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Cubism “Everything in nature takes its form from the sphere, the cone, and the cylinder.”-Cezanne.

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Presentation on theme: "Cubism “Everything in nature takes its form from the sphere, the cone, and the cylinder.”-Cezanne."— Presentation transcript:

1 cubism “Everything in nature takes its form from the sphere, the cone, and the cylinder.”-Cezanne

2 ”Cezanne cracked the glass, but Picasso shattered it”
science & art Science was rapidly changing Old notions of matter, time, and space are shattered“”” ”Cezanne cracked the glass, but Picasso shattered it”

3 First abstract art style Used simple shapes Ignored color in beginning
What is Cubism? First abstract art style Used simple shapes Ignored color in beginning Lacks elements of light, atmosphere, and space Overlapping Fragments Reality of objects in space, reality of flat painted surface

4 synthetic Disregard physical laws no traditional perspective
Value not used to convey depth jagged planes of color more than one location in space. Two major phases: analytical synthetic

5 How did Cubism get its name?
Cubism got its name from remarks from the painter Henri Matisse and critic Louis Vauxcelles. They saw Braque’s work "Houses at L'Estaque" (1908) and mocked it saying “everything is broken down into cubes.”

6 Post Impressionism – Gauguin – greatly influence Pablo Picasso
Cubism Influence Post Impressionism – Gauguin – greatly influence Pablo Picasso Impressionist – Cezanne – greatly influenced George Braque African Influence – greatly influenced Picasso’s early works Direct reaction to Fauvism

7 Disengages with detail and simplified a painting
Cezanne influence Taught to break away from technique and concentrate on color and power of single brush stroke Disengages with detail and simplified a painting

8 Formal simplification and expressive power
African Influence Formal simplification and expressive power Based from African and Iberian sculptures Used earth tones similar to the African masks Large inspiration for Picasso

9 Pablo Picasso Spanish painter and sculptor

10 Les Demoiselles d’Avignon, Picasso, 1907

11 Flatter, more consistent and more ambiguous
Analytic Cubism Flatter, more consistent and more ambiguous Color Scheme; monochromatic (tan, brown, gray, cream, green, and blue) Emphasis on pictorial structure, not color

12 Three Women Picasso 1913

13 Bread and Fruit Dish Picasso 1909

14 Girl with Mandolin Picasso 1910

15 Mandora Braque 1909

16 The Portuguese Braque 1911

17 Appealing and easier to interpret Less intricate
Synthetic Cubism Wider use of color Wider use of materials Appealing and easier to interpret Less intricate Added substances like sand to paint to make it appear thicker

18 Three Musicians, Picasso, 1921

19 Bottle, Newspaper, Pipe & Glass, Braque, 1913

20 Still Life with Chair Caning, Picasso, 1912

21 George Braque Influenced by Latisse and the Fauves, then Cezanne and Picasso Worked closely with Picasso Co-creator of Cubism

22 Cubism Influence on Later Art
Expressionism - a manner of painting, drawing, sculpting, etc., in which forms derived from nature are distorted or exaggerated and colors are intensified for emotive or expressive purposes. Futurism - style of art, literature, music, etc., and a theory of art and life in which violence, power, speed, mechanization or machines, and hostility to the past or to traditional forms of expression were advocated or portrayed. Dada - the style and techniques of a group of artists, writers, etc., of the early 20th century who exploited accidental and incongruous effects in their work and who programmatically challenged established canons of art, thought, morality, etc. Constructivism - a nonrepresentational style of art developed by a group of Russian artists principally in the early 20th century, characterized chiefly by a severely formal organization of mass, volume, and space, and by the employment of modern industrial materials. Orphism - a short-lived but influential artistic movement of the early 20th century arising from analytic cubism and the work of Robert Delaunay and having as conspicuous characteristics the use of bold color, the dynamic, prismatic juxtaposition and overlapping of nonobjective geometric forms and planes, and a lightness and lyricism dissociated from its cubist origins


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