Clément Janequin Essays

  • The Evolution of Love in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth-Centuries

    3480 Words  | 7 Pages

    Cenegage Learning, 2010. Sermisy, Claudin de. “Je n’ay point plus d’affection.” In Antology of Renaissance Music, ed. Allan W. Atlas. New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1998. Sermisy, Claudin de. Les cris de Paris chansons de Janequin et Sermisy. Ensemble Cleément Janequin. ocm36863959. 1981. Compact Disc.

  • The Guggenheim Museum

    1750 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Guggenheim Museum I first visited the Guggenheim Museum two weeks ago with Claus, my friend from Germany. We had the MOMA in mind but I guess talking, talking we must have passed it by. Half an hour from the MOMA we found ourselves in front of the Guggenheim, the astonishing white building that was Frank Lloyd Wright's last project. Why not? We said to ourselves. And so we walked right in. According to the pamphlet: "The Guggenheim Museum is an embodiment of Wright's attempts to render

  • The White Feather Campaign

    838 Words  | 2 Pages

    The White Feather Campaign 1. The message of the poster, source A, is for families to encourage the man to sign up for the army and go off to war to fight for the country. They did this because compared to the German army at the beginning of the war, it was very small. The artist conveys the message of two women who are both from different classes waving off their husbands and sons who are going off to war. They are comforting each other implying that all women should come together and

  • Helen Frankenthaler: Works On Paper

    1546 Words  | 4 Pages

    Helen Frankenthaler was an American born painter, sculptor and printmaker. Frankenthaler, with two fellow artists, led the way into the development of Color Field painting, a component of Abstract Expressionism. Frankenthaler is recognized as one of the greatest artists of the twentieth century as a result of her contribution of great talent and the ability to deliver beautiful and innovative works on canvas and paper. "Frankenthaler's radiant canvases are known and admired all over the world, her

  • The WWII Proposal for the Provision of a Welfare State

    1677 Words  | 4 Pages

    The WWII Proposal for the Provision of a Welfare State The proposals made during the Second World War for the provision of a Welfare State were made in order to eliminate poverty from the country. Various proposals were made that aimed to achieve this. One proposal, which was the main aim of the "Beveridge Report" was to abolish Want by providing social insurance for all: this meant providing various benefits and making people pay contributions, both depending on the class of the individual

  • Greenberg's Contribution To The Flatness Of Modernism

    1294 Words  | 3 Pages

    Greenberg indicated that Modernists intentionally drew attention to the physical flatness of the canvas, to express how you should embrace the literal flatness, to embrace two-dimensionality. We will be exploring hoe Greenberg states the flatness of Modernism through-out this essay, this will include many factors that are included in the arts such as the canvas, paint and the way in which it is applied as well as the colour. We will firstly define Greenberg’s essay of what Modernism is and what

  • Artwork is Not Art Because of Theory

    3376 Words  | 7 Pages

    Whether it be writers, painters, sculptors, musicians, or photographers, artists all over the world have striven to show people their views of the world, of people, and even of the universe itself. Throughout history the creative urge of man to present to fellow men a different perspective or representation of life-or even the afterlife-has surfaced time and time again in the form of artwork. Sometimes it comes through genius and complexity, full of meaning and symbolism. Others, it is simple and

  • Analysis of Still Life with Apples and Oranges by Paul Cezanne

    2020 Words  | 5 Pages

    Still-Life with Apples and Oranges (c.1899) within the art movement of Impressionism. The analysis will be based upon the aesthetic and ideological underpinnings of the avant-garde. This will be done with reference to the writings of Charles Harrison and Clement Greenberg. Firstly, Modernism and the avant-garde will be discussed as defined by Harrison and Greenberg as the introduction to the discussion of the chosen artwork of Cezanné, followed by the analysis of the artwork with reference to the writings

  • The Avant-Garde Die First

    2304 Words  | 5 Pages

    vanguard, became firmly established” (Arnason 24). These artists ... ... middle of paper ... ...on: Princeton University Press, 1974. Greenberg, Clement. “Avant Garde Attitudes.” Clement Greenberg. Ed. Terry Fenton. 4 Dec 2004. http://www.sharecom.ca/greenberg/avantgarde.html. Greenberg, Clement. “Modern and Postmodern.” Clement Greenberg. Ed. Terry Fenton. 4 Dec 2004. <http://www.sharecom.ca/greenberg/postmodernism.html>. Kimball, Roger. Experiments Against Reality. Chicago:

  • Which Comes First: The Art or the Artist?

    1260 Words  | 3 Pages

    Which Comes First: The Art or the Artist? A Historical Perspective The approach of the year 2000 seems a good time to think about the way the role of art and the artist has changed through history, and how modern art is interpreted by a modern audience. Writing about modern art gives me the creeps. In other types of art, clear facts can be asserted with security, public reactions are clearly documented, skills can be appreciated, and art is clearly recognized as such. Modern art defys all

  • Ramsay Macdonald's Betrayal of His Party in 1931

    562 Words  | 2 Pages

    Ramsay Macdonald's Betrayal of His Party in 1931 In 1931, Ramsay Macdonald resigned from his position as leader of the Labour Party and Prime Minster of Britain, to take up a position a few days later as the leader of the new National Government set up to run the country, and thus becoming the countries leader again. Many have claimed that he betrayed the Labour Party by leaving them so he could join another party in a better position; in other words he was motivated by personal ambition

  • The Beveridge Report: Fabian Society

    1266 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Beveridge report Fabian Society formed in 1884, lead by the Sidney and Beatrice Webb who had strong views on the moral values of social (or socialist) provision and had thinking based on poor laws and the relief of distress, were the first to produce a report based on Majority and Minority of welfare. This report failed as all the members, the right-wing critics of state welfare, could not agree about the fact that the state should be the provider for welfare services. The Beveridge Report is

  • Impact of the Beveridge Report in Shaping the 1945 UK Welfare State.

    1759 Words  | 4 Pages

    election of 1945. All main political parties displayed interest to implement its proposals and this was used to their advantage in their campaigns, none more so than labours "Let Us Face the Future" campaign which subsequently lead to the election of Clement Atlee as Prime Minister in July 1945. Hill states that the laws passed immediately following the end of the war under Attlee administration were clearly and explicitly inspired by the Beveridge report. Most notably through the Family Allowances Act

  • Clement Greenberg; Who he was and his theories

    556 Words  | 2 Pages

    Clement Greenberg was born on January 16, 1909 in Bronx, New York. His parents were from the Lithuanian Jewish cultural enclave in north-eastern Poland. Greenberg was the oldest of three sons. At the age of five Greenberg and his family moved to Norfolk, Virginia but moved back to Brooklyn when he was eleven. Greenberg graduated High School at the Marquand School and went on to Syracuse University, where he received his Bachelor of Arts degree in languages and literature in the year 1930. During

  • Action Painting

    963 Words  | 2 Pages

    Action Painting Changing concerns in the field of theory and practice reflected developments in the social and economic structures after the horrible events of World War II. The complex relationship between the loss of faith in the Enlightenment’s promise that rationality would produce increased freedom and changes in cultural value systems caused by revolutionary developments in science and technology brought into focus natural contradictions in modern thinking. Abstract Expressionists of

  • Essay #2

    531 Words  | 2 Pages

    Albert Schweitzer once said, “I don’t know what your destiny will be, but one thing I do know: the only ones among you who will be really happy are those who have sought and found how to serve.” This quote applies to James Dowling’s life when it speaks of the happiness that can be found in serving. Instead of taking the path of the bragging war hero that seeks glory for his ego, Dowling took the path of the humble servant, who, although great, serves others. For example, even though he was a celebrated

  • Animals and Nature in the Work of Margaret Wise Brown

    578 Words  | 2 Pages

    Animals and Nature in the Work of Margaret Wise Brown Read almost any book by Margaret Wise Brown, and you will start to see some overlapping trends. Readers know when they are reading a work by this famous author without seeing the cover or title page because her works have so many similarities. The use of multiple animals and nature frequently appear in her books and serve as common ideas in literature by Margaret Wise Brown. Many of Margaret Wise Brown’s most famous books have animals

  • Modern Art of Glass Bottles

    1505 Words  | 4 Pages

    Did you hear about the two little boys who found themselves in a modern art gallery by mistake? "Quick," said one, "Run! Before they say we did it!" Although this may be a hilarious slap your knee joke, I believe this depicts how society feels about modern art. As a popular saying goes “’Modern art’ is produced by incompetents, sold by charlatans, and bought by ignoramuses!” Why such the skepticism towards current art? Why do art historians and renowned scholars set new art aside in favor

  • Why the Labour Party Won the Election in 1945

    645 Words  | 2 Pages

    Why the Labour Party Won the Election in 1945 The Labour Party won the general election in 1945, with Clement Attlee returning as Prime Minister. The state of play was that Labour has won 314 seats, the Conservatives 294. Socialism was not widely recognised until 1945. The majority of people were almost frightened by it. This was because Russia was a socialist state, promoting communism. When Russia proved to be a reliable alley during the war, socialism became less strange and was more

  • Adult Learner Retention

    2133 Words  | 5 Pages

    Adult Learner Retention Adult learner retention continues to hold the attention of adult educators in every type of program. Although the reasons students leave and the strategies for keeping them may differ from adult basic education (ABE) to higher education, the goal of retention is the same: to keep learners in programs until they achieve their goals (Tracy-Mumford et al. 1994). In any program, adults are largely voluntary participants, but the student role is just one of many roles and responsibilities