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Early 20th Century styles based on SHAPE and FORM:

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to show the concept' of an object rather than creating a detail of the real thing ... century, including Constructionism, Cubism, Modernism, Bauhaus, Art Nouveau, and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Early 20th Century styles based on SHAPE and FORM:


1
Early 20th Century styles based onSHAPE and
FORM Cubism Futurism Art Deco to show the
concept of an object rather than creating a
detail of the real thing to show different views
of an object at once, emphasizing time, space
the Machine age to simplify objects to their most
basic, primitive terms
2
Pablo Picasso1888-1973 Considered most
influential artist of 20th Century
Blue Period
Rose Period
Analytical Cubism
Synthetic Cubism
3
Early works by a young Picasso
Girl Wearing Large Hat, 1901.
Lola, the artists sister, 1901.
4
Picassos Blue Period
Blue Period(1901-1904)
Moves to Paris in his late teens
Coping with suicide of friend
Paintings were lonely, depressing
Major color was BLUE!
5
Picassos Blue Period
Pablo Picasso,Blue Nude, 1902. BLUE PERIOD
6
Picassos Blue Period
Pablo Picasso,Self Portrait, 1901. BLUE PERIOD
7
Picassos Blue Period
Pablo Picasso,Tragedy, 1903. BLUE PERIOD
8
Picassos Blue Period
Pablo Picasso,Le Gourmet, 1901. BLUE PERIOD
9
Picassos work at the National Gallery
10
Picassos Rose Period
Rose Period(1904-1906)
Much happier art than before
Circus people as subjects
Reds and warmer colors
Pablo Picasso,Harlequin Family, 1905.ROSE
PERIOD
11
Picassos Rose Period
Pablo Picasso, La Familia de Saltimbanques, 1905.
ROSE PERIOD
12
Picassos Rose Period
Pablo Picasso, La Familia de Saltimbanques, 1905.
ROSE PERIOD
13
Picassos Rose Period
Pablo Picasso,Girl With a Goat, 1906. ROSE PERIOD
14
Beginnings of Cubism
Much more abstract than before
Pablo Picasso, Composition with Skull, 1908.
15
Georges Braque, Musical Instruments, 1908.
16
Georges Braque, Fruitdish, 1908-09.
17
Pablo Picasso, Three Musicians, 1921.
18
Pablo Picasso,Les Demoiselles DAvignon,
1907. I paint forms as I think them, not as I
see them
19
Major Influences
Paul Cezanne(Post-Impressionist)
Femme de Vert1909
20
Major Influences
African Zimba Mask
Les Demoiselles dAvignon, 1907.
21
Major Influences
African Zimba Mask
Les Demoiselles dAvignon, 1907.
22
Analytical Cubism
Analytical Cubism Little contrast in
color Complex and systematic design Faceted
shapes, translucent divisions of space Differing
views of the same subject in the same
work Invented by Picasso and George Braque- at
the same time, but not really in
collaboration Retains some sort of depth
Pablo Picasso,Portrait of Vollard,
1910. ANALYTICAL CUBISM
23
Analytical Cubism
Pablo Picasso,Aficionado, 1912. ANALYTICAL
CUBISM
24
Synthetic Cubism
Synthetic Cubism Invented by Braque and
Picasso Puts forms back together after breaking
them apart Collage comes from French word for
glue Foreign materials are pasted onto the
design- makes the collage look like a real
surface Scraps are changed and painted on,
giving them a double meaning
George Braque, Gillet, 1914.
New Space Concept - first since Masaccio
25
Synthetic Cubism
Pablo Picasso,Glass and Bottleof Suze,
1912. SYNTHETIC CUBISM
26
Futurism First announced on Feb. 20, 1909
Newspaper Le Figaro published a manifesto by the
Italian poet and editor Tommaso Marinetti We
will fight with all our might the fanatical,
senseless and snobbish religion of the past, a
religion encouraged by the vicious existence of
museums. We rebel against that spineless
worshiping of old canvases, old statues and old
bric-a-brac, against everything which is filthy
and worm-ridden and corroded by time. We consider
the habitual contempt for everything which is
young, new and burning with life to be unjust and
even criminal. To purposely intended to inspire
public anger and amazement, to arouse
controversy, and to attract widespread attention.
Umberto Boccioni, Unique Forms of Continuity in
Space, 1913.
27
Boccioni, Dynamism of a Cyclist, 1913. FUTURISM
28
Boccioni, The City Rises, 1910. FUTURISM
29
Natalia Goncharova, The Cyclist. 1913. FUTURISM
30
Giacomo Balla, Abstract Speed Sound, 1913-1914.
FUTURISM
31
The Chrysler Building, NYC
Art Deco
Art Deco was a popular design movement from 1920
until 1939, affecting the decorative arts such as
architecture, interior design, and industrial
design. This movement was a combination of many
different styles and movements of the early 20th
century, including Constructionism, Cubism,
Modernism, Bauhaus, Art Nouveau, and
Futurism. Its popularity apexed during the 1920s.
Although many design movements have political or
philosophical roots or intentions, Art Deco was
purely decorative. At the time, this style was
seen as elegant, functional, and ultra modern.
William Van Alen, The Chrysler Building, 1930.
32
The Chrysler Building, NYC
33
The Chrysler Building, NYC
34
The Chrysler Building, NYC
35
The Chrysler Building, NYC
36
The Chrysler Building, NYC
37
Elevators, The Chrysler Building, NYC
38
Simon Kenton HS, Independence, KY
39
Cincinnati Museum Center (formerly Union Terminal)
40
Cincinnati Museum Center (formerly Union Terminal)
41
Other Art Deco examples
42
Other Art Deco examples
43
Other Art Deco examples
44
Other Art Deco examples
45
Other Art Deco examples
46
Other Art Deco examples
47
Other Art Deco examples
48
Other Art Deco examples
49
DADA Started as a reaction to the horrors of WWI
and Nihilism Began independently in Zurich and
NY French for hobbyhorse, but the word itself
had no meaning Believed that reason and logic had
been responsible for war Only hope was anarchy,
irrationality, and intuition Pessimism and
disgust of the artists helped them reject
tradition- Arp pioneered the use of chance in
artwork- released him from the role of artist For
Dadaists, the idea of chance comes from the
unconsciousness- influenced by Freud
Jean Arp, Collage Arranged According to the Laws
of Chance, 1916-17.
50
We had lost confidence in our culture.
Everything had to be demolished At the Cabaret
Voltaire we began by shocking common sense,
public opinion, education, institutions, museums,
good taste, in short, the whole prevailing
order.
Hannah Hoch, The Pretty Maiden, 1920. DADA
51
Jean Arp Mountain, Table, Anchors, Navel.
1925. DADA
52
Marcel Duchamp
Duchamp was the central figure in NY Dada
scene Exhibited his first ready-made sculptures
- mass produced common products selected by the
artist Free from the opinions of the population-
neither good or bad taste Forces viewers to see
the artness of objects
Marcel Duchamp, Fountain, 1913.
53
Marcel Duchamp, The Bride Stripped Bare by Her
Bachelors, Even (The Large Glass) 1915-23. DADA
54
"I am still a victim of chess. It has all the
beauty of art -- and much more. It cannot be
commercialized. Chess is much purer than art in
its social position. Marcel Duchamp
55
Marcel Duchamp Bicycle Wheel, 1913. DADA
56
Marcel Duchamp Nude Descending a Staircase, 1912.
57
In 1919, Duchamp drew a moustache and goatee,
graffiti-style, on a postcard of the Mona Lisa
and added the caption L.H.O.O.Q. which, as any
French schoolboy could tell you, sounds like elle
a chaud au cul (Shes hot in the ass). It
quickly became an icon of the international Dada
movement.
Duchamp, L.H.O.O.Q., 1919.
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