Early Indian Independence Movement Why is It that No One Knows Anything About Trains?
Feb 08

The art movement, Cubism, began in 1908 and strongly influenced art and sculpture in the early 20C.

Cubism dissected painted images, then reassembled them as abstract forms. Cubism showed images which could be seen from all angles. Subjects were painted in cube form, hence the name, Cubism.

French painters, Georges Braque and Pablo Picasso were foremost in introducing the movement. They worked closely until 1914. By 1910 cubism had become popular and was known as the”Cubist School.”

Other art movements began and new trends developed.

‘Analytical cubism’ displayed surfaces closely patterned with incomplete lines, which played the forms against one another. Often the works were painted in the same tone, making it difficult to identify images. Artists left clues, such as a pipe suggested someone smoking; also alphabetic letters, a newspaper or a bottle of wine.

In 1912 “synthetic cubism” emerged. Small objects were painted over then stuck onto the canvas, and superimposed one over another. Brighter colours replaced the dark, monochromatic scales which were hard to decipher.

Paper replaced paint and was pasted onto canvas forming an image. Patches cut from newspaper, presented images. Paper with woodprint, advertisements, were more colorful. Sand textured canvasses worked with graphite or charcoal forming shadows.

By Margaret Houghton

[Slashdot] [Digg] [Reddit] [del.icio.us] [Facebook] [Technorati] [Google] [StumbleUpon]

\\ tags: ,

Leave a Reply