Artwork

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How Too Much Art History Knowledge Prevents a Personal Connection

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Manage episode 308239579 series 2319822
Content provided by Cindy Ingram. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Cindy Ingram or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Are you really engaged with the artwork when you walk into an art museum? Or are you too busy thinking about what you know about the art and artist? Perhaps you’ve even noticed other people reciting facts and background on a piece of art to whomever they’ve brought along. When I was younger, I was that person. I’d be all about the artist’s life, the colors and brush strokes used, the behind-the-scenes story I knew, and on and on.

We art teachers know a lot of stuff. We’ve taken art history classes and engage students in all sorts of ways. So when we go into a museum, we can fall into this way of engaging quite easily and automatically. In this episode, I talk about one of the most meaningful things for me when it comes to works of art, the emotional connection, and how knowing too much history can get in the way of it.

3:15​ -Why I decided to study art education instead of art history

8:39 - An excerpt from my essay about a Picasso painting that knocked me off my feet

11:03 - The magic that happened when I looked at that Picasso art again 10 years later

15:25 - The lesson I learned from a squirrel that held my curiosity for an hour

19:22 - Choosing which way you want to engage with artwork

Transcript at https://artclasscurator.com/88-art-history-knowledge/

  continue reading

135 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 308239579 series 2319822
Content provided by Cindy Ingram. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Cindy Ingram or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Are you really engaged with the artwork when you walk into an art museum? Or are you too busy thinking about what you know about the art and artist? Perhaps you’ve even noticed other people reciting facts and background on a piece of art to whomever they’ve brought along. When I was younger, I was that person. I’d be all about the artist’s life, the colors and brush strokes used, the behind-the-scenes story I knew, and on and on.

We art teachers know a lot of stuff. We’ve taken art history classes and engage students in all sorts of ways. So when we go into a museum, we can fall into this way of engaging quite easily and automatically. In this episode, I talk about one of the most meaningful things for me when it comes to works of art, the emotional connection, and how knowing too much history can get in the way of it.

3:15​ -Why I decided to study art education instead of art history

8:39 - An excerpt from my essay about a Picasso painting that knocked me off my feet

11:03 - The magic that happened when I looked at that Picasso art again 10 years later

15:25 - The lesson I learned from a squirrel that held my curiosity for an hour

19:22 - Choosing which way you want to engage with artwork

Transcript at https://artclasscurator.com/88-art-history-knowledge/

  continue reading

135 episodes

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