certain themes different works of art, art & design homework help

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Im working on a comparative analysis paper on two works of art: Andy Warhol’s Thirteen Most Wanted Men and Ai Weiwei’s Study in Perspective. And I need 4 paragraphs (250 words each or more) to add to my comparative analysis paper.

3 of those paragraphs need to discuss a certain singular theme across both works of art and discuss how the theme specifically connects both works of art. (one paragraph on the theme of publicity, another on perspective and another one on authority)

Finally, i need one paragraph that connects all the themes together and discuss how they work together.

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Explanation & Answer

Okay here is the outline, too. I've attached both files here, but the main one is the same as above.

Assignment:
Im working on a comparative analysis paper on two works of art: Andy Warhol’s
Thirteen Most Wanted Men and Ai Weiwei’s Study in Perspective. And I need 4
paragraphs (250 words each or more) to add to my comparative analysis paper.
3 of those paragraphs need to discuss a certain singular theme across both works of art
and discuss how the theme specifically connects both works of art. (one paragraph on
the theme of publicity, another on perspective and another one on authority)
Finally, i need one paragraph that connects all the themes together and discuss how
they work together.
Response:
Publicity is one of the common themes between Warhol’s Thirteen Most Wanted
Men and Weiwei’s Study in Perspective. In this case, publicity is referring to the idea
that the primary subjects of the artwork are public images. In Warhol’s Thirteen Most
Wanted Men, Warhol uses wanted posters of criminals. In a sense, these are public
works because they are taken by the government and presented to the public for the
apprehension of criminals. In Weiwei’s Study in Perspective, Weiwei goes to different
public monuments. At the public monuments, he takes photographs of the monument
while he is directing his middle finger at the monument. While his middle finger is not
necessarily a public image, the public monuments certainly are intended for the public
and are icons. So publicity, then, or the idea that the art works depict public images,
are common themes between both Warhol and Weiwei’s pieces. By using imag...


Anonymous
Really useful study material!

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