Art, asked by rajwishu123, 4 months ago

write essay on "Similarities in the Art and Culture of my state/UT with the paired

state/ UT " upto 350 words​

Answers

Answered by ItzSmartavinay
6

Answer:

Art and culture define humanity as a whole. For as long as societies

have created Art, its Cultures have been shaped and enchanted by it. Art

can be expressed many ways. Art can be verbal and non-verbal, written,

acted, painted and emotionally expressed. Art is an idea such as love and

freedom of expression. It is as if every part of our being human is

dictated by our Artistic creativity. Art makes generation what they are and

explicitly defines their Culture. Americans have long had Art as part of

their short history. From the 16th century Art paintings with European

ancestry to the 21st century Art of modern ideology. It is a cultural

phenomenon that makes us enjoy every gratifying moment on earth. Culture is

also crucial to our development. It defines us as who we are and what we

believe. Art and Culture define every generation.

What were the role of women and their influence on the various arts?

Women play an important part in the development of Art in America. In

the 16th and 17th century women did not have the access to the training

that was needed to become a professional artist. Most women artist during

this time were family members of successful male artists. In the 19th

century, women started to become a force on the American art scene. The

started winning prestigious commissions and awards. Women also participated

in notable exhibitions, they taught in art schools and wrote as art

critics. During the 20th century, women had major roles in artistic

movements like abstraction, expressionism, and minimalism. Even though

women had this major part in these movements, they were often overshadowed

by the male artists. In the 1970's, The Feminist Art Movement embraced

different methods to transform the status quo in the art world. They

challenged the unequal representation of women and fought for the rights of

women to reflect on female experience within art. There is a National

Museum of Women in the Arts in Washington, DC that recognizes the

achievements of female artists throughout history. The museum shows many

diverse exhibitions in addition to about 4,500 pieces from over 1,000

female artists. ("20th Century-National Museum of Women In The

Arts", 2014)

What were the role of ethnic minorities and their influence on the

various arts?

It wasn't until the twentieth century that minorities began to get

recognized for their pieces. Between periods of the 17th century and the

early 19th century, African American art took a form of small drums,

quilts, wrought-iron figures and ceramic vessels. In the 1920's and 1930's,

America experienced the Harlem Renaissance. This was the first major public

recognition of African-American culture. African-American music,

literature, and art gained wide notice throughout the nation. Jazz, swing,

and blues entered the American popular music. Famous artist such as William

H. Johnson and Palmer Hayden created beautiful and unique pieces of artwork

that featured African Americans. In the 1960's, black American artists

began to organize protests against mainstream museums that ignored black

art. They began to form their own collectives, museums, and they

independently organized shows. Black artist began to develop multiple

strategies for envisioning blackness and signifying black life, experience,

and identity in modern America.

In the late 1960's and 1970's, the protest within the black and

feminist art that embodied them had high expectations within other ethnic

groups including, Native American and Chicano artists. They were also

seeking cultural validation in modern American. Many of these artist took

modern art styles and subjects to challenge age-old racist representation

of American Indians. These artist tried to develop diverse modern

strategies that transformed traditional Indian painting that eliminated the

ethnic and artistic stereotypes.

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