Psychedelic art Essays

  • Super Psychedelic Art In The 1960s

    1031 Words  | 3 Pages

    Super Psychedelic 60s The 1960’s were a time that completely changed a nation and its ways of thinking and producing. There were many types of art dotting the United States, but the most popular included psychedelic art. Psychedelic art is a famous type of drug-influenced, breathtakingly gorgeous style of art that appeared mainly on song album covers and posters. Psychedelic art was extremely popular because of its many talented producers, its high drug involvement, and the influences that other

  • Wes Wilson Psychedelic Art

    905 Words  | 2 Pages

    Tripping Over Hazy Art From trippy patterns to wildly vibrant typography, the psychedelic art style was absolutely endless. The unique art movement was at its best from 1966 to 1972. Although there were many memorable artists in this time, Wes Wilson was known for being the “father of the 60’s rock concert posters.” Psychedelic art was just about everybody’s obsession in the 1960’s because of its unorthodox style and artists that were a part of it. Throughout the 1960’s there were many fads and

  • Mark Rothko's Psychedelic Art

    591 Words  | 2 Pages

    I hold a great appreciation for the arts. In high school, I enrolled in art classes each year, focusing the majority of my studies on Renaissance, Impressionistic, and Contemporary art. Although I have had previous education in the arts, I, like most Americans, believed 1960’s art was defined by the pop-art of Andy Warhol and the psychedelic era. Contrary to my original beliefs, the 1940’s, 50’s, and 60’s was more explicitly defined, in the art world, by New York City’s abstract expressionism. Artists

  • rave culture

    1106 Words  | 3 Pages

    the experience. Author Daniel Martin defines a rave as “a long period of constant energetic and stylistic dancing exhibited by a large group of people in a hot, crowded facility providing continuous loud House music and an accompanying strobe lit psychedelic light show” . Since the beginning of this culture there has been much controversy on the legality of what goes on in the scene. Through the history, music, people, spirituality we are introduced to one of the newest things affecting pop culture

  • Typographic Style In Pop Culture

    1580 Words  | 4 Pages

    anti-establishment values, rock and roll and psychedelic drugs; often referred to as psychedelic posters. This movement had many characteristics from art nouveau, pop art and op-art movement. This is evident in the use of organic flowing lines and curves, color and the use of pop culture images and manipulation to show the conceptual image. The works of Armin Hofmann, poster

  • Erika Dyck Psychedelic Psychiatry: LSD on the Canadian Prairies

    2681 Words  | 6 Pages

    Erika Dyck Psychedelic Psychiatry: LSD on the Canadian Prairies (Winnipeg: The University of Manitoba Press, 2012). Erika Dyck provides the reader and interesting view of early historical psychological research on LSD, lysergic acid diethyl-amide. This book is composed of Dyck’s  scientific interpretation and dissection of earlier psychedelic psychiatry research by Humphry Osmond, and Abraham Hoffer. A Swiss biochemist named Albert Hofmann dissolved a minimal amount of      d-lysergic acid diethyl-amide

  • natural born killers

    510 Words  | 2 Pages

    weird actors and funky camera movements. It’s unforgettable. A trip into the mind of two serial killers. The film is real good, but I think it might be even better if you were drunk. You might be a little used to everyone acting weird and all the psychedelic colors. But since I am not old enough to do that yet, I’ll just review as how I saw it. Mallory (Juliette Lewis) has a horrible life. Her brother is a little jerk, her father molests her, and her mother does nothing about it. It’s horrible. But

  • Sensation Seeking Score

    734 Words  | 2 Pages

    Sensation Seeking Score: A Test Needing Revision Zuckerman defines sensation seeking as a personality trait characterized by the need for various and complex sensations and experiences- this includes taking physical and social risks for the experience (1994). The sensation seeking scale was used on individuals to predict differential response to sensory deprivation (Zuckerman, 1979), it has now changed to include four subscales like: boredom susceptibility, disinhibition, experience seeking, thrill

  • Zinberg Social Control

    712 Words  | 2 Pages

    procuring the drug, administration of the drug, selecting the physical and social settings for use, activities undertaken The frequently used maxim for psychedelics, “use in a good place at a good time with good people,” is an example of this. Two rituals that are in harmony with the maxim are the selection of a pleasant rural setting for psychedelic use and the timing of use to avoid driving while ‘tripping.’ Informal sanctions, which are followed by both small and large groups of users, indicate

  • Heavy Metal Music

    1407 Words  | 3 Pages

    Heavy Metal Heavy metal from the 1960’s to the 1980’s was a different and hard time for heavy metal bands. Heavy Metal is a genre of rock n’ roll that was created in the late sixties and late seventies. With influences from blues-rock and psychedelic rock mostly blues. With there twelve bar blues and extended guitar solos help create many guitar styles. Heavy Metal is recognized by its loud distorted guitars, emphatic rhythms, dense bass and drum sound, and vigorous vocals. Metal subgenres either

  • The Role Of Drug Culture In The 1960s

    1175 Words  | 3 Pages

    While drugs are seen as a divisive issue today, in the 1960s they were much more accepted and widely available. It is during this time period that drugs that are highly illegal now were available and used daily in many cultures around the world. Many of these drugs, such as cocaine, were seen as a “cure-all” and supposedly helped with a variety of ailments. These are the reasons I find drug culture in the 1960s particularly interesting. I also think it is interesting how drugs such as acid and marijuana

  • Persuasive Essay On Why Marijuana Should Be Illegal

    1104 Words  | 3 Pages

    Marijuana is the 3rd most commonly abused substance in the world behind alcohol and tobacco, and the most commonly used illegal drug in the United States and should be illegal. Abuse refers to the misuse, excessive use, or recurrent use of marijuana. Marijuana is a hallucinogen, which means it distorts the way the brain sees the world. Think about what the world would be like if everyone had a distorted view of everything. When marijuana is smoked, the effects are felt within minutes. Most of the

  • The First Time I Touched a Girl

    782 Words  | 2 Pages

    speaking. Her face seemed to be in a permanent scowl, and like most girls, she looked at me with pure hatred. But as scary as Maria was, she was nothing compared to the drug film. Even the opening credits made me nervous. The screen was filled with psychedelic colors that bubbled and whirled into each other, as if a rainbow were being cooked in a lab until it suffered aneurisms. Then, the title of the film, LSD: Trip or Trap? appeared luridly across the screen in bold, slanted letters. Maybe it was the

  • Aldous Huxley's View On Government Essay

    702 Words  | 2 Pages

    Examining Aldous Huxley’s View on Government Control “Science and technology provide the means for controlling the lives of citizens” (Brave). This quote describes a major and ever-growing problem in the basic, daily lives of society now, and has been since the mid-twentieth century. With technology, medicine, and general knowledge evolving so rapidly it is hard to find a constant code by which governments can carry out their purpose of regulating societies. In some cases, organization is taken

  • Summary Of William Lee's Junky

    871 Words  | 2 Pages

    Junky is a novel about the author and his history of using drugs and the encounters he had with friends he made while scoring. William Lee also known as Bill, who was born in 1914 into a wealthy family in a Midwest city. The story starts out when Bill was a young child and he describes how he was constantly scared, he has had hallucinations. He says how they made him afraid to go to bed because of the horrid dreams he would have, he was constantly worried that when he woke up they would be reality

  • Argumentative Essay On Hallucinogens

    802 Words  | 2 Pages

    Hallucinogens should be considered for public use as a medical form to treat mental disorders such as bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, compulsive disorder and dementia. Studies prove hallucinogens have beneficial use, but no treatment has been established, then why should they be placed in such low regard, hallucinogen’s can lend a hand in providing aid for perpetual disorders. The effects of hallucinogen’s can encourage social behavior, while culture dependence on pharmaceutical drugs discredit

  • Lysergic Acid Diethylamide

    1606 Words  | 4 Pages

    catalytic band in rock and roll history. Although they came together in the shadow of the Beatles, another band of that era was Jefferson Airplane. Jefferson Airplane was deemed the first of the San Francisco psychedelic rock groups. Jefferson Airplane was always considered to be a psychedelic rock group, but it was not until later in their existence that the Beatles fell into this category as well. Both groups earned this title for their creative style of rock as well as for their experimentation

  • Psychedelic Musicians in Rock and Roll

    2740 Words  | 6 Pages

    Psychedelic Musicians in Rock and Roll In 1967 the Beatles were in Abbey Road Studios putting the finishing touches on their album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. At one point Paul McCartney wandered down the corridor and heard what was then a new young band called Pink Floyd working on their hypnotic debut, The Piper at the Gates of Dawn. He listened for a moment, then came rushing back. "Hey guys," he reputedly said, "There's a new band in there and they're gonna steal our thunder." With

  • Nondiegetic Music Of The Doors In The Scene Waiting In Saigon

    1343 Words  | 3 Pages

    be diegetic until Mr. Coppola brings in The Doors song “The End”. Which brings the sounds of the helicopter into the music. He uses the helicopter as a set up for the music ensemble that is forth coming. As the electric guitar starts to play a psychedelic tune with the sounds of the synthesized helicopter, you feel like you’re in a somewhat delusional state of mind. As if your mind is being carried away by the music to a dreamlike place. The dirt in the scene is doing some mysterious dance to the

  • Psychedelic Informative Speech

    1008 Words  | 3 Pages

    been a connection with drugs and music. In the past, most music was very big with drugs, especially psychedelic drugs. Many people think that this can help musicians with their creativity. Well, as you will find in this speech, you will see what the drugs do to the victims, how you know that these musicians are taking drugs , and the history about musicians in the 50’s to present day. Psychedelic drugs were really popular with musicians and artists and it had mostly affected music. It had mostly