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Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20 th Century Art c.1900-c.1945

Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

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Page 1: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Art Appreciation

Topic IX:

Early 20th Century

Art

c.1900-c.1945

Page 2: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Early British Modernism (c.1900-c.1915)

Early U.S. Modernism (c.1900-c.1929)

Pre-War Vienna and German Expressionism (c.1900-1930s)

École de Paris

Fauvism (1905-1907)

Cubism (1907-1920s)

Futurism, Orphism and Rayonism (c.1909-c.1916)

The Birth of Abstract Art

Constructivism (1915-mid 1920s)

Dada (1915-c.1922)

Bauhaus (1919-1923)

Surrealism (1920-late 1940s)

Neue Sachlichkeit (“New Objectivity”; 1923-early 1930s)

Avant Garde in Britain and the U.S.

Realism and Figurative Painting in the U.S. and Europe

Naïve Painting

Mexican Art

Art in the Early 20th Century:

Page 3: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Art changed completely in the 20th

century. With the

birth of Modernism, a rapid succession of “isms” followed,

movements in which artists rejected naturalism—representing

the physical world realistically—and academic art—with its

emphasis on classical traditions. Instead, they experimented

with technique and form, questioning the very nature of art and

humanity.

At the turn of the century, the dramatic winds of

Modernism swept over the English Channel, exciting a

generation of British painters and sculptors—before World War I

destroyed the spirit of optimism. Virtually the whole generation

of British Modernists were educated at the Slade School of Fine

Art in London. Founded in 1871 by Felix Slade, it overtook the

Royal Academy as the most important art school in the country.

British Modernism reached its height just before World

War I. Conventional subject matter began to be superseded by

abstract painting and sculpture, including non-representational

easel paintings, colorful geometrical images and sculpture

reduced to simplified forms. The boldness of British Modernism,

however, was shattered by the war, and with few exceptions,

the work of this generation of artists declined markedly

afterwards.

Page 4: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Self-

Portrait

by

John

Page 5: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

The Café

Royal

by

Ginner

Page 6: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Ennui

by

Sickert

Page 7: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Torso in

Metal

from “The

Rock

Drill”

by

Epstein

Page 8: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Hieratic

Head of

Ezra

Pound

by

Gaudier-

Brzeska

Page 9: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Workshop

by

Lewis

Page 10: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

La

Mitrailleuse

by

Nevinson

Page 11: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Mrs.

Mounter at

the

Breakfast

Table

by

Gilman

Page 12: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

The

Marchese

Casati

by

John

Page 13: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Dazzle

Ships in

Drydock at

Liverpool

by

Wadsworth

Page 14: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Hilda and I at Pond Street by Spencer

Page 15: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

The Vorticists at the Restaurant de la Tour Eiffel, Spring 1915

by Roberts

Page 16: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

By the end of the 19th

century, the U.S. had forged its

own history, and writers had succeeded in creating a distinctive

American voice. To do the same for painting, artists opted to

engage with the new realities of city life and the challenging

ideas coming from Europe.

Around 1900, America experienced rapid population

growth and urbanization. City life became the central theme of

a group of young realist painters who became known as the

“Ashcan School” because they depicted the unglamorous life of

street life. They were the first representatives of U.S.

Modernism, although their style was conservative by European

standards.

Many American artists went to Paris or Rome to study

fine arts, and visiting exhibitions played a key role in changing

the American art world. By the end of the 1920s, a number of

American artists had been influenced by the most advanced

European tendencies. The forms of Modern art could be

equated with the machines that were transforming American

life.

Fragmentation in the paintings of some artists of the

period reflect the hectic bustle of city life, while others came

close to total abstraction.

Page 17: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Snow in

New

York

by

Henri

Page 18: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Composition

with Three

Figures

by

Weber

Page 19: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

McSorley’s Bar by Sloan

Page 22: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

I Saw the

Figure

Five in

Gold

by

Demuth

Page 23: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Foghorns by Dove

Page 24: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Beginning at the turn of the 20th

century, Pre-War Vienna

was the epicenter for music, literature, and the visual arts. The city

became a magnet for free-thinking artists from across Europe.

At times, this cultural environment led to conflict and

scandal. A pulsating metropolis of nearly two million inhabitants,

Vienna was also a deeply divided city. While the poor were packed

into tenement buildings, the aristocracy, barons of commerce, and

senior civil servants lived in splendid apartments.

By 1900, an extensive program of public works had been

completed, providing an underground train system, new tramways,

public buildings, and electric street lighting. Much of the new

construction was designed in the “Jugedenstil,” the German term

for Art Nouveau. Working alongside architects, leading artists

designed interiors with Symbolist motifs, such as elegant floral

patterns and sinuous female forms.

Vienna was also a vibrant café society, where artists and

their friends met to discuss projects, artistic events abroad, and the

controversial ideas of the day, such as those of Sigmund Freud, the

Viennese founder of psychoanalysis. Upright Viennese citizens

believed Freud’s theories concerning primal sexual urges and the

meaning of dreams were immoral. It was in this realm of sex and

nudity that artists would engage in battles with Viennese notions of

decency.

Page 25: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

The

Kiss

by

Klimt

Page 26: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Death

and Life

by

Klimt

Page 27: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Dead

Mother

by

Shiele

Page 29: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

In the early 20th

century, the classical ideals of academies

and the rapidly aging Art Nouveau style held artistic vision in

Germany in a stranglehold. Inevitably, any new movement would

have to be violently different, and that movement was

Expressionism. What distinguished German Expressionist art

was its emphasis on the highly personal psychological and

emotional response of the artist to the subject, and not the subject

itself.

A handful of young architecture students from Dresden

formed “Die Brüke” (“The Bridge”), naming their group after the

German philosopher Nietzsche. They shared Nietzsche’s view that

many was a bridge to a better world—and because Dresden was

famous for its bridges. Their bright, acid colors—set against each

other to create a sense of edge—and heavily distorted outline

pushed art decisively away from naturalism.

Almost at the same time, another style of Expressionism

was being formed in Munich, which took its name from an almanac

published by the group of artists called “Der Blaue Reiter” (“The

Blue Rider). Believing that creativity was not found in academic art,

they printed pictures of ancient Egyptian artifacts, children’s

drawings, and the newest artistic innovations alongside each other.

They sought to return society to a state of harmony that they felt

had been lost in the process of modernization.

Page 30: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Portrait of

Alexander

Sakharoff

by

von

Jawlensky

Page 31: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Masks

by

Nolde

Page 32: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Kneeling

Woman

by

Lehmbruck

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Page 34: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

The Fate of

Animals

by Marc

Page 35: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Berlin

Street

Scene

by

Kirchner

Page 36: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Woman

with a

Bag

by

Schmidt-

Rottluff

Page 37: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

The

Avenger

by

Barlach

Page 38: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art
Page 39: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art
Page 40: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Death

Seizing

a

Woman

by

Kollwitz

Page 41: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

There had not been an artistic hub like Paris since

Renaissance Florence, and from 1904 to 1929, it was the

most important artistic center. Of all European cities, Paris

had by far the largest art market with upward of 100 private

galleries.

In time, the notion of a specifically Parisian artistic

phenomenon arose: an École de Paris (“School of Paris”).

Foreign painters, sculptors, art dealers and publicists from

abroad descended on the city and settled among the

resident French artists, both native Parisians and those who

had arrived from the provinces.

However, this school was not an art movement

linked by a manifesto, training, or shared political views.

Rather it was a group of artists who were united by a desire

to follow a bohemian lifestyle, share their experiences, and

choose, if they wanted, to attend Paris’s numerous art

academies and open studios. In this way, a wide variety of

artists found common ground.

Page 42: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Paris

Through

the

Window

by

Chagall

Page 43: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

The

Promenade

by

Chagall

Page 44: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

The

Green

Violinist

by

Chagall

Page 45: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Jeanne

Hébuterne

in Red

Shawl

by

Modigliani

Page 46: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Woman in

Red

by

Soutine

Page 47: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Fauvism exploded onto the Paris art scene in 1905.

Its bright, pure colors, flattened perspective, and simplified

detail signalled a new era. Unwittingly, a small group of

French artists had developed the first modern art movement.

The Fauves were a group of friends who sought a

more dynamic way of depicting nature. They experimented

with bold, non-naturalistic color and applied their paint in

short, energetic strokes, which prompted them to be dubbed

“Les Fauves,” or “Wild Beasts.”

For all the impression of wildness, however, the

Fauves soon revealed they were more interested in solid,

permanent structure than violent expression or the

impressionist “fleeting moment.” Pure color—sometimes

softened with a touch of white—was applied in little dabs and

strokes. The canvas was left bare in places to act as color

itself.

By 1906-07, the parameters of Fauvism had shifted to

include line to define shape and larger blocks of more muted

color. The human form replaced landscape as the focal point

of their paintings. Some of the Fauves stayed with their

original style, but their approach was generally less daring.

Page 48: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

The Bar

by

Vlaminck

Page 49: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

The Joy of Life by Matisse

Page 50: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Harmony

in Red by

Matisse

Page 51: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

The Pink Nude by Matisse

Page 52: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Woman

in a

Chemise

by

Derain

Page 53: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Nude with

Raised

Arm

by

Rouault

Page 55: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

In the space of just a few years, Cubism overturned many of

the visual conventions that had dominated Western art since the

Renaissance. Initially the project of a handful of painters working in

Paris, it laid the groundwork for innovative art for over 50 years.

By the beginning of the 20th

century, Europe’s most advanced

painters were becoming less concerned with creating an illusion of

depth and volume in their work. Artists had grown increasingly

aware of alternatives to art of the Western tradition and how it

challenged Western art’s ideas of naturalism and beauty. By

experimenting with representations of objects and space, Cubism

broke down these conventions by representing their subjects in

terms of block-like forms.

Cubism eventually evolved from complex and fragmented

forms that were shattered and reconstituted on the picture surface

to simple flat planes of color and abstract forms. Most Cubist

paintings used a limited range of colors, preferring to concentrate

on the analysis of form, but late Cubism became more colorful and

exuberant.

The lack of concern for subject matter has led to Cubism

being described as an attempt to achieve a kind of “pure visual

music.” Rather than seeing the subject from a single point of view,

painters combined different angles and aspects of a subject. The

images created have to be deciphered, requiring the viewer to

become an active participant.

Page 56: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

The Old

Guitarist

by

Picasso

Page 57: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Acrobat

and Young

Harlequin

by

Picasso

Page 58: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Les

Damoiselles

d’Avignon

by

Picasso

Page 59: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Three

Musicians

by

Picasso

Page 60: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Guernica by Picasso

Page 62: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Man with a

Guitar

by

Braque

Page 63: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Man in a

Café

by

Gris

Page 64: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Sailor with Guitar by Lipchitz

Page 65: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art
Page 66: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Brooklyn

Bridge

by

Gleizes

Page 67: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Woman

Combing

Her Hair

by

Archipenko

Page 68: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art
Page 69: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

The

Mechanic

by

Leger

Page 70: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Head of

a Young

Girl

by

Laurens

Page 71: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

In the years before World War I in Europe, the Futurists, the

Orphists, and the Rayonists all believed that a new form of art was

needed for changing society. Although their theories were not the same,

they all pushed painting in the direction of totally abstract art.

The development of Futurism (1909-c.1916) overlapped with that

of Cubism. Futurist painters proclaimed themselves “the primitives of a

new and transformed sensibility.” They combined some elements of

Neoimpressionism (such as pointillist brushwork) with photographic

analysis and the fractured forms of Cubism. They also used

unnaturalistic color to heighten the impact of the work on the viewer,

and “force-lines” to convey movement and draw the viewer into the

picture.

Orphism (1911-c.1914) was a term coined by the critic

Guillaume Apollinaire in 1912 to describe a more colorful and abstract

form of Cubism associated with music. Orphist artists were inspired by

complementary color theory to develop increasingly abstract paintings

based around color blocks and discs, and were a key advance toward

artistic abstraction.

Rayonism (1912-c.1914) was a short-lived Russian movement,

which attempted to synthesize the discoveries of Cubism, Futurism, and

Orphism into a single artistic language. Characterized by rhythmically

interacting shafts of color, Rayonist paintings provided a crucial step in

the development of Russian abstract art.

Page 72: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

La Ville de Paris by Delaunay

Page 73: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Revolt by Russolo

Page 74: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Dynamism of a Dog on a Leash by Balla

Page 75: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Speed of a Motorcycle by Balla

Page 76: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Blue

Dancer

by

Severini

Page 77: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Unique

Forms of

Continuity

in Space

by

Boccioni

Page 78: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art
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The Cyclist by Goncharova

Page 80: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Interventionist

Manifestation

by

Carra

Page 81: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Art without subject matter was a revolutionary concept in the

early 20th

century. Identifiable people and objects were replaced by

floating shapes—some resembling creatures, other geometric—blocks of

color so big that they filled an entire canvas, and vertical and horizontal

lines.

In the first decade of the 20th

century, Fauvist and Expressionist

artists had removed the connection between the colors they used to

represent nature and nature itself. The Cubists had divided objects into

multiple planes, challenging dimensions of space, and the Futurists

challenged concepts of time.

Until 1910, these artists had kept within the bounds of concrete

reality—they had depicted recognizable subjects. The biggest leap of all

would be removing any reference to the world of identifiable objects.

The foundation of art was reproducing some facet of the world as the

artists saw it. It would be no simple matter to take the decisive step

towards abstraction—art without representation.

Abstract artists were united by one urge. They wanted to

oppose the self-limiting material values that they felt dominated society

with a new, profound set of spiritual ideals. Their approach to creativity

was steeped in ancient philosophy, esoteric Eastern beliefs, and new

mystical writings. Music, which was abstract, ordered, and emotionally

charged, provided a guide for abstract artists.

Page 82: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Composition VII by Kandinsky

Page 83: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Black

Square

by

Malevich

Page 84: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Three

Girls

by

Malevich

Page 85: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

The Kiss

by

Brancusi

Page 86: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Endless

Column

by

Brancusi

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Page 88: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Bird in

Space

by

Brancusi

Page 89: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Composition

in Red,

Black, Blue,

and Yellow

by

Mondrian

Page 90: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

When the Russian Revolution took place in 1917, there was

already a group of progressive artists prepared to help build a new

communist society. Such a task required a new artistic language

that could encapsulate the ideals of the revolution, and that

language was Constructivism.

Constructivism can be traced to Vladmir Tatlin’s achievement

after visiting Picasso’s Paris studio in 1914. Tatlin’s achievement

was to transform the painted Cubism that he saw there into “real

materials in space.” He began by making wall-mounted “painted

reliefs” that employed metal, string, and wood projecting out of the

surface. By 1915, he was creating free-hanging sculptures, in which

natural materials were used for their color, texture, and shape.

The emphasis on materials became more meaningful after

the workers’ state had been established. Wood, metal, glass, and

plastics were used in industry, so when artists used these materials,

they were cementing their bond with the working people. By 1919,

Constructivism had gained the Communist Party’s backing.

By 1920-21, however, a political division developed between

those Constructivists who believed that artists should maintain a

personal involvement with the creative process, and those who

believed that artists were “intellectual workers.” This led to some

artists leaving Russia for the West to make “pure art,” while those

who remained placed their talents at the service of the new regime.

Page 91: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Constructed

Head No. 2

by

Gabo

Page 92: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art
Page 93: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Beat the

Whites with

the Red Edge

by Lissitzky

Page 94: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Monument to

the Third

International

by

Tatlin

Page 95: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art
Page 96: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Hanging Construction No. 12 (left) and Spatial Construction

No. 12 (right) by Rodchenko

Page 97: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Head

by

Pevsner

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Dada was a richly subversive art movement that developed

at the time of World War I as a protest against bourgeois

conventions and the folly of war. The aim of the Dadaists was to

destroy traditional values in art and to create new art to replace the

old.

Dada started in 1916 in Zurich where Hugo Ball, a German

actor, musician, theatrical producer, and playwright established a

small music hall called the Cabaret Voltaire. He was soon joined by

other émigrés, and the group chose the name Dada—French for

“hobby horse”—randomly from a French-German dictionary.

The Dadaists loudly rejected the old artistic structures and

set out to scandalize and outrage their audience. They composed,

printed, and performed nonsense poetry and songs, and produced

imagery and objects designed to shock the viewer. More than any

previous art movement, Dada rejected established institutions.

When the war ended, the Dada spirit quickly spread to

Cologne, Berlin, and Hanover, then finally settled in Paris. By 1921,

most of the important Dadaists had gathered in the French capital

around the poet and critic André Breton.

Dada challenged the rules of art. Everyday objects as art,

political collage, the use of chance and playful metaphysics—all

these energized the movement. The Dada group dissolved in 1921,

but many of the artists went on to become Surrealists.

Page 100: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Nude

Descending

a Staircase,

No. 2

by

Duchamp

Page 101: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Fountain

by

Duchamp

Page 102: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Girl Born without a Mother by Picabia

Page 103: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Collage

with

Squares

Arranged

According

to the Laws

of Chance

by

Arp

Page 104: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Enak’s

Tears

by

Arp

Page 105: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Rayograph/

Rayogram

by

Man Ray

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Merzbau by Vitters

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Adolph

the

Superman

by

Heartfield

Page 111: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Founded in Germany in 1919, the Bauhaus School

of Art and Design was the vision of modernist architect

Walter Gropius. Established in the city of Weimer, the

Bauhaus (“Building House”) school aimed to overcome the

prejudice that raised high art over lowly design.

The school survived shortages of funds, political

instability, and occasional internal divisions. It was twice

forced tor relocate and produced just 500 graduates in 14

years, yet it was the 20th

century’s most influential school

of design. Classes were held in workshops with

apprentices taking a compulsory preliminary class before

moving on after six months to train in the field of their

choice.

Students studied color theory, practical use of

materials, draftsmanship, painting, and photomontage.

After 1925, the school’s focus shifted from craft to

industrial design. New products, such as ceiling lamps,

cantilever chairs, and furniture suitable for office or home,

were designed by Bauhaus technicians and produced by

companies who owned large-scale factories.

Page 112: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

The

Green

Bridge II

by

Feininger

Page 113: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Light-

Space

Modulator

by

Moholy-

Nagy

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Triadic Ballet by Schlemmer

Page 116: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Senecio

by

Klee

Page 117: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Castle and Sun by Klee

Page 118: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Homage

to the

Square:

Soft

Spoken

(1969)

by

Albers

Page 119: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Nesting Tables by Albers

Page 120: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Surrealism started as a literary and political movement but

had a profound effect on art, photography, and film. Influenced by

the political writings of Karl Marx and Sigmund Freud’s work on

psychology, it aimed to uncover the repressed subconscious using

dreamlike imagery that challenged perceptions of authority.

The Surrealist movement was started in Paris by the poet

and critic André Breton, who published the first Surrealist

Manifesto and launched the journal La Révolution Surréaliste in

1924. Breton and his fellow writers wanted to free the imagination

by tapping into the unconscious mind through automatic writing, a

process of free association, in their poetry and prose.

Breton found support for his ideas in the visual arts.

Although there was no single style of Surrealist art, there are two

dominant strands: strange objects in dreamlike settings to create a

hallucinatory effect, and those using free association, which the

Surrealists called automatism. The latter was achieved by such

means as staring at a pattern until a hallucination occurred.

The Surrealists sometimes incorporated photography in

their work as they were able to link the real and surreal by

manipulating photographic techniques, or simply using it to isolate

the unexpected. Taboo-breaking images of sexuality, violence, and

blasphemy also were common.

Page 121: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Love

Song

by

de

Chirico

Page 122: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

The Mystery

and

Melancholy

of a

Street

by

de Chirico

Page 123: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

Harlequin’s Carnival by Miró

Page 124: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

The Accommodations of Desire

by Dalí

Page 125: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

The Persistence of Memory by Dalí

Page 126: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

The Face

of Mae

West

by

Dalí

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Lobster Telephone by Dalí

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The Sleep by Dalí

Page 129: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

The

Human

Condition

by

Magritte

Page 130: Art Appreciation Topic IX: Early 20th Century Art

The Man

in the

Bowler

Hat

by

Magritte

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Luncheon in Fur by Oppenheim

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Gradiva by

Masson

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The

Robing of

the Bride

by

Ernst

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The

Jungle

by

Lam

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Impossible III

by

Martins

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Creation of

the Birds

by Varo

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When Expressionism’s passion was nearly spent, and

angry Dada risked becoming merely chic entertainment, German

art had to take a long hard look at itself and the role it played in

society. Neue Saclichkeit (“New Objectivity”) was just that look.

Also known as New Realism, this movement was characterized by

a newfound attention to the realistic representation of objects in

a detailed way.

There was no specific style, nor even a shared political

perspective, though certain artists were deeply angered by

society’s callousness and wished to place their art at the service

of their indignation. New Objectivity is perhaps best seen as a

reaction to what had gone before.

The unifying subject that artists were concerned with was

people. They painted either portraits with a cool, analytical

detachment or groups of figures, often at social gatherings. Some

made searing social commentaries by juxtaposing individuals of

radically different social status in the same frame to show

disgust with social division or with human rottenness. Other

artists painted with a desire to reveal what they felt behind

surface appearances, creating art with a sense of nostalgia,

almost melancholy, in their arrangements of classically posed

figures.

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The

Lovesick

Man

by

Grosz

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The Pillars

of Society

by

Grosz

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Night by

Beckmann

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Portrait of

the Dancer

Anita Berber

by

Dix

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Portrait of

the

Journalist

Sylvia von

Harden

by

Dix

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Metropolis by Dix

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Agosta

and Rasha

by

Schad

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Between the wars, Britain and the U.S. produced a

variety of avant-garde artists. They looked to Paris and

European modernism for inspiration, but they produced art that

reflected their own national backgrounds.

Ben Nicholson and Barbara Hepworth were at the

forefront of the British avant-garde movement. After traveling

through France and visiting cutting-edge artists, in 1933 they

helped establish Unit One, the first British modernist movement

to embrace art, design and architecture. Unit One organized

exhibitions across Britain, which sparked debate and polarized

opinion on modern art. British avant-garde painters and

sculptors tended toward abstraction, but they also continued the

tradition of British landscape art.

Two American artists—Alexander Calder and Stuart

Davis—were also connected to the European avant-garde. Both

artists lived in Paris in the late 1920s. The random motion of

Calder’s steel and wire sculptures was influenced by Dadaists

and Surrealists, but they were also indebted to American folk

art. Davis was inspired by Cubism, but his subject matter was

distinctly American. Unlike his British contemporaries, Davis

celebrated the urban world in joyous, decorative paintings that

depicted modern buildings, neon lights, street signs, posters,

and commercial packaging.

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Mobile by Calder

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1933

(guitar)

by

Nicholson

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The Mellow Pad by Davis

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Pelagos by Hepworth

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Family of Man by Hepworth

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Portrait of Winston Churchill

by Sutherland

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Draped Reclining Mother and Baby by Moore

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In the 1920s and 1930s, a number of artists resisted the trend

toward abstraction, preferring to work more conventionally while still

reflecting contemporary life. Figurative painters in Europe and

America continued the tradition of Realism, but in several diverse

styles.

Both painting styles portray social reality and truth rather than

aesthetics and ideals. Many 20th

-century painters reflected their time

period in the choice of subject matter and in the styles they adopted,

continuing a tradition of representational art that still exists today.

Realist and figurative painting had two principle sources: 19th

century social realism by previous artists who were concerned with

representing everyday working life, and the revival of the classical style

in Europe following World War I, a tendency associated with nationalism

and political conservatism. As well as nostalgic rural genre paintings

and landscapes, there was an emergence of realistically-depicted urban

scenes and interiors reflecting an ever increasing industrialized

environment and the psychological tensions of the modern world.

In America, the realism of the Ashcan school was followed by a

gentler and more nostalgic figurative style during the Depression years

on the part of the American regionalists, although it would resurface

again in other artists. Precisionist painters were influenced by

photography, but many also developed their own naturalistic style.

Representational painting in Europe also had regional variations, but

some form of realism continued into the 20th

century across most of the

continent.

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The

Clowns by

Solana

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Skyscrapers

by

Sheeler

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Bucks County Barn

by Sheeler

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Baptism in

Kansas by

Curry

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Tornado Over Kansas by Curry

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Tragic Prelude by Curry

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Jack in the

Pulpit

No. IV

by

O’Keeffe

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Red,

White,

and

Blue

by

O’Keeffe

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American

Gothic

by

Wood

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The

Ballad of

the

Jealous

Lover of

Lone

Green

Valley

by

Benton

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The

Guitar

Lesson

by

Balthus

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The Mountain by Balthus

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Nighthawks by Hopper

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Freedom

from

Want

by

Rockwell

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The Problem We All Live With by

Rockwell

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Awakening by Pirandello

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Going to Work by Lowry

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With the revolutionary changes in art at the start of the 20th

century came a reappraisal of previously dismissed genres, including

Naïve painting, sometimes confusingly known as Primitive art. The

lack of training of Naïve artists was recognized as a strength rather

than a shortcoming, giving their work a refreshing spontaneity and

directness.

Naïve painting can be loosely defined as the work of artists

with little or no formal training, but it does not imply an amateur

status. When this style entered the mainstream of fine art, it was

adopted by formally-educated artists, who might be more properly

labeled “pseudo-” or “faux-naïve.”

Naïve artists were largely untouched by trends in the art

world. Their influence on mainstream art, however, has been

considerable. Unlike many 20th

-century artists, Naïve painters are

often motivated by their interest in a subject. Frequently, there is a

preoccupation with the past. Although some have aspired to emulate

academic painters, the common stylistic elements come from their

lack of training in conventional techniques. The composition is often

simple and instinctive, sometimes to the point of being wildly

unstructured. This unsophisticated quality is intensified by a lack of

scientific perspective.

Naïve paintings are also frequently crowded with detail—

especially awkwardly drawn figures—contrasting with flat areas of

paint. Combined with a tendency to use bright, unnaturalistic colors,

this gives Naïve art a vitality and a childlike innocence.

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The

Snake

Charmer

by

Rousseau

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The Dream by Rousseau

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The Steamer by Wallis

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Les

Grandes

Marguerites

by

Séraphine

de Senlis

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Deux Grandes

Marguerites

by

Séraphine de

Senlis

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The Quilting Bee by Grandma Moses

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Terrestrial Paradise by Bigaud

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The Chicken Vendor by Bigaud

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Drinkies

by

Cook

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Shoe

Shop

by

Cook

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Fueled by protest after centuries of colonial occupation,

Mexican art is a rich blend of diverse sources, and reflects a

complex mixture of historic and social factors. European influences

became a point of contention at the beginning of the 20th

century

after the Mexican Revolution (1910-20) challenged artists to form a

unique national identity.

From panoramic murals to modest still lifes, Mexico’s people

and culture were at the ideological center of art production. Looking

at their Pre-Columbian past and indigenous populations with fresh

eyes (now freed from European value judgments), Mexican artists

began to incorporate the nature, people and culture around them

instead of emulating foreign trends.

Art that focused on all things Mexican became an important

part of the search for national identity. American Indian holidays,

costume, and folk art became a source of inspiration. These motifs

were often mixed with references to ancient gods, religious

practices and the distinctive Mexican landscape. Some artists also

portrayed the cruelties and injustices of the Spanish Conquest.

Although no one style was ever promoted or followed,

Mexican art retains a distinctive look and a unique color palette.

Moreover, the far-reaching influence of Mexican muralism on art

throughout Latin America and all over the world cannot be

underestimated.

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Calavera Catrina by Posada

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The Grinder

by Rivera

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Nude

with

Calla

Lilies

by

Rivera

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Fresco mural at the top of the National Palace grand staircase,

Mexico City by Rivera (1928)

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Emiliana

Zapata

by

Siqueiros

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Echo of a

Scream

by

Siqueiros

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Man of Fire by

Orozco

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The

Two

Fridas

by

Kahlo

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Self-Portrait

with Thorn

Necklace and

Hummingbird

by

Kahlo

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Self-

Portrait

as

Tehuana

or Diego

on My

Mind

by

Kahlo

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The

Broken

Column

by

Kahlo

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Trovador

by

Tamayo

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The

Watermelon

Eater

by

Tamayo

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Moon Dog by Tamayo