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Modern Art History Part 2
AWN 4M1
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Romanticism (112) Neoclassicism (35) Academic Art (27) Realism (108) Modern Art Naïve Art (Primitivism) (30) Naturalism (6) Symbolism (60) Aestheticism (5) Tonalism (7) Post-Impressionism (99) Impressionism (139) Arts and Crafts (3) Art Nouveau (59) Secession (2) Pictorialism (9) Modernismo (17) Expressionism (135) Neo-Romanticism (3) Cubism (58) Abstract Art (50) Orphism (Simultanism) (5) Avant-garde (1) Futurism (18) Cubo-Futurism (6) Vorticism (4) Rayonism (1) Synchromism (1) Dada (20) Suprematism (5) Analytical Realism (1) Constructivism (25) New Objectivity (Neue Sachlichkeit) (6) De Stijl (Neoplasticism) (8) Concrete Art (Concretism) (49) Social Realism (21) New Realism (American Realism) (8) Surrealism (139) Metaphysical art (6) Magic Realism (19) Purism (3) Art Deco (11) Precisionism (8) Harlem Renaissance (New Negro Movement) (4) Regionalism (5) Muralism (9) Socialist Realism (7) Lettrism (5) Abstract Expressionism (123) Indian Space Painting (2) Tachisme (29) Art Informel (80) Haute Pâte (Matter Painting) (6) Korean Informel (3) Neo-Concretism (6) Transautomatism (1) Viennese Actionism (1) Post-Painterly Abstraction (68) Abstract Illusionism (5) Feminist Art (19) Outsider art (Art brut) (15) Mail Art (4) Neo-Expressionism (29) Neo-Dada (22) Neo-Figurative Art (5) Spatialism (10) Kinetic art (24) Arte Povera (14) Existential Art (3) Op Art (52) Nouveau Réalisme (13) Pop Art (77) New Generation Sculpture (6) Classical Realism (4) Contemporary Art Conceptual Art (83) Contemporary (44) Minimalism (96) Post-Minimalism (53) Light and Space (19) Junk Art (3) Environmental Art (16) Kitsch (6) Relational Art (13) Funk Art (1) Photorealism (Super-Realism, Hyper-Realism) (18) Poster Art Realism (2) Contemporary Realism (22) P&D (Pattern and Decoration) (5) New Image Painting (5) Pittura Colta (3) Transavantgarde (3) New European Painting (7) Neo-Pop Art (15) Neo-minimalism (Neo-Geo) (44) Street art (25) Maximalism (4) Lowbrow Art (3) Stuckism (2) Toyism (1) CyberArt (5)
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*The Red Studio Henri Matisse 1911 Style: Fauvism
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Icarus Matisse 1946
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Les betes sur la mer Matisse 1950
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Expressionism The main characteristic of this movement is the distortion of reality through: -exaggeration -vigorous brushwork -strong colour The purpose is to express an artist’s ideas and emotions.
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*The Scream Edvard Munch 1893
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*Survivors Kathe Kollwitz 1923
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Cry of Death Kathe Kollwitz
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*Emil Nolde Trois Chanteurs 1938 watercolour (aquarelle)
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*The Blue Horses Franz Marc 1911
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Modigliani Red Headed Woman 1918
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"Color is the keyboard, the eyes are the harmonies, the soul is the piano with many strings. The artist is the hand that plays, touching one key or another, to cause vibrations in the soul." ~Wassily Kandinsky Concentric Circles Wassily Kandinsky 1913
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Self Portrait Egon Schiele 1912
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More work from Schiele
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Art Nouveau
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Gustav Klimt The Kiss
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Klimt The Tree of Life
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Cubism
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1899 1901 1906 1907 Pablo Picasso Self Portraits
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Blue Period Picasso
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Harlequin Series Picasso
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When Les Demoiselles d'Avignon first appeared, it was as if the art world had collapsed. Known form and representation were completely abandoned. Hence it was called the most innovative painting in modern art history. With the new strategies applied in the painting, Picasso suddenly found freedom of expression away from current and classical French influences and was able to carve his own path. *Desmoiselles d’Avignon Pablo Picasso
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*Woman With A Guitar Georges Bracque 1913 Style: Analytical Cubism
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Three Musicians Pablo Picasso 1921
Style: Synthetic Cubism
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Guernica Pablo Picasso 1937
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skull bull
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*Dove of Peace Pablo Picasso 1949
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Pablo Picasso is recognized as the world's most prolific painter
Pablo Picasso is recognized as the world's most prolific painter. His career spanned over a 78 year period, in which he created: 13,500 paintings, 100,000 prints and engravings, and 34,000 illustrations which were used in books. He also produced 300 sculptures and ceramic pieces during this expansive career. It is also estimated that over 350 pieces which he created during his career, have been stolen; this is a figure that is far higher than any other artist throughout history.
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Nude Descending A Staircase Marcel Duchamp 1912
*Cubist & Futurist
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Surrealism
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Marc Chagall born: July died: March (97) Russian-Jewish Painting, Prints, Stained Glass, Tapestries, Theatre Costumes Movement: Surrealism, Expressionism *not allowed to live in St. Petersburg without permit & was jailed *moves to Paris but then has to escape during Nazi occupation *ends up in US
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La Mariee Marc Chagall
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Time Transfixed Marcel Duchamp
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Salvadore Dali Spanish *named after older brother that dies before he was born and told that he was his reincarnation *was eventually kicked out of the Surrealist group because he supported Francisco Franco’s regime following the Spanish Civil War
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*The Persistence of Memory Salvadore Dali 1931
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*Soft Construction with Baked Beans Salvadore Dali 1936
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City of Drawers Salvadore Dali
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The Ship Salvadore Dali 1942
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*The Son of Man Rene Magritte 1964
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La Chateau de Pyrenees Rene Magritte 1959
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Signature in Blank Rene Magritte
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*Object Meret Oppenheim 1936
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I Saw Three Cities Kay Sage 1944
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Tomorrow is Never Kay Sage 1955
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Drawing Hands Escher 1948
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Waterfall Escher 1962
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