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Artist
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The study of artists sits at the center of art history, studio art, literature, and cultural studies courses. Students are asked to examine not only what artists make but how biography, historical context, and personal vision shape creative output. Works and figures such as Francis Bacon, Franz Marc, Otto Dix, Joan Miró, Alice Neel, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Albrecht Dürer, and Sori Yanagi offer rich material for academic inquiry because each represents a distinct movement, method, or cultural moment. Literary treatments of artistic identity—such as Henry James's The Art of Fiction and James Joyce's A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man—extend the conversation into questions about creative consciousness and narrative form, making the artist a subject relevant well beyond visual art departments.

Papers on this topic tend to follow several distinct approaches. Biographical and monographic essays trace an artist's life and the evolution of their practice, as seen in work on Otto Dix and Alice Neel. Formal analysis papers focus on specific works—Dürer's Knight, Death and the Devil or Franz Marc's animal paintings—examining color, composition, and technique. Other essays take broader cultural angles, addressing postmodern artists, fashion appropriation, or the social role of art-making in contemporary society.

A strong essay on an artist grounds its argument in close attention to specific works rather than general praise or biography alone. Pairing visual or textual evidence with historical or theoretical context gives a thesis real weight. The most common pitfall is treating an artist's life as the sole explanation for their work; always connect biographical detail to the formal or conceptual choices visible in the art itself.

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Paper Masters
What Is Post Modernism?
Jean-Francois Lyotard's "What is Post Modernism?" begins like a Homeric, epic poem -- in medias res. The piece commences with descriptions of the times in which Lyotard lives, works, and the times on which he reflects…
Paper Doctorate
An analysis of an author's body of work
This paper discusses a children's literary author. Patricia Giff left the teaching profession after twenty years in order to pursue writing as a career. She was successful in her transition. Besides a very successful series of children's books, Giff is the author of several more mature novels, two of which have been awarded the Newbury Award for excellence.
Paper Masters
Style of Writing and Use
This paper analyzes the style and language usage of Elizabeth Barrett Browning. It looks at two poems in particular, "The Cry of the Children" and "How Do I Love Thee" to illustrate how Elizabeth's use of repetition conveys both a sense of suspense and a sense of unity and importance in what is being stated in each verse.
Paper Masters
Artemisia Gentileschi: Life, Trauma, and Baroque Art
In 1944, with the terrible storm clouds of World War II scorching the earth, scholar Anna Banti turned her mind to a very different subject, reaching back over the centuries to pen a biography of the Baroque painter…
Paper Masters
Interview a Person Who Has Mentally Ill
George Tirebiter 35 Oct 17, 1975 - Roman Catholic M. White
Research Paper Masters
Painting in Painting and Sculpture Gallery I In MOMA in New York
This paper discusses a painting from Pablo Picasso that is now seen in the New York City Museum of Modern Art. It is a very large painting which shows five female prostitutes from Paris, France. None of the women is very pretty and there is an attitude of danger in the piece. This reflects the nature of prostitution and the potential for disease.
Essay Undergraduate
Elvis Presley: life, music, and cultural impact
This paper is a serious psychological study of Elvis Presley and his motivations through a series of different psychological paradigms. Erik Erikson's Stages of Development; Kohlberg's Moral Stages of Development;Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs, and McClelland's Theory of Motivation are all used to answer the question as to why the singer pursed such a self-destructive path.
Research Paper Doctorate
Stravinsky Fountain Is Near the George Pompidou
¶ … Stravinsky fountain is near the George Pompidou Centre, called the most Avante Garde building in the world. The Pompidou Centre is named after Georges Pompidou, a French president who hoped that Paris would have a…
Paper Undergraduate
Dadaism in Modern Society
This work discusses Dadaism definition and history with pictorial examples and then looks for its expression in the modern world in both "high art" and popular culture.
Paper Undergraduate
Turning a Narrative Into a Film
The story significantly depicts not only the preoccupation of the 17th hundred London issues and a trend brought by the progressive industrialization of time, but speaks so much relevance in our modern time as well. The epigraph which sums up the very essence of the story explains the dynamic of a human being too busy to mingle with the crowd for fear of facing the haunting memory of a disturbed self, the lonely person, the conscience and the unsettling disturbances deep within. The epigraph "Such a great misfortune, not to be able to be alone" (Soya 147) is rich in context within the story, but also a rich source of reflection of a human and societal struggle.