Concepts of Modern ArtNikos Stangos Harper & Row, 1981 - 384 pagina's No other book on modern and contemporary art presents in as authoritative and concise a manner the ideas that underlie the diverse and radical developments of the last hundred years. In this new edition, an important essay, "Postmodernism and the Art of Identity", not only brings the story of modern art right up to the present, but also introduces the unexpected development of returning to art the day-to-day meaning it may have lost, through engagement with issues raised in the representation of gender, sexuality, and AIDS. In other essays by some of the most internationally acclaimed writers on art, the extraordinary challenges of twentieth-century art are introduced and discussed with unparalleled lucidity, intelligence, and factual accuracy. |
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Pagina 34
... artists an interested public among left - thinking people . Where local governments were progressive it could help them to places in public collections that avant - garde artists in other countries had to wait decades for . Changes in ...
... artists an interested public among left - thinking people . Where local governments were progressive it could help them to places in public collections that avant - garde artists in other countries had to wait decades for . Changes in ...
Pagina 40
... artists felt the need to test their means and their urges , and gradually to fashion a controllable language in which to formulate their personal messages . The artists of Der Blaue Reiter ( the blue rider ) were of this second sort ...
... artists felt the need to test their means and their urges , and gradually to fashion a controllable language in which to formulate their personal messages . The artists of Der Blaue Reiter ( the blue rider ) were of this second sort ...
Pagina 220
... artists produce the impression of movement by means of illusion , whereas the Kinetic artists do exactly the opposite : they produce illusion by means of movement . The Op artists rely entirely on pictorial means : the interplay of ...
... artists produce the impression of movement by means of illusion , whereas the Kinetic artists do exactly the opposite : they produce illusion by means of movement . The Op artists rely entirely on pictorial means : the interplay of ...
Inhoudsopgave
Preface Nikos Stangos | 10 |
Expressionism Norbert Lynton | 30 |
Cubism John Golding | 50 |
Copyright | |
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abstract art Abstract Expressionism Abstract Expressionists aesthetic American André André Breton Apollinaire architecture artists automatism become Blaue Reiter Boccioni Braque Breton catalogue Cézanne collage colour composition Conceptual Art concerned Constructivism Constructivists contemporary critics Cubism Dada Dadaists Delaunay Demoiselles Derain Doesburg drawing Duchamp early elements Ernst exhibition expression Fauves Fauvism figure forms function futurist Gabo Gris idea illustration images influence involved Kandinsky Kinetic Art Kooning Kupka Léger light Lissitzky London Malevich Manifesto Matisse means Miro Modern Art Mondrian Motherwell Museum of Modern Newman objects Oil on canvas Orphism Ozenfant and Jeanneret painters painting Paris photo Museum Picabia Picasso pictorial picture planes Pollock Pop Art pure Purist Rietveld Robert Rothko Salon sculpture seems sense space spectator Stijl structure Studio style Suprematism suprematist surface Surrealism surrealist synthetic Tate Gallery technique Theo Theo van Doesburg tion tradition vertical visual Vlaminck Vorticists Willem de Kooning wrote York