: The class will be divided into three groups A, B, and C by counting off at your seats. Each group A, B, and C will be assigned one of the three Discussion Questions below. Students in each group A, B, and C will now count off 1, 2, and 3 for the next stage of the activity. Each group A, B, and C will discuss the meaning of the assigned quote [fifteen minutes]. Students should apply what they have learned so far in any of their classes, in this class, or in personal experience / research. Their explication of the quote should eventually find concrete examples to illustrate their point. Each student should make notes of the group s conclusions. Then three new groups 1, 2, and 3 will be formed. Their task will be to synthesize (if possible) the meaning of the three quotes [twenty minutes] (1) What knowledge of art can be gained by focusing attention on the artist? (a) Can or should artists intentions, and the creative process itself, be understood through observing artists or knowing something of their lives? (b) Is the creative process as important as the final product, even though it cannot be observed directly? (c) (d) Are an artist s intentions relevant to assessing the work? Can a work of art contain or convey meaning of Page 1 of 7

II. III. which the artist is oblvious? (2) What knowledge of art can be gained by focusing attention solely on the work itself, in isolation from the artist or the social context? (a) Can or should technical virtuosity in itself, a skilled mastery of the medium, be enough to distinguish a work of art? (b) Are certain compositions, ways of structuring sounds or shapes, inherently more pleasing than others? (c) Can a work be judged primarily by the harmony of form and content, the way in which structure and style work effectively to create or support the subject matter? (3) What knowledge of art can be gained by focusing on the reader or audience s response? (a) (b) (c) What counts as art? 1. Exercise: Ranking works of art p. 259 2. Exercise: Excerpt from a play p. 260 Can it be plausibly argued that art is brought into being only in the response of the audience, that a work is created anew each time it is viewed, heard or read? What is the role of the critic in judgment of the worth of art? Are any of the following sufficient indicators of the value of a work: its popularity, its commercial value in the market, its universality in its appeal beyond its cultural boundaries, and/or its longevity? How do you judge a work of art? 1. Class Jig Saw Activity # 1: The class will be divided into four a. What roles do the arts play in people s lives? Are these roles Page 2 of 7

IV. unique to the arts? (Can art change the way we interpret the world? Does involvement in the arts help the development of personal value systems? Can art express emotion? Does art enlarge what it is possible to think?) b. Are the arts a kind of knowledge, or are they a means of expressing knowledge? If the latter, what knowledge might they express? c. How important is form in art? C est joli la vie, mais cela n a pas de forme. L art a pour objet de lui en donner une [Life is very nice but it lacks form. It s the aim of art to give it some.] Jean Anouilh d. What is the origin and nature of a sense of beauty? Is this sense specific to the individual or to the culture, or is it universal? B. Beauty and the beholder 1. Reading: Alchin How Proust Can Change Your Life, Website 2. Exercise: Picasso p. 264 Are there objective standards for beauty? A. The Golden Ratio B. Beauty and harmony 1. Reading: Alchin What the Whole World Likes Best, Website 2. Reading: Alchin Is Beauty Just Biology? Website 3. What is the purpose of art? 4. Class Jig Saw Activity # 2: The class will be divided into four a. What is the proper function of the arts: to capture a perception of reality, to teach or uplift the mind, to express emotion, to create beauty, to bind a community together or to praise a spiritual power? Are there functions omitted here? Do the various arts have the same functions? b. To what extent and in what ways might the arts be regarded as a representation of reality? What kinds of art might be seen as realistic? c. Is originality essential in the arts? Is the relationship between the individual artist and tradition similar in all the arts, in all cultures Page 3 of 7

and across all times? d. Most arts have used technology, over many centuries (for example, musical instruments, pencils). Has the relationship between the arts and technology changed as a result of the possibilities of mechanical reproduction and digital manipulation? C. Art as teacher D. The significance of art within world cultures 1. Exercise: Art within cultures p. 267 E. Art as propaganda 1. Exercise: Recruiting poster p. 268 2. Reading: Musical Freedom and why dictators fear it Website 3. Class Jig Saw Activity # 5: The class will be divided into four a. What knowledge of art can be gained by focusing attention on the artist? Can or should artists intentions, and the creative process itself, be understood through observing artists or knowing something of their lives? Is the creative process as important as the final product, even though it cannot be observed directly? Are an artist s intentions relevant to assessing the work? Can a work of art contain or convey meaning of which the artist is oblivious? b. What knowledge of art can be gained by focusing attention solely on the work itself, in isolation from the artist or the social context? Can or should technical virtuosity in itself, a skilled mastery of the medium, be enough to distinguish a work of art? Are certain compositions, ways of structuring sounds or shapes, inherently more pleasing than others? Can a work be judged primarily by the harmony of form and content, the way in which structure and style work effectively to create or support the subject matter? c. What knowledge of art can be gained by focusing on the reader or audience s response? Can it be plausibly argued that art is brought into being only in the response of the audience, that a work is created anew each time it is viewed, heard or read? What is the role of the critic in judgment of the worth of art? Are any of the Page 4 of 7

following sufficient indicators of the value of a work: its popularity, its commercial value in the market, its universality in its appeal beyond its cultural boundaries, and/or its longevity? d. What knowledge of art can be gained by focusing attention on its social, cultural or historical context? To what extent do power relationships determine what art or whose art is valued? Is all art essentially a product of a particular place and time in terms of its subject matter and conventions of expression? Is art best seen as anthropological or historical documentation, bringing to life a remote society or era, but understood esoterically, only with independent knowledge of that remote life? Does art become obsolete? Is art understood more fully by emphasizing what all cultures have in common rather than by stressing what is unique to each? V. The representation of reality through paintings VI. Leonardo da Vinci and perspective VII. Technology and color 1. Exercise: Two paintings p. 270 VIII. The impact of science on art 1. Exercise: Phillip Garner p. 271 2. Reading: Pinker How much art can the brain take? Website 3. Reading: Computer Art, Website B. Art and truth 1. Reading: Wolpert Which side are you on? Website IX. The art critic 1. Exercise: Contextualists p. 273 X. Art and knowledge 1. Exercise: Keats p. 274 2. Class Jig Saw Activity # 3: The class will be divided into four a. Does familiarity with art itself provide knowledge and, if so, of what kind? Knowledge of facts? Of the creator of the art form? Of the conventions of the form or tradition? Of psychology or cultural Page 5 of 7

XI. history? Of oneself? b. Does art, or can art, tell the truth? If so, is artistic truth the same as truth in the context of the natural sciences, the human sciences, or history? How might the knowledge claims of art be verified or falsified? c. What do artists do to exercise critical control over the imagination, in Popper s phrase? Far from being engaged in opposing or incompatible activities, scientists and artists are both trying to extend our understanding of experience by the use of creative imagination subjected to critical control, and so both are using irrational as well as rational faculties. Both are explaining the unknown and trying to articulate the search and its findings. Both are seekers after truth who make indispensable use of intuition. Karl Popper d. Is explanation a goal of the arts? How do the arts compare in this regard with other areas of knowledge? Art as systems of knowledge 1. Exercise: Research a movement in poetry or music p. 275 B. Reading: Today s world Art as a Luxury? P. 276 1. Class Jig Saw Activity # 4: The class will be divided into four a. What is the value of learning an art form (for example, music or visual arts)? What is of value in each of the different art forms (dance, film, literature, music, theatre, visual arts, and so on)? Are any of the arts of more or less value than the others? Can what is of value in arts education be learned in other ways? How are value judgments in the arts justified? How is good art recognized or decided on? b. Does the artist carry any moral or ethical responsibility? Is it possible for an artwork to be immoral? Should art be judged on its ability to please or shock? c. What is the role of education in creating art, and in appreciating it? Is an art form legitimate if it can be enjoyed only by those trained Page 6 of 7

in its appreciation through having had relevant education or through having become familiar with it in their own cultural context? (Would your answer be the same if the question was about the legitimacy of, for example, quantum physics?) Is a critical assessment of an art form legitimate if it is made by someone with no relevant education or cultural familiarity? d. If art has power to change how people think, does this mean it should be controlled? Should art be politically subversive? Or should it serve the interests of the community, or the state, or the patron or funding organization? C. Reading: Susanne Langer p. 276-7 D. Writing Assignment: Essay Questions p. 277 Page 7 of 7