Essay Topic Hub

Artist
Essays

1,829+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

1,829 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

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.

1,829 papers
Sort by:
Research Paper Doctorate
Vincent van Gogh: life and artistic legacy
Van Gogh was born in the Netherlands to a preacher and his early life had inauspicious surroundings. He was well into maturity when he realized his true vocation was painting, and though he developed his talent in…
Paper Undergraduate
Character animation principles and techniques
¶ … 3D Animation Model: Parkour Performance
Paper Undergraduate
Day of the Locust
Nathanial West's novel The Day of the Locust is a dark story about Hollywood and its corrupting influences. Tod Hackett, the protagonist is a set designer recruited out of Yale to work for a West Coast film studio.
Research Paper Doctorate
Zwelethu Mthethwa: South African Photography and Art
Zwelethu Mithethwa says, "I chose color because it provides a greater emotional range. My aim is to show the pride of the people I photograph" (National pp). Born in 1960 in Durban, Kwa-Zulu Natal, Mithethwa holds…
Research Paper Doctorate
Philosophy of William Wordsworth
In "Preface to Lyrical Ballads," William Wordsworth explores what he believes to be the search for truth in art. His claim rests on the assertion that "all good poetry is the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings"…
Research Paper Doctorate
Art history overview and key movements
The clouds gleamed gloriously, as if they were smiling to greet newcomers to heaven Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo Buonarroti. The two artists sat rather impatiently in the heavenly waiting room, and they refused to…
Research Paper Doctorate
Colorization Technique and Film
¶ … filmmakers have quite a few options. They may choose to place a character in a realistic spaceship; they may choose to shoot their film from dynamic angles which push the limits of filmmaking; they may choose to…
Research Paper Doctorate
Of Mice and Men
Loneliness and Isolation in Steinbeck's Of Mice And Men
Research Paper Doctorate
Alberto Williams and his compositional legacy
Generally speaking, the term nationalism is used to describe a sense of identification which individuals within a society or culture share regarding their state of residence. Most countries are characterized by this…
Paper Doctorate
Alfred Hitchcock and Edgar Allan Poe
This paper discusses and compares the work of Alfred Hitchcock with the work of Edgar Allen Poe and how Poe has influenced what some may say the greatest director/film maker of all time. It discusses how Poe and Hitchcock share similar fears and obsessions and how the effectively translated them to famous work.