Fauvism was a typical
French modern art movement which started simultaneously with Cubism and Futurism.
On this Wikiquote - page you find many artists - quotes on Surrealism: https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/surrealism-short-described-in-quotes-the-french-art-movement-explained-for-students-and-pupils-6323424 Jacob Bendien explains and describes the history facts, art characteristics and the meaning of Surrealism and Surrealist artists - the typical and rather intellectual
French modern art movement.
On Wikiquote I also gathered artist quotes under the head of Cubism; on Wikipedia you can find a more detailed description of
the French modern art movement.
Not exact matches
Surrealism, the
modern French art movement started in France in the 1920's There is the founder and leader André Breton who only wrote, and the surrealist important artists Hans / Jean Arp, Joan Miro, Marcel Duchamp.
French artist Caroline Achaintre's visually striking, witty ceramic sculptures and hand - tufted wall hangings bring together a whole host of references such as catwalk fashion, carnival, and death - metal iconography, as well as Primitivism and Expressionism — early twentieth - century Western
art movements that borrowed heavily from non-Western and prehistoric imagery to find new ways of representing the
modern world.
Francis Picabia was a
French avant - garde painter, poet and typographist who was a vital part of most key
modern art movements of the 20th century.
Two decades later, poet and critic Charles Baudelaire recognized flânerie as the powerful engine of a new
art movement in Paris and, inspired by Poe's man of the crowd, promoted it in his landmark 1863 essay «The Painter of
Modern Life,» which heralded the arrival of the quintessential artist - flâneurs — the
French impressionists.
There is a general consensus of opinion among the older and more conservative
French artists, a feeling also shared in England, that the effect of the war on foreign
art will be to at least check and modify, if not destroy, some of the recent
modern movements, such as «Futurism,» «Cubism,» «Pointellism,» etc..
The Phillips» collection began as a museum of
modern art, exemplifying Paris - based European
art movements such as
French Realism (c. 1850 onwards) Impressionism (c.1873 - 83), Post-Impressionism (c. 1880 onwards), Fauvism, Intimism, Expressionism, Primitivism, Symbolism, and Cubism, before taking on 20th century styles such as Precisionism, American Realism, Ashcan School, Abstract Expressionism, Colour Field painting, Kinetic
art, and geometric abstract
art.
The classically trained
French painter, printmaker and designer Andre Masson was one of the leading figures within the Surrealism
movement, which dominated
modern art in Europe during the interwar years.
Museological in scale and executed with precise skill, the paintings recall the history of monochromatic works as they are seen in multiple
modern art movements from Russian Constructivism to Minimalism to the
french BMPT painting group.
In some ways, this was the result of a process that had been building up for decades: The
modern art movements of the early 20th century can be defined by their struggle with the legacy of Western Art; artists were clamoring to break out of these boundaries either by leaving and working elsewhere (for example German expressionists August Macke and Emil Nolde followed in the footsteps of French post-impressionist Paul Gauguin) or by seeking inspiration and incorporating what they could from the «exotic» art of other cultures — from African sculpture to Japanese prin
art movements of the early 20th century can be defined by their struggle with the legacy of Western
Art; artists were clamoring to break out of these boundaries either by leaving and working elsewhere (for example German expressionists August Macke and Emil Nolde followed in the footsteps of French post-impressionist Paul Gauguin) or by seeking inspiration and incorporating what they could from the «exotic» art of other cultures — from African sculpture to Japanese prin
Art; artists were clamoring to break out of these boundaries either by leaving and working elsewhere (for example German expressionists August Macke and Emil Nolde followed in the footsteps of
French post-impressionist Paul Gauguin) or by seeking inspiration and incorporating what they could from the «exotic»
art of other cultures — from African sculpture to Japanese prin
art of other cultures — from African sculpture to Japanese prints.
The least strident sub-variant of the wider
Art Informel style - itself one of the most important European modern art movements of the post-World War II period - Lyrical Abstraction (or «Abstraction Lyrique») was a French style of 20th century painting in the manner of American Abstract Expressioni
Art Informel style - itself one of the most important European
modern art movements of the post-World War II period - Lyrical Abstraction (or «Abstraction Lyrique») was a French style of 20th century painting in the manner of American Abstract Expressioni
art movements of the post-World War II period - Lyrical Abstraction (or «Abstraction Lyrique») was a
French style of 20th century painting in the manner of American Abstract Expressionism.
The
French abstract sculptor, engraver, collagist and poet, Jean (Hans) Arp, was a prominent member of numerous important
modern art movements of the 20th century, including the Moderne Bund, the Blue Rider Expressionist Group, Dadaism and Surrealism, as well as the sculptural artist - groups Cercle et Carre and Abstract - Creation.
He was described as the inventor of
modern jewelry by the
French artist and designer Émile Gallé, and his luxurious naturalistic designs helped define the
Art Nouveau
movement.