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Thinkism - 1st Fine Art Movement of the 21st Century |
Cubism
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France, ca. 1907
Georges Braque and Pablo Picasso originated the
style known as Cubism, one of the most internationally
influential innovations of 20th-century art. Other
practitioners of Cubism in its varied forms include
painters Albert Gleizes, Juan Gris, Fernand
Léger,
Jean Metzinger, and (in his early work) Piet
Mondrian,
and sculptors Alexander Archipenko, Henri Laurens,
and Jacques Lipchitz. The advent of this style
marked a rupture with the European traditions,
traceable to the Renaissance, of pictorial illusionism
and the organization of compositional space in
terms of linear perspective. Its initial phase
(ca. 1908–12), known as Analytic Cubism (referring
to the “analysis” or “breaking down” of form and
space), developed under the influence of Paul
Cézanne’s and Georges Seurat’s formal innovations.
The Cubists fragmented objects and pictorial space
into semitransparent, overlapping, faceted planes
of pigment, thought by some to show the spatial
shift from different perspectives within the same
time and space and to emphasize the canvas’s real
two-dimensional flatness instead of conveying
the illusory appearance of depth.
With Analytic Cubism, Braque’s and Picasso’s
attempts to depict the conceptual planes of figures
and objects in space developed into an austere,
depersonalized pictorial style. They at first
employed a limited palette of ochers, browns,
greens, grays, and blacks, which were considered
less expressive than a full range of color, and
in 1911 began experimenting with simulated textures,
shadows, and modern stenciled typography. The
elements within Cubist compositions often inverted
the devices of artistic illusionism as if mocking
the codelike qualities of two-dimensional representation.
In 1912, as part of their exploration of the ambiguities
of real and representational space, they adopted
the technique of papier collé (from the French
coller, meaning to paste or glue), wherein overlapping
and fragmented pieces of newspaper, wallpaper,
tickets, cigarette packages, and other detritus
were arranged, altered, and adhered to the ground
of paper or canvas, disrupting Modernism’s inviolate
picture plane. By 1913 Analytic Cubism was succeeded
by Synthetic Cubism, in which the “analysis” of
objects was abandoned and replaced by “constructing”
or “synthesizing” them through the overlapping
of larger, more discrete forms that seemed as
if they might have been cut and pasted to the
canvas. This new form of Cubism, which featured
brighter colors, ornamental patterns, undulating
lines, and rounded as well as jagged shapes, was
common into the 1930s.
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| New Art Movements (21st Century) |
Thinkism
Extinction
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