CUBISM

art movement, primarily in painting, originating in Paris c.1907.

Cubist Theory

Cubism began as an intellectual revolt against the artistic expression of previous eras. Among the specific elements abandoned by the cubists were the sensual appeal of paint texture and color, subject matter with emotional charge or mood, the play of light on form, movement, atmosphere, and the illusionism that proceeded from scientifically based perspective. To replace these they employed an analytic system in which the three-dimensional subject (usually still life) was fragmented and redefined within a shallow plane or within several interlocking and often transparent planes.

Analytic and Synthetic Cubism

In the analytic phase (1907–12) the cubist palette was severely limited, largely to black, browns, grays, and off-whites. In addition, forms were rigidly geometric and compositions subtle and intricate. Cubist abstraction as represented by the analytic works of Pablo Picasso, Georges Braque, and Juan Gris intended an appeal to the intellect. The cubists sought to show everyday objects as the mind, not the eye, perceives them—from all sides at once. The trompe l'oeil element of collage was also sometimes used.

During the later, synthetic phase of cubism (1913 through the 1920s), paintings were composed of fewer and simpler forms based to a lesser extent on natural objects. Brighter colors were employed to a generally more decorative effect, and many artists continued to use collage in their compositions. The works of Picasso, Braque, and Gris are also representative of this phase.

The Scope of Cubism

In painting the major exponents of cubism included Picasso, Braque, Jean Metzinger, Gris, Duchamp, and Léger. The chief segments of the cubist movement included the Montmartre-based Bâteau-Lavoir group of artists and poets (Max Jacob, Guillaume Apollinaire, Gertrude and Leo Stein, Modigliani, Picabia, Delaunay, Archipenko, and others); the Puteaux group of the Section d'Or salon (J. Villon, Léger, Picabia, Kupka, Marcoussis, Gleizes, Apollinaire, and others); the Orphists (Delaunay, Duchamp, Picabia, and Villon; see orphism); and the experimenters in collage who influenced cubist sculpture (Laurens and Lipchitz).

Cubist Inspiration and Influence

In painting the several sources of cubist inspiration included the later work of Cézanne; the geometric forms and compressed picture space in his paintings appealed especially to Braque, who developed them in his own works. African sculpture, particularly mask carvings, had enormous influence in the early years of the movement. Picasso's Demoiselles d'Avignon (1907; Mus. of Modern Art, New York City) is one of the most significant examples of this influence. Within this revolutionary composition lay much of the basic material of cubism.

The cubist break with the tradition of imitation of nature was completed in the works of Picasso, Braque, and their many groups of followers. While few painters remained faithful to cubism's rigorous tenets, many profited from its discipline. Although the cubist groups were largely dispersed after World War I, their collective break from visual realism had an enriching and decisive influence on the development of 20th-century art. It provided a new stylistic vocabulary and a technical idiom that remain forceful today.

Bibliography

See G. Apollinaire, The Cubist Painters (1913, tr. 1949); R. Rosenblum, Cubism and Twentieth-Century Art (rev. ed. 1967); D. Cooper, The Cubist Epoch (1971); C. Green, Cubism and Its Enemies (1987); W. Rubin, Pioneering Cubism (1989).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Cubism  - 1706 results

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CUBISM: A HISTORY AND AN ANALYSIS 1907-1914 BRAQUE B. Bottle...colle, 18 7/8" X 23 1/8" Collection Lady Hulton, London CUBISM A HISTORY AND AN ANALYSIS 1907-1944 by JOHN GOLDING...I. THE HISTORY AND CHRONOLOGY OF CUBISM 19 II. PICASSO AND BRAQUE...
CUBISM AND TWENTIETH-CENTURY ART CUBISM and TWENTIETH-CENTURY ART Robert Rosenblum Department of...CONTENTS PART ONE THE FOUNDATIONS OF CUBISM I Picasso and Braque, 1905-1908...
...TWENTIETH CENTURY PAINTERS FROM CUBISM TO ABSTRACT ART Translated by...searchings and, singularly, those of Cubism, the various methods of this opposition...from these two forms of opposition to Cubism, there exists a third which cannot be...
...Bibliographical Notes on Apollinaire and Cubism: by Bernard Karpel, Librarian, The...The Movement: Early works on Cubism. Selected references in French, German...Preliminary Notice: Some speak as if all cubism had been a mode of showing an object from...
...Futurism -- The Second Apollonian Stream: Cubism, from Cezanne to Picasso; from Picasso...discontinuous and reasoned forms of Cubism. The same spirit inspired both these transformations...the subject into working drawings. The Cubism of Leger in particular, with the tubular...
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"Hemingways in Our Time: Cubism, Conservation, and the Suspension of...comparison of Hemingways stories and Cubism fruitful for what it tells us about...his work. The liberated tone of early Cubism stands in stark contrast to the restrictive...
...the Cubist Painters; Apollinaire and Cubism. by Vincent Aurora Peter...The Cubist Painters; Apollinaire and Cubism; Artists Bookworks; East Sussex, England...French text, then Reads own Apollinaire and Cubism, a chapter by chapter commentary. The...
...the Cubist Painters; Apollinaire and Cubism. by Vincent Aurora Peter...The Cubist Painters; Apollinaire and Cubism; Artists Bookworks; East Sussex, England...French text, then Reads own Apollinaire and Cubism, a chapter by chapter commentary. The...
...Entirety: Gertrude Stein and Picasso and Cubism. by Jamie Hilder THIS IS THIS...can take an art historical term such as Cubism, which has a (more or less) clearly...portraiture inside her own ideas about cubism and literary portraiture. The linking...
Bruce Adams. Rustic Cubism: Anne Dangar and the Art Colony at Moly-Sabata...Vaughan Hart Bruce Adams. Rustic Cubism: Anne Dangar and the Art Colony at Moly-Sabata...incongruous match, but from its inception Cubism had sought to shatter artists preoccupation...
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"Inheriting Cubism: The Impact of Cubism on American Art, 1909-1936" by Daniel Kunitz "Inheriting Cubism: The Impact of Cubism on American Art, 1909-1936," at Hollis Taggert Galleries, New York. November 28, 2001-January 12, 2002...
Crossing Cultures with Cubism. by Debra Lott The study of Cubism is an excellent approach to influence and inspire high school students with artworks of a diverse time. Cubism not only changed the existing art society of the early...
Braque, Picasso and Early Cubism. by Arthur C. Danto Braques...to geometrical schema, to cubes." "Cubism" had become art world jargon in Paris...title "Picasso and Braque: Pioneering Cubism." Since the order of names is not alphabetical...
Cubism. by Guy Hubbard THINGS TO LEARN * A distinctly new kind of art first appeared in 1907. It was called "Cubism." It began in Paris, France, with a Frenchman, Georges...artists, most importantly Robert Delaunay and Juan Gris. * Cubism was the first art movement of many that appeared throughout...
"Czech Cubism, 1912-1916" at the Rupertinum, Salzburg...communicate. Braque and Picasso pioneered Cubism in Paris in 1907. Their innovations were...absorbed not only the pictorial language of Cubism but also its ethic of radical innovation...
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Cubism? This Tate; the Arts. Byline: BRIAN SEWELL WITH...that the gallery was to mount an exhibition with the title Cubism and its Legacy, my eyes widened with excitement and anticipation...shoulder to tame his wilder excesses, Leger edging from Cubism to Tubism, Juan Gris on the sidelines, bringing the ideas...
What an Ugly Business; Cubism at Its Purest: Picassos Dryad, a Painting...hindlegs, just risen from all fours, is Cubism at its purest, simplest, freshest,most...the false logic of later aspects of Cubism still years away. She isthe colour of...
A Fresh Soup of Stock Cubism; Excitement Lies Behind Muted Hues: Thomas Scheibitzs E Elements...Here we have the angular physiognomies and round headsof synthetic Cubism, the saturated colour and diagonals of Constructivistgraphics and the...
The Tate Lyle? Artist Tries Cubism of the Sugar Variety. Byline: BILL MOULAND IT is, apparently, an exploration of the universal quality of the box - or something...
...Excellence from the US and UK: Left, Charles and Ray Eames Postwar Sideboard; above, a Christopher Dresser Teapot from 1879 Cubism 50 Years Ahead of Its Time. Byline: ROWAN MOORE EXHIBITION Design Cities Design Museum, SE1 .. THE theme of Design Cities...
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encyclopedia articles on: Cubism  - 44 results

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CUBISM art movement, primarily in painting, originating in Paris c.1907. Cubist Theory Cubism began as an intellectual revolt against the artistic expression...and often transparent planes. Analytic and Synthetic Cubism In the analytic phase (1907 12) the cubist palette was...
...1909, Delaunay had progressed from a neoimpressionist phase to cubism, applying cubist principles to the exploration of color. He...This amalgam of fauve color, futurist dynamism, and analytical cubism sought to emulate the rhythms but not the appearance of nature...
PEVSNER, ANTOINE aNtwan pyevz n r, 1886 1962, Russian sculptor and painter. He was influenced by cubism while in Paris in 1911 and 1913. During World War I he was in Norway with his brother Naum Gabo . They returned to Moscow after...
...PICABIA, FRANCIS peka bea, 1878 1953, French painter. After working in an impressionist style, Picabia was influenced by cubism and later was one of the original exponents of Dada in Europe and the United States. He contributed to avant-garde periodicals...
RICHTER, HANS hans rikh t r, 1888 1976, American artist, b. Germany. A painter and filmmaker, Richter was influenced by cubism and Dada and was a member of the Dutch de Stijl group (see Stijl, de ). His preoccupation with continuity led him first...
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