Movement of abstract painting that emerged in New York City during the mid-1940s and attained singular prominence in American art in the following decade.
From The Reader's Companion to American History The Ashcan school of art evolved during the early years of the twentieth century in New York City. The core of the movement was formed by “the Eight”—Robert Henri, Arthur B. Davies, Maurice Prendergast, Ernest Lawson, William Glackens, Everett Shinn, John Sloan, and George Luks.
An international Expressionist movement founded in Paris in 1948. The name is an acronym of Copenhagen, Brussels and Amsterdam, the native cities of the artists involved, which included the Dane Asgar Jorn, the Dutchmen Karel Appel, Corneille and George Constant, and the Belgian Pierre Alecinsky.
Movement in painting that originated in France in the 1860s and had enormous influence in European and North American painting in the late 19th century.
Movement in modern art that took its imagery from the glossy world of advertising and from popular culture such as comic strips, films, and television.
Movement in art, literature, and film that developed out of Dada around 1922. Led by André Breton, who produced the Surrealist Manifesto (1924), the surrealists were inspired by the thoughts and visions of the subconscious mind.
Nonrepresentational art. Ornamental art without figurative representation occurs in most cultures. The modern abstract movement in sculpture and painting emerged in Europe and North America between 1910 and 1920.
From Bloomsbury Guide to Art A term first used by the Italian critic Germano Celant in 1967 to characterize the work of certain artists exhibiting at the Galleria La Bertesca, Genoa, who rejected the traditional iconography and materials of fine art.
Type of modern art in which the idea or ideas that a work expresses are considered its essential point, with its visual appearance being of secondary (often negligible) importance.
From Bloomsbury Guide to Art Sometimes known as earthwork, after a 1969 exhibition at Cornell University. A development in the late 1960s based on the concept that geography and land should be the materials of art, not merely the location.
From The Thames & Hudson Dictionary of Art and Artists Term used to describe certain U.S. 19th-century landscape painters, e.g. Lane, Heade and Kensett in certain of his works, as Lake George, 1869.
From Bloomsbury Guide to Art The term favoured and propagated by Mathieu to describe the expressive abstraction associated with the School of Paris after the Second World War, and to distinguish it from geometric abstraction.
Art created from the 19th cent. to the mid-20th cent. by artists who veered away from the traditional concepts and techniques of painting, sculpture, and other fine arts that had been practiced since the Renaissance.
Type of abstract or semi-abstract painting practised by a group of artists in Paris between 1911 and 1914. Orphism owed much to the fragmented forms of cubism (indeed it is sometimes called Orphic cubism).
From The Hutchinson Unabridged Encyclopedia Style of painting and sculpture popular in the late 1960s and 1970s, especially in the USA, characterized by intense, photographic realism and attention to minute detail.