Answer:
Ans1.Discuss the difference between "Appropriation" and "Memeification" in the article from I Care If You Listen.
2.Read the article from Variety and explain how Erroll Garner's lawsuit was an important first step for black artists.
3.Read the New York Times article and discuss some of the ways that black music has been presented through non-black artists. Describe the example of a BLACK performer performing in "blackface". Describe Nat King Cole's experience in performing on TV.
4.Discuss the nature of the pushback that Elvis Pressley experienced by some white listeners. Give some examples of the appreciation he had with some black listeners.
5.Watch the Grapevie video and discuss five different viewpoints about Bruno Mars' cultural and musical appropriation.
Explanation:
Bruno Mars found himself caught in a heated debate about cultural appropriation over the weekend after an activist accused the "24K Magic" star of being a culture vulture profiting off of traditionally black music.
"Cultural appropriation," according to the Cambridge Dictionary, is "the act of taking or using things from a culture that is not your own, especially without showing that you understand or respect this culture."
Bruno Mars' mother is Filipina and his father is Puerto Rican and Jewish
But the Grammy-winning star is known for blending elements of funk, soul, R&B, regg
Explanation:
 
        
             
        
        
        
The deliberate evocation of primitive power through insistent rhythms and percussive sounds is known as Primitivism.
Primitivism has its adherents favored simple, clear cut tunes of folk characters that revolved around a central note and moved within a narrow compass.
        
                    
             
        
        
        
Answer:
That looks really cool I like it
 
        
             
        
        
        
1. performing a task unconsciously = <u>automatism</u>: it means that you don't think about what you are creating, you just create - like brainstorming 
2. Surrealists believed that artists needed to escape the oppressive control of = <u>reason</u>: surrealists created art which was not realistic, but something surreal, as their name would suggest
3. the first truly public museum = <u>the Louvre</u>, opened in 1793
4. Joan Miro used the poetic technique of = <u>Action painting;</u><u /> it means that the images are created spontaneously, smeared or splashed onto the canvas
5. Miro’s paintings seem to have no structure; they are = <u>a free flow of images;</u><u /> it means that the artist didn't have a specific idea in mind
6. Gertrude Stein had to flee Paris because she was = <u>Jewish</u>: she was a Jew living in Nazi-occupied France
7. Perfect modern artifact in Nazi eyes = <u>the steel helmet</u>: it was the first movie about war
8. Survived the London Blitz = <u>Saint Paul's Cathedral</u>: it managed to survive unharmed for the most part
9. The purpose of the art exhibition in Munich was to show = <u>"degenerate" or inferior art</u>: this art show is actually known as Degenerate art show
10. Art approved by Third Reich (Nazi Germany) included idealized images of = <u>labor, maternity, and family life;</u> these were the ideas that Nazi Germany wanted to promote
11. Miro’s Birth of the World was a precursor to = <u>free association;</u> it is similar to action painting Miro often used
12. Like Pollock, Willem de Kooning was know for his = <u>abstract expressionism</u>: it is a movement where art is obviously abstract and expressed as something surreal