Sentences with phrase «from tachisme»

He has distanced himself from Tachisme, the French version of Abstract Expressionism, either because of the movement's willingness to slide over into figuration and overt expression — or simply because he dislikes categories.

Not exact matches

His lyrical and ebullient pictorial language drew from archaic sources, as well as the drawings of children and contemporary art movements such as Cubism and Tachisme.
The term Tachisme - derived from the French word «tache» meaning «spot» - describes a type of abstract painting popular in the late 1940s and 1950s characterized by the use of irregular dabs or splotches of colour.
• Introduction • Impressionist Movement (fl.1870s - 1880s) • Neo-Impressionism (1880s) • Newlyn School -LRB-(fl.1884 - 1914)-RRB- • Art Nouveau (Jugendstijl)(1890 - 1914) • Symbolist Art (1890s) • Post Impressionist Art (1880s / 90s) • Les Fauves (1905 - 8) • Expressionist Movement (1905 onwards) • The Bridge (Germany 1905 - 13)(Die Brucke) • Blue Rider (Germany 1911 - 14)(Der Blaue Reiter) • Ashcan School (New York)(1900 - 1915) • Cubist Art (fl.1908 - 1914) • Orphic Cubism (Orphism, Simultanism)(1914 - 15) • Photographic Art • Collage (from 1912) • Futurist Art (1909 - 1914) • Rayonism (c.1912 - 14) • Suprematism (c.1913 - 1918) • Constructivism (1914 - 32) • Vorticism (c.1914 - 15) • Dada (Europe, 1916 - 1924) • De Stijl (1917 - 31) • Neo-Plasticism (fl.1918 - 26) • Bauhaus School (Germany, 1919 - 1933) • Purism (Early, mid-1920s) • Precisionism (Cubist - Realism)(fl. 1920s) • Surrealist Movement (1924 onwards) • Art Deco (c.1925 - 40) • Ecole de Paris (Paris School) • New Objectivity (Neue Sachlichkeit)(Germany, 1925 - 35) • Magic Realism (1925 - 40) • Socialist Realism (1928 - 80) • Social Realism (America)(1930 - 45) • Degenerate Art (Entartete Kunst)(1933 - 45) • Neo-Romanticism (1935 - 55) • Art Brut • Organic Abstraction (fl.1930 - 1950) • St Ives School (1939 - 75) • Existential Art (Late - 1940s, 1950s) • Abstract Expressionist Movement (1947 - 65) • Art Informel (fl. 1950s) • Tachisme (1950s) • Arte Nucleare (c.1951 - 60) • Assemblages (1953 onwards) • Neo-Dada (1953 - 65) • Kitchen Sink Art (c.1954 - 57) • Pop Art (c.1958 - 70) • Op - Art (Optical Art)(fl.1965 - 70) • New Realism (1960s) • Post-Painterly Abstraction (Clement Greenberg)(Early, mid-1960s)
MODERN ART Pre-Raphaelites (1848 on) Impressionistm (1870s on) Neo-Impressionism (1870s) Newlyn School (1880s) Art Nouveau (Late 19th C) Symbolism (Late 19th C) Post Impressionism (c. 1880s) Les Fauves (1898 - 1908) Expressionist Art (1900 on) Die Brucke (1905 - 11) Der Blaue Reiter (1911 - 14) Ashcan School (1892 - 1919) Cubism (1908 - 1920) Orphism (1912 - 16) Purism (1920s) Precisionism (1920s on) Collage (1912 on) Futurism (1909 - 1914) Rayonism (1910 - 20) Suprematism (1913 - 1920s) Constructivism (1917 - 21) Vorticism (1913 - 15) Dada Movement (1916 - 1924) De Stijl (1917 - 31) Bauhaus School (1919 - 1933) Neo-Plasticism (1920 - 40) Art Deco (1920s, 30s) Ecole de Paris (1900 on) Neue Sachlichkeit (1920s) Surrealism (1924 on) Magic Realism (1920s) Entartete Kunst (1930s) Social Realism (1920s, 30s) Socialist Realism (1929 on) St Ives School (1930s on) Neo-Romanticism: from 1930s Organic Abstraction (1940 - 65) Existential Art (1940s, 50s) Abstract Expressionism (c.1944 - 64) Art Informel (c.1946 - 60) Tachisme (1940s, 50s) Arte Nucleare (1951 - 60) Kitchen Sink Art (mid-1950s) Assemblage (1953 on) Neo-Dada (1950s on) Op - Art (Optical Art)(1960s) Pop Art (1958 - 72) New Realism (1960s) Post-Painterly Abstraction (1960s) Feminist Art (1960s on)
In drawings done as a student, we can see Schönebeck developing his form, from pleasant landscape - based pen marks to abstract fields - edgier riffs on Tachisme, the then - popular European version of Ab - Ex.
Like Tachisme, the COBRA group was closely related to the gesturalist wing of the broader European abstract expressionist school known as Art Informel, and derives its style from the early expressionist movement in Germany.
• Types • Origins and History • Stone Age Abstract Painting • From Academic Realism to Abstraction • Kandinsky & Expressionism Demonstrate The Power of Colour • Cubism Rejects Perspective and Pictorial Depth • Suprematism and De Stijl Introduce New Geometric Shapes • Surrealist and Organic Abstraction • Abstract Expressionism - More Colour, No More Geometry • Europe: Art Informel & Tachisme • Op - Art: The New Geometric Abstraction • Postmodernist Abstraction • Famous Collections Resources • Abstract Painters • Abstract Paintings: Top 100 • Abstract Art Movements • Abstract Sculpture (1900 - 2000) • Abstract Sculptors (1900 - 2000)
Tachisme also rejected Cubism and was characterised by paint used straight from the tube, dripped and blobbed.
«Between Tachisme and Abstract Expressionism: Bluhm, Francis, Jenkins» will be on view at the gallery's Chelsea location from October 5 to November 10, 2017.
«Tachisme» gets its name from «tache,» meaning a stain or splash.
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