Art History +

Bauhaus Typography Examples (1919–1933): A Visual Guide to Grids, Lowercase, and the “Universal” Alphabet
A research-backed, image-led primer to Bauhaus typography: how asymmetric grids, pragmatic grotesks, and Herbert Bayer’s lowercase “Universal” alphabet reshaped posters, books, magazines, and signage between 1919 and 1933—plus clear case studies and a student checklist for reading layouts. Leia mais...
Surrealism Timeline for Students: Techniques & Key Works
A clear, classroom‑ready Surrealism study guide: a student‑friendly timeline (1917–1970s), core techniques (automatism, photograms, frottage/grattage, exquisite corpse), five key works to analyze, and a practical checklist for reading any Surrealist image. Leia mais...
Tenebrism vs. Chiaroscuro: Baroque Light Explained (with Examples from Caravaggio to Rembrandt)
What’s the real difference between tenebrism and chiaroscuro? This classroom‑friendly guide defines both, maps a short timeline from Renaissance modeling to Baroque drama, and shows you how to spot each in seconds—using Caravaggio, Artemisia, La Tour, Ribera, and Rembrandt as clear, museum‑grade examples. Leia mais...
Analytical vs. Synthetic Cubism: A Timeline with Examples (1907–1919)
Between 1907 and the First World War, Picasso and Braque rebuilt how pictures work. This clear primer maps a Cubism timeline (1907–1919), shows how to spot Analytical vs. Synthetic features at a glance, and offers classroom‑ready examples from Picasso, Braque, and Juan Gris. Leia mais...
How the Egyptian Canon of Proportions Worked: The 18‑Square Grid (and its Amarna & Late‑Period tweaks)
A clear, research‑backed explainer of the Egyptian canon of proportions: how the 18‑square grid standardized standing and seated figures, how red guidelines and black corrections worked in workshops, and how Amarna (~20 squares) and the Late Period (21 squares) tweaked the system—plus case studies and a student exercise. Leia mais...
Neoclassicism (c. 1750–1830): Enlightenment Ideals in Marble & Paint — Key Ideas, Timeline for Students, and How to Spot It
What is Neoclassicism? A clear, student‑friendly guide to its Enlightenment roots, style traits, key artists (David, Canova, Ingres), classic case studies, and a compact timeline—plus smart connections to modern design. Leia mais...
Renaissance Perspective (1400–1600): How Artists Invented Depth — A Student’s Guide with Clear Examples
A clear, student‑friendly explainer of Renaissance perspective: what it is, why it appeared in Florence around 1415, and how artists from Masaccio to Raphael used vanishing points, horizon lines, and orthogonals to turn flat walls into measured space. Walk through Brunelleschi’s experiment, Alberti’s On Painting, Piero della Francesca’s math, Uccello’s stage‑set battles, Leonardo’s aerial perspective, and Raphael’s grand architecture—plus a mini‑glossary, quick checklists, and where to see each work. Leia mais...
Swiss Style (International Typographic Style), 1940s–1960s: The Mid-Century Typographic Revolution (with Bauhaus Typography Examples)
A student-friendly guide to the International Typographic Style—why Swiss grids, sans-serifs, and objective photography reshaped posters, brands, and today’s UI. With a Bauhaus typography mini-section, classic case studies, and a compare-and-contrast sidebar that links to De Stijl and Constructivism. Leia mais...
Romanticism (c. 1780–1850): The Art Movement of Emotion, Imagination, and the Sublime
Romanticism in art turned from rules to feelings. Across Europe c. 1780–1850, painters pushed imagination, dramatic light, and vast landscapes to convey the sublime—those awe‑tinged experiences that overwhelm reason. This guide explains Romanticism in art movement terms, from signature landscape painting to key artists, ideas, and how it differs from Neoclassicism. Leia mais...
Post‑Internet vs Net Art: Timeline, Examples & Guide
Confused about post‑internet art vs net art? This museum‑grade guide gives you crisp definitions, a student‑friendly timeline (1991–2025), and key works you can actually view online—plus a quick decision tree to tell them apart in the wild. Leia mais...
Fauvism (1904–1908): How Color Became Structure in Early Modern Art
A fast, museum‑grade guide to Fauvism: how Matisse, Derain, and Vlaminck turned pure, high‑key color into structure—from Collioure 1905 to the Salon d’Automne shock and beyond. Leia mais...
Street Art vs. Graffiti: History, Techniques, and 20 Key Works (1967–Today)
A clear, student-friendly guide to street art vs. graffiti: crisp definitions, a 1967–today timeline (from Cornbread and TAKI 183 to museum surveys), technique primers (stencils, wheatpaste, murals), 12 artists with 20 key works, the 5Pointz VARA case, conservation basics, hotspots to visit, and FAQs—plus smart links to related movements shaping urban visuals. Leia mais...