Abstract Art
Abstract Art
Abstract Art
Robert Delaunay, 191213, Le Premier Disque, 134 cm (52.7 in.), Private collection.
Abstract art uses a visual language of shape, form, color and line to
create a composition which may exist with a degree of independence
from visual references in the world.[1] Western art had been, from
theRenaissance up to the middle of the 19th century, underpinned by the
logic of perspective and an attempt to reproduce an illusion of visible
reality. The arts of cultures other than the European had become
accessible and showed alternative ways of describing visual experience
to the artist. By the end of the 19th century many artists felt a need to
o 1.5Russian avant-garde
o 1.6The Bauhaus
o 1.7Abstraction in Paris and London
o 1.8America: mid-century
2Abstraction in the 21st century
3Causation
4Gallery
5See also
6References
7Sources
8External links
History[edit]
Main articles: History of painting and Western painting
19th century[edit]
Main articles: Romanticism, Impressionism, Post-Impressionism,
and Expressionism
Three art movements which contributed to the development of abstract
art were Romanticism, Impressionism andExpressionism. Artistic
Henri Matisse, The Yellow Curtain, 1915. With his Fauvist color and drawing Matisse
comes very close to pure abstraction.
20th century[edit]
Main articles: Western painting, Fauvism, and Cubism
Post Impressionism as practiced by Paul Gauguin, Georges
Seurat, Vincent van Gogh and Paul Czanne had an enormous impact
on 20th-century art and led to the advent of 20th-century abstraction.
The heritage of painters like Van Gogh,Czanne, Gauguin,
and Seurat was essential for the development of modern art. At the
beginning of the 20th century Henri Matisse and several other young
artists including the pre-cubist Georges Braque, Andr Derain, Raoul
Dufy and Maurice de Vlaminck revolutionized the Paris art world with
"wild", multi-colored, expressive landscapes and figure paintings that the
critics called Fauvism. With his expressive use of color and his free and
imaginative drawing Henri Matisse comes very close to pure abstraction
in French Window at Collioure (1914), View of Notre-Dame (1914),
and The Yellow Curtain from 1915. The raw language of color as
developed by the Fauves directly influenced another pioneer of
abstraction, Wassily Kandinsky(see illustration).
Although Cubism ultimately depends upon subject matter, it became,
along with Fauvism, the art movement that directly opened the door to
abstraction in the 20th century. Pablo Picasso made his
first cubist paintings based on Czanne's idea that all depiction of nature
can be reduced to three solids: cube, sphere and cone. With the
painting Les Demoiselles d'Avignon (1907), Picasso dramatically created
a new and radical picture depicting a raw and primitive brothel scene
with five prostitutes, violently painted women, reminiscent of African
tribal masks and his own new Cubist inventions. Analytic cubism was
jointly developed by Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque, from about
1908 through 1912. Analytic cubism, the first clear manifestation of
cubism, was followed by Synthetic cubism, practiced by Braque,
Picasso, Fernand Lger, Juan Gris, Albert Gleizes, Marcel
Duchamp and others into the 1920s. Synthetic cubism is characterized
by the introduction of different textures,
surfaces, collage elements, papier coll and a large variety of merged
subject matter. The collage artists like Kurt Schwitters and Man Ray and
others taking the clue from Cubism were instrumental to the
development of the movement called Dada.
Frantiek Kupka, Amorpha, Fugue en deux couleurs (Fugue in Two Colors), 1912,
oil on canvas, 210 x 200 cm, Narodni Galerie, Prague. Published in Au Salon
d'Automne "Les Indpendants" 1912, Exhibited at the 1912 Salon d'Automne, Paris.
Robert Delaunay, 1912, Windows Open Simultaneously (First Part, Third Motif), oil
on canvas, 45.7 x 37.5 cm,Tate Modern
as well as Picasso. During the Spring David Burliuk gave two lectures on
cubism and planned a polemical publication, which the Knave of
Diamonds was to finance. He went abroad in May and came back
determined to rival the almanac Der Blaue Reiter which had emerged
from the printers while he was in Germany'.
From 1909 to 1913 many experimental works in the search for this 'pure
art' had been created: Francis Picabia paintedCaoutchouc, 1909,[14] The
Spring, 1912,[15] Dances at the Spring[16] and The Procession, Seville,
1912;[17] Wassily Kandinsky painted Untitled (First Abstract Watercolor),
1910,[18] Improvisation 21A, the Impression series, and Picture with a
Circle (1911);[19] Frantiek Kupka had painted the Orphist works, Discs of
Newton (Study for Fugue in Two Colors), 1912[20]and Amorpha, Fugue en
deux couleurs (Fugue in Two Colors), 1912; Robert Delaunay painted a
series entitledSimultaneous Windows and Formes Circulaires, Soleil
n2 (191213);[21] Lopold Survage created Colored Rhythm (Study for
the film), 1913;[22] Piet Mondrian, painted Tableau No. 1 and Composition
No. 11, 1913.[23]
Music[edit]
As visual art becomes more abstract, it develops some characteristics of
music: an art form which uses the abstract elements of sound and
divisions of time. Wassily Kandinsky, himself a musician, was inspired by
the possibility of marks and associative color resounding in the soul. The
idea had been put forward by Charles Baudelaire, that all our senses
respond to various stimuli but the senses are connected at a deeper
aesthetic level.
Closely related to this, is the idea that art has The spiritual
dimension and can transcend 'every-day' experience, reaching a spiritual
plane. The Theosophical Society popularized the ancient wisdom of the
sacred books of India and China in the early years of the century. It was
in this context that Piet Mondrian, Wassily Kandinsky, Hilma af Klint and
other artists working towards an 'objectless state' became interested in
the occult as a way of creating an 'inner' object. The universal and
timeless shapes found in geometry: the circle, square and triangle
become the spatial elements in abstract art; they are, like color,
fundamental systems underlying visible reality.
Russian avant-garde[edit]
The Bauhaus[edit]
The Bauhaus at Weimar, Germany was founded in 1919 by Walter
Gropius.[25] The philosophy underlying the teaching program was unity of
all the visual and plastic arts from architecture and painting to weaving
and stained glass. This philosophy had grown from the ideas of the Arts
and Crafts movement in England and the Deutscher Werkbund. Among
the teachers were Paul Klee, Wassily Kandinsky, Johannes Itten, Josef
Albers, Anni Albers, Theo van Doesburg and Lszl Moholy-Nagy. In
1925 the school was moved to Dessau and, as the Nazi party gained
control in 1932, The Bauhaus was closed. In 1937 an exhibition
of degenerate art, 'Entartete Kunst' contained all types of avant-garde art
disapproved of by the Nazi party. Then the exodus began: not just from
the Bauhaus but from Europe in general; to Paris, London and America.
Paul Klee went to Switzerland but many of the artists at the Bauhaus
went to America.
During the 1930s Paris became the host to artists from Russia,
Germany, the Netherlands and other European countries affected by the
rise of totalitarianism.Sophie Tauber and Jean Arp collaborated on
paintings and sculpture using organic/geometric forms. The
Polish Katarzyna Kobro applied mathematically based ideas to
sculpture. The many types of abstraction now in close proximity led to
attempts by artists to analyse the various conceptual and aesthetic
groupings. An exhibition by forty-six members of the Cercle et
Carr group organised by Joaquin Torres-Garcia[26] assisted by Michel
Seuphor[27] contained work by the Neo-Plasticists as well as
abstractionists as varied as Kandinsky, Anton Pevsner and Kurt
Schwitters. Criticised by Theo van Doesburg to be too indefinite a
collection he published the journal Art Concret setting out a manifesto
defining an abstract art in which the line, color and surface only, are the
concrete reality.[28] Abstraction-Cration founded in 1931 as a more open
group, provided a point of reference for abstract artists, as the political
situation worsened in 1935, and artists again regrouped, many in
London. The first exhibition of British abstract art was held in England in
1935. The following year the more international Abstract and
Concreteexhibition was organised by Nicolete Gray including work
by Piet Mondrian, Joan Mir, Barbara Hepworth and Ben Nicholson.
Hepworth, Nicholson and Gabo moved to the St. Ives group in Cornwall
to continue their 'constructivist' work.[29]
America: mid-century[edit]
During the Nazi rise to power in the 1930s many artists fled Europe to
the United States. By the early 1940s the main movements in modern
art, expressionism, cubism, abstraction, surrealism, and dada were
represented in New York: Marcel Duchamp, Fernand Lger, Piet
Mondrian, Jacques Lipchitz, Andr Masson, Max Ernst, Andr Breton,
were just a few of the exiled Europeans who arrived in New York.[31] The
rich cultural influences brought by the European artists were distilled and
built upon by local New York painters. The climate of freedom in New
York allowed all of these influences to flourish. The art galleries that
primarily had focused on European art began to notice the local art
community and the work of younger American artists who had begun to
mature. Certain artists at this time became distinctly abstract in their
mature work. During this period Piet Mondrian's paintingComposition
No. 10, 19391942, characterized by primary colors, white ground and
black grid lines clearly defined his radical but classical approach to the
rectangle and abstract art in general. Some artists of the period defied
categorization, such asGeorgia O'Keeffe who, while a modernist
abstractionist, was a pure maverick in that she painted highly abstract
forms while not joining any specific group of the period.
Eventually American artists who were working in a great diversity of
styles began to coalesce into cohesive stylistic groups. The best known
Into the 21st century abstraction remains very much in view, its main
themes: the transcendental, the contemplative and the timeless are
exemplified by Barnett Newman, John McLaughlin, and Agnes Martin as
well as younger living artists. Art as Object as seen in
the Minimalist sculpture of Donald Judd and the paintings of Frank
Stella are still seen today in newer permutations. The poetic, Lyrical
Abstraction and the sensuous use of color seen in the work of painters
as diverse asRobert Motherwell, Patrick Heron, Kenneth Noland, Sam
Francis, Cy Twombly, Richard Diebenkorn, Helen Frankenthaler,Joan
Mitchell, among others.
There was a resurgence after the war and into the 1950s of the
figurative, as neo-Dada, fluxus, happening, conceptual art,neoexpressionism, installation art, performance art, video art and pop
art have come to signify the age of consumerism. The distinction
between abstract and figurative art has, over the last twenty years,
become less defined leaving a wider range of ideas for all artists.
Causation[edit]
One socio-historical explanation that has been offered for the growing
prevalence of the abstract in modern art an explanation linked to the
name of Theodor W. Adorno is that such abstraction is a response to,
and a reflection of, the growing abstraction of social relations in industrial
society.[33]
Frederic Jameson similarly sees modernist abstraction as a function of
the abstract power of money, equating all things equally as exchangevalues.[34] The social content of abstract art is then precisely the abstract
nature of social existence legal formalities, bureaucratic
impersonalization, information/power in the world of late modernity.[35]
Post-Jungians by contrast would see the quantum theories with their
disintegration of conventional ideas of form and matter as underlying the
divorce of the concrete and the abstract in modern art.[36]
Gallery[edit]
Albert Gleizes, 191012, Les Arbres (The Trees), oil on canvas, 41 x
27 cm. Reproduced in Du "Cubisme", 1912
See also[edit]
Art portal
Abstract expressionism
Abstraction in art
Action painting
American Abstract Artists
Art history
Art periods
Asemic writing
Concrete art
De Stijl
Geometric abstraction
Hard-edge
History of painting
Lyrical abstraction
Op Art
Representation (arts)
Spatialism
Western painting
In other media
Abstract animation
Abstract comics
Abstract photography
Experimental film
References[edit]
1. Jump up^ Rudolph Arnheim, Visual Thinking
2. Jump up^ Mel Gooding, Abstract Art, Tate
Publishing, London, 2000
Sources[edit]
1. ^ Compton, Susan (1978). The World
Backwards: Russian Futurist Books 191216.
The British Library. ISBN 0-7141-0396-9.
2. ^ Stangos, Nikos (editor) (1981). Concepts of
Modern Art. Thames and Hudson. ISBN 0500-20186-2.
3. ^ Gooding, Mel (2001). Abstract Art
(Movements in Modern Art series). Tate
Publishing. ISBN 1-85437-302-1.
External links[edit]
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Abstract art
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Definition
What is the Idea Behind Abstract Art?
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
Abstract
Abstract
Abstract
Abstract
Painters
Paintings: Top 100
Art Movements
Sculpture (1900-2000)
Sculptors (1900-2000)
"straight lines and circles are... not only beautiful... but eternally and
absolutely beautiful."
WHAT IS ART?
For an guide to the aesthetic and
classification issues concerning
fine/decorative/applied arts, see:
Art Definition, Meaning.
Curvilinear
Colour-Related or Light-Related
Geometric
Emotional or Intuitional
Gestural
Minimalist
Some of these types are less abstract than others, but all are concerned with
Geometric Abstraction
This type of intellectual abstract art emerged from about 1908 onwards. An
early rudimentary form was Cubism, specifically analytical Cubism - which
rejected linear perspective and the illusion of spatial depth in a painting, in
order to focus on its 2-D aspects. Geometric Abstraction is also known as
Concrete Art and Non-Objective Art. As you might expect, it is characterized
The use of colour and shape to move the spectator was paramount in the
development of abstract art. Impressionism, including the variants of NeoImpressionist Pointillism and Post-Impressionism, had already drawn attention
to the power of colour, but German Expressionism made it the cornerstone of
painting. One of its leaders, Wassily Kandinsky (1866-1944) published a book
entitled 'On The Spirtual In Art' (1911), which became the foundation text of
abstract painting.
Kandinsky was convinced by the emotional properties of shape, line and above
all, colour in painting. (He had an abnormal sensitivity to colour, which he
could hear as well as see, a condition called synaesthesia.) He believed a
painting should not be analyzed intellectually but allowed to reach those parts
of the brain that connect with music.
Even so, he warned that serious art must not be lead by the desire for
abstraction into becoming mere decoration. Most German Expressionists (eg.
Ernst Kirchner, Karl Schmidt-Rottluff, Max Ernst, Alexei Jawlensky, Oskar
Kokoschka, Franz Marc, August Macke and Max Beckmann) were not abstract
painters, but their vivid palette - along with Kandinsky's theoretical writings alerted other more abstract-inclined artists to the power of colour as a means
of achieving their goals.
The parallel Parisian avant-garde style of Fauvism (1905-08) merely
underlined the effect of colour with works like Red Studio (1911, MoMA, NY)
by Henri Matisse.
works (gestural brushwork). For two interesting early works that illustrate the
differing styles of these two artists, see: Seated Woman (1944, Metropolitan
Museum of Art) by Willem de Kooning and Pasiphae (1943, Metropolitan) by
Jackson Pollock. The fact that it was the first major art movement born in the
USA, gave it added weight and significance: at least in the minds of critics.
Later, Abstract Expressionism spawned a number of individual styles under the
umbrella of Post-painterly abstraction, an anti-gesturalist trend. These
individual styles included: Hard-Edge Painting, Colour Stain Painting,
Washington Colour Movement, American Lyrical Abstraction, and Shaped
Canvas. Abstract Expressionism also provoked avant-garde responses from
several other artists including Cy Twombly (1928-2011), whose calligraphic
scribbling is part-drawing, part-graffiti; and the Californian abstract sculptor
Mark Di Suvero (b.1933) noted for his large scale iron/steel sculptures.
Europe: Art Informel, Tachisme & Cobra Group Gesturalism
In Europe, a new art movement known as Art Informel emerged during the
late 1940s. Seen as the European version of abstract expressionism, it was in
reality an umbrella movement with a number of sub-variants. These minimovements included: (1) Tachisme, a style of abstract painting marked by
splotches and dabs of colour, was promoted as the French answer to American
Abstract Expressionism. A key influence was the avant-garde American
artist Mark Tobey (1890-1976), whose all-over calligraphic painting style
anticipated that of Pollock. Important members included Jean Fautrier (18981964), Georges Mathieu (1921-2012), Pierre Soulages (b.1919), and the
Portuguese artist Maria Helena Vieira da Silva (1908-92) as well as the
American abstract expressionist Sam Francis (1923-94). (2) The avantgardeCobra Group, which practised the gestural or "action painting" style of
American Abstract Expressionism. It was founded by painters, sculptors and
graphic artists from the Danish group Host, the Dutch group Reflex, and
theBelgian Revolutionary Surrealist Group, including: Asger Jorn (1914-73),
the Belgian writer Christian Dotremont (1922-79), Pierre Alechinsky (b.1927),
Karel Appel (1921-2006) and Constant (C.A. Nieuwenhuys) (1920-2005). Pol
Bury (1922-2005) was also a member, but in 1953 he quit painting to explore
kinetic sculpture. (3) Lyrical Abstraction, a quieter, more harmonious style
ofArt Informel. Leading members included: Wols (Alfred Otto Wolfgang
Schulze) (1913-51), Hans Hartung (1904-89), Jean-Michel Atlan (1913-60),
Pierre Soulages (b.1919), Georges Mathieu (1921-2012), and Jean-Paul
Riopelle(1923-2002). Other sub-groups included Forces Nouvelles, and Art
Non Figuratif.
Op-Art: The New Geometric Abstraction
One of the most distinct styles of geometric abstract painting to emerge from
the modernist era, was the Op-Art movement (an abbreviation of 'optical art')
whose hallmark was the engagement of the eye, by means of complex, often
monochromatic, geometric patterns, to cause it to see colours and shapes that
were not actually there. Leading members included the Hungarian painter and
graphic designer Victor Vasarely (1908-97), and the English painterBridget
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