Sentences with phrase «as precisionism»

Trained in an impressionist approach to landscape painting, Sheeler experimented early in his career with compositions inspired by European modernism before developing a linear, hard - edged style now known as Precisionism.
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.

Not exact matches

Butler's title for the show is Precisionist Casual, which invokes the early American modernist movement, Precisionism, which was practiced by Charles Sheeler and Charles Demuth, as well as the New Casualists, a term she coined in an essay published in The Brooklyn Rail (June 2011):
Connections between the past and the present will be explored throughout this large - scale survey, which will feature more than 100 masterworks of American Precisionism by such modernists as Charles Sheeler, Georgia O'Keeffe, and Charles Demuth.
Bringing to mind diverse sources of influence such as early Pop art, Precisionism and New Objectivity, these paintings suggests that a level, clear - eyed gaze at our contemporary experience does not preclude an affective relationship with it.
I recognized the name from a favorite painting in the Whitney, by Charles Sheeler, one that the museum has since displayed not as Cubism or Precisionism but as American Surrealism.
He was younger than Charles Demuth and Charles Sheeler, but he shared such subjects as warehouses and utility poles with their Precisionism.
Her work references Cubism, Futurism, and American Precisionism as well as earlier historical predecessors — trompe l'oeil artists such as John Peto and William Harnett.
Their collective approach to art - making is steeped in academic discourse, and whilst retaining the vibrancy of their graffiti backgrounds, traditional art movements such as Futurism, Abstract Expressionism and Precisionism are also embraced by the visual vocabulary imbued within their work.
As such, the style was related to other similar genres such as Op art, kinetic abstraction, geometric abstract art, ABC art, Cool art, non-gestural painting, non-relationalism, abstract mannerism, precisionism.As such, the style was related to other similar genres such as Op art, kinetic abstraction, geometric abstract art, ABC art, Cool art, non-gestural painting, non-relationalism, abstract mannerism, precisionism.as Op art, kinetic abstraction, geometric abstract art, ABC art, Cool art, non-gestural painting, non-relationalism, abstract mannerism, precisionism...
From the press release: «The exhibition is a celebration of contemporary mark making whilst embracing and taking inspiration from traditional art movements such as Futurism, Abstract Expressionism and Precisionism among others.
Over time, his innovative sharp - focus effects helped him to paint detailed and smooth - surfaced compositions that best suited his self - proclaimed style of Precisionism - a style of realism that focused on linear precision so as to capture the exact geometric shapes of skyscrapers and other similar structures, like industrial factories, machinery and associated plant.
An important influence on modern art painting in the United States, Precisionism was an American movement (also referred to as Cubist Realism) whose focus was modern industry and urban landscapes, characterized by the realistic depiction of objects but in a manner which also highlighted their geometric form.
The gallery handles artwork from early 20th - century movements including American Modernism, African American Art, Social Realism, Regionalism, Magic Realism, and Precisionism by such artists as Milton Avery, Thomas Hart Benton, Oscar Bluemner, Paul Cadmus, Arthur Dove, Marsden Hartley, Edward Hopper, Rockwell Kent, John Marin, Reginald Marsh, PaJaMa, Fairfield Porter, Ben Shahn, and others.
Modern and contemporary styles represented in the collection include precisionism, surrealism, abstract expressionism, geometric abstraction, pop and op art, Fluxus, photo realism, and minimalism, as well as works that explore social and political issues.
Specific painting movements included the Ashcan School (c.1900 - 1915); Precisionism (1920s) which celebrated the new American industrial landscape; the more socially aware urban style of Social Realism (1930s); American Scene Painting (c.1925 - 45) which embraced the work of Edward Hopper and Charles Burchfield, as well as midwestern Regionalism (1930s) championed by Grant Wood, Thomas Hart Benton and John Steuart Curry.
Her austere views of a men's shelter seen from her New York window evoke the abbreviated Precisionism of George Ault, just as the pale reflected sunburst of «Winter Sunset, Blair Pond,» echoes Arthur Dove's visionary moons.
In simple terms, Hard - edge painting - which recalls the Precisionism associated with the De Stijl theories and Neo-Plasticism of Piet Mondrian (1872 - 1944), as well as works by Josef Albers (1888 - 1976)- combines the clear imagery of geometric abstraction with the intense hues of Colour Field Painting.
[1] In addition to work showing a personal version of precisionism, he produced paintings, drawings, and prints in the social realist, Mexican muralist, and surrealist styles as well as still lifes, portraits, and landscapes that defy easy classification.
Its true - to - life focus on modernist architectural subjects (like factories, water towers, silos - even skyscrapers), made Precisionism a species of Realism, and, in fact, it was sometimes referred to as Cubist - Realism.
Other influences include exponents of American Precisionism of the 1930s, such as Charles Sheeler (1883 - 1965) and Charles Demuth (1883 - 1935).
If there are identifiable affinities or sources for such a style, they are likely to be found in the precisionism of Charles Sheeler and certain other varieties of American Cubism, as well as the geometric abstraction of Piet Mondrian.
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