The
history of painting
reaches back in time to artifacts from pre-historic humans, and
spans all cultures, that represents a continuous, though disrupted,
tradition from Antiquity. Across cultures, and spanning continents
and millennia, the history of painting is an ongoing river of
creativity, that continues into the 21st century. Until the early
20th century it relied primarily on
representational,
religious and
classical motifs, after which time more
purely
abstract and
conceptual approaches gained favor.
Developments in Eastern painting historically parallel those in
Western painting, in general, a few
centuries earlier.
African art,
Islamic art,
Indian
art,
Chinese art, and
Japanese art each had significant influence on
Western art, and, eventually, vice-versa.
Recommended articles: 20th century Western painting,
Painting, Outline of painting
history.
Pre-history
Image:CavePainting1.jpg|
Cave
PaintingImage:Bhimbetka.JPG|Rock Shelters of
Bhimbetka
, rock painting,
Stone Age, IndiaImage:lascaux2.jpg|Lascaux
,
HorseImage:Paleo ptg
lascaux unicorn.jpg|Lascaux
,
UnicornImage:Lascaux
painting.jpg|Lascaux
, Bulls
and HorsesImage:Rock art bull.jpg|Spanish cave painting
of
BullsImage:Haljesta.jpg|
Petroglyphs, from Sweden,
Nordic Bronze Age (painted)
Image:GreatGalleryedit.jpg|Pictographs from the Great Gallery, Canyonlands
National Park, Horseshoe Canyon,
Utah
, c. 1500 BCE
The oldest known paintings are at the
Grotte
Chauvet
in France, claimed by some historians to be about
32,000 years old. They are engraved and painted using
red ochre and black pigment and show
horses, rhinoceros, lions, buffalo, mammoth or humans often
hunting. There are examples of
cave
paintings all over the world—in France, India, Spain, Portugal,
China, Australia etc. Various conjectures have been made as to the
meaning these paintings had to the people that made them.
Prehistoric men may have painted animals to "catch" their
soul or
spirit in order to hunt
them more easily or the paintings may represent an
animistic vision and homage to surrounding
nature, or they may be the result of a basic
need of expression that is
innate to human
beings, or they could have been for the transmission of practical
information.
In
Paleolithic times, the representation
of humans in cave paintings was rare.
Mostly, animals were
painted, not only animals that were used as food but also animals
that represented strength like the rhinoceros or large Felidae, as in the Chauvet Cave
. Signs like dots were sometimes drawn. Rare
human representations include handprints and half-human / animal
figures.
The Chauvet Cave in the Ardèche
Departments of
France contains the most important preserved cave paintings of
the Paleolithic era, painted around 31,000 BC. The Altamira
cave paintings in Spain were done 14,000 to 12,000
BC and show, among others, bisons.
The hall
of bulls in Lascaux
, Dordogne
, France, is one of the best known cave paintings
from about 15,000 to 10,000 BC.
If there is meaning to the paintings, it remains unknown. The caves
were not in an inhabited area, so they may have been used for
seasonal rituals. The animals are accompanied by signs which
suggest a possible magic use.
Arrow-like symbols in Lascaux
are
sometimes interpreted as calendar or
almanac use. But the evidence remains
inconclusive. The most important work of the
Mesolithic era were the marching
Warriors, a rock painting at Cingle de la Mola,
Castellón, Spain dated to about 7,000
to 4,000 BC. The technique used was probably spitting or blowing
the pigments onto the rock. The paintings are quite naturalistic,
though stylized. The figures are not three-dimensional, even though
they overlap
The
earliest known Indian paintings (see section below) were the rock
paintings of prehistoric times, the
petroglyphs as found in places like the
Rock Shelters
of Bhimbetka
, (see above) and some of them are older than 5500
BC. Such works continued and after several
millennia, in the 7th century, carved pillars of Ajanta
, Maharashtra
state present a fine example
of Indian paintings, and the colors, mostly various shades of red
and orange, were derived from minerals.
Eastern painting
East Asian painting
See also Chinese painting,
Japanese painting, Korean painting.Image:Guardians of Day
and Night, Han Dynasty.jpg|Paintings on tile of guardian spirits
donned in
Chinese robes, from
the
Han Dynasty (202 BC – 220
AD)Image:Luoshenfu Gu Kai Zhi.jpg|
Luoshenfu, by
Gu Kaizhi (344-406 AD), ChineseImage:Sun Quan
Tang.jpg|Emperor
Sun Quan in the
Thirteen Emperors Scroll and Northern Qi Scholars Collating
Classic Texts, by
Yan Liben (c.
600-673 AD), ChineseImage:EightySevenCelestials3.jpg|Eighty-Seven
Celestials, by
Wu Daozi (685-758),
ChineseImage:Hangan03.jpg|Portrait of
Night-Shining White,
by
Han Gan, 8th century, ChineseImage:Spring
Outing of the Tang Court.jpg|
Spring Outing of the Tang
Court, by
Zhang Xuan, 8th century,
ChineseImage:Chinesischer Maler des 8. Jahrhunderts
001.jpg|
Paradise of the Buddha Amitabha, 8th century, ChineseImage:Meister
nach Chang Hsüan 001.jpg|
Ladies making silk, a remake of
an 8th century original by
Zhang Xuan by
Emperor Huizong of Song,
early 12th century, ChineseImage:E innga kyo.jpg|An illustrated
sutra from the
Nara period, 8th century,
JapaneseImage:Chou Fang 001.jpg|
Ladies Playing Double
Sixes, by
Zhou Fang (730-800 AD),
ChineseImage:Chou Wen-chü (Schule) 001.jpg|
Yard concert,
10th century, ChineseImage:Xiao and Xiang rivers.jpg|
The Xiao
and Xiang Rivers, by
Dong Yuan (c.
934-962 AD), ChineseFile:Shenzong of Song.jpg|Court portrait of
Emperor Shenzong of Song
(r. 1067-1085), ChineseImage:Songhuizong4.jpg|
Golden Pheasant
and Cotton Rose, by
Emperor
Huizong of Song (r.1100-1126 AD),
ChineseImage:Songhuizong8.jpg|
Listening to the Guqin, by
Emperor Huizong of Song
(1100-1126 AD), ChineseImage:Su Han Ch'en 001.jpg|
Children
Playing, by Su Han Chen, c. 1150, ChineseImage:Chinesischer
Maler des 12. Jahrhunderts (II) 001.jpg|Chinese, anonymous artist
of the 12th century
Song
DynastyImage:Chinesischer Maler von 1238 001.jpg|Portrait of
the
Zen Buddhist
Wuzhun
Shifan, 1238 AD, ChineseImage:Ma Lin 001.jpg|
Ma Lin, 1246 AD, ChineseImage:Zhao Mengfu1.jpg|
A
Man and His Horse in the Wind, by
Zhao
Mengfu (1254-1322 AD),
ChineseImage:SesshuToyo.jpg|Shukei-sansui (Autumn Landscape),
Sesshu Toyo, (1420-1506),
JapaneseImage:Kano White-robed Kannon, Bodhisattva of
Compassion.jpg|
A White-Robed Kannon, Bodhisattva of Compassion, by
Kanō Motonobu (1476-1559),
JapaneseImage:Mogyeon.jpg|
Mother Dog, Yi Am (1499-?),
KoreanImage:Chinese painting2.jpg|Landscape painting in the shan
shui style, 16th century, ChineseImage:Nanbansen2.jpg|
Nanban
ships arriving for trade in Japan, 16th century,
JapaneseImage:Kano_Eitoku_010.jpg|A screen painting depicting
people playing
Go, by
Kanō Eitoku (1543-1590), JapaneseImage:Pine
Trees.jpg|
Pine Trees, six sided screen, by
Hasegawa Tohaku (1539-1610),
JapaneseImage:Gu Hongzhong's Night Revels, Detail 1.jpg|
Night
Revels, a
Song Dynasty remake of a
10th century original by
Gu
Hongzhong.Image:Bodhidarma.jpg|Scroll calligraphy of
Bodhidharma, “Zen points directly to the human
heart, see into your nature and become Buddha”,
Hakuin Ekaku (1686 to 1769),
JapaneseImage:Shunkeizu.jpg|Hanging scroll 1672,
Kanō Tanyū, (1602-1674),
JapaneseImage:Peonies by Yun Shouping.jpg|
Peonies, by
Yun Shouping (1633-1690),
ChineseImage:Ch20_asago.jpg|
Genji Monogatari, by
Tosa Mitsuoki (1617–1691),
JapaneseImage:Geumgangjeon.jpg|
View of Geumgang,
Jeong Seon (1676–1759), 1734, KoreanImage:Ikeno
Taiga 001.jpg|
Ike no Taiga,
(1723-1776),
Fish in Spring, JapaneseImage:Okyo Pine,
Bamboo, Plum.jpg|
Maruyama school,
Pine, Bamboo, Plum, six-fold screen,
Maruyama Ōkyo (1733–1795),
JapaneseImage:Hwangmyo.jpg|
A Cat and a Butterly,
Kim Hong-do (1745-?), 18th century,
KoreanImage:Joyucheong.jpg|
A Boat Ride,
Shin Yun-bok (1758-?), 1805,
KoreanImage:SakaiHoitsuAutumnFlowersandMoon.JPG|
Rimpa school, "Autumn Flowers and Moon,"
Sakai Hoitsu, (1761-1828),
JapaneseImage:Hokusai tanuki tea kettle.jpg|A tanuki (raccoon dog)
as a tea kettle, by
Katsushika
Hokusai (1760—1849), JapaneseImage:Maehwaseo.jpg|
A House
amongst Apricot Trees, Jo Hee-ryong (1797-1859),
KoreanImage:hokusai-fuji-koryuu.png|
Katsushika Hokusai,
The Dragon of
Smoke Escaping from Mt Fuji,
JapaneseImage:MiyagawaIsshoScene.jpg|
Miyagawa Isshō, untitled
Ukiyo-e painting, Japaneseimage:Tomioka Tessai Two
Divinities Dancing.jpg|
Tomioka
Tessai, (1837-1924),
Nihonga style,
Two Divinities Dancing, 1924, JapaneseImage:Bathing
Women.jpg|
Ogura Yuki, (1895-2000),
Bathing Women,
Nihonga style, 1938,
Japanese
China, Japan and Korea have a strong tradition in painting which is
also highly attached to the art of
calligraphy and
printmaking (so much that it is commonly seen as
painting). Far east traditional painting is characterized by water
based techniques, less realism, "elegant" and stylized subjects,
graphical approach to depiction, the importance of
white space (or
negative space) and a preference for
landscape (instead of human figure) as a subject.
Beyond ink and color on silk or paper scrolls, gold on
lacquer was also a common medium in painted East
Asian artwork. Although silk was a somewhat expensive medium to
paint upon in the past, the invention of
paper
during the 1st century AD by the Han court eunuch
Cai Lun provided not only a cheap and widespread
medium for writing, but also a cheap and widespread medium for
painting (making it more accessible to the public).
The ideologies of
Confucianism,
Daoism, and
Buddhism
played important roles in East Asian art.
Medieval Song Dynasty
painters such as Lin Tinggui and his
Luohan Laundering [1778] (housed in the Smithsonian
Freer Gallery of Art
) of the 12th century are excellent examples of
Buddhist ideas fused into classical Chinese artwork. In the
latter painting on silk (image and description provided in the
link), bald-headed Buddhist
Luohan are
depicted in a practical setting of washing clothes by a river.
However, the painting itself is visually stunning, with the Luohan
portrayed in rich detail and bright, opaque colors in contrast to a
hazy, brown, and bland wooded environment. Also, the tree tops are
shrouded in swirling fog, providing the common "negative space"
mentioned above in East Asian Art.
In
Japonisme, late 19th century artists
like the
Impressionists,
Van Gogh,
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec and
Whistler admired
traditional Japanese
Ukiyo-e artists like
Hokusai and
Hiroshige and their work was influenced by
it.
Chinese painting
The earliest (surviving) examples of Chinese painted artwork date
to the
Warring States Period (481 -
221 BC), with paintings on silk or tomb murals on rock, brick, or
stone. They were often in simplistic stylized format and in
more-or-less rudimentary geometric patterns. They often depicted
mythological creatures, domestic scenes, labor scenes, or palatial
scenes filled with officials at court. Artwork during this period
and the subsequent
Qin Dynasty (221 -
207 BC) and
Han Dynasty (202 BC - 220
AD) was made not as a means in and of itself or for higher personal
expression. Rather artwork was created to symbolize and honor
funerary rights, representations of mythological deities or spirits
of ancestors, etc. Paintings on silk of court officials and
domestic scenes could be found during the Han Dynasty, along with
scenes of men hunting on horseback or partaking in military parade.
There was
also painting on three dimensional works of art on figurines and
statues, such as the original-painted colors covering the soldier
and horse statues of the Terracotta Army
. During the social and cultural climate of
the ancient
Eastern Jin Dynasty
(316 - 420 AD) based at Nanjing in the south, painting became one
of the official pastimes of
Confucian-taught bureaucratic officials and
aristocrats (along with music
played by the
guqin zither, writing fanciful
calligraphy, and writing and reciting of
poetry). Painting became a common form of
artistic self-expression, and during this period painters at court
or amongst elite social circuits were judged and ranked by their
peers.
The establishment of classical Chinese landscape painting is
accredited largely to the
Eastern
Jin Dynasty artist
Gu Kaizhi (344 -
406 AD), one of the most famous artists of Chinese history. Like
the elongated scroll scenes of Kaizhi,
Tang
Dynasty (618 - 907 AD) Chinese artists like
Wu Daozi painted vivid and highly detailed artwork
on long horizontal handscrolls (which were very popular during the
Tang), such as his
Eighty Seven Celestial People. Painted
artwork during the Tang period pertained the effects of an
idealized landscape environment, with sparse amount of objects,
persons, or activity, as well as monochromatic in nature (example:
the murals of Price Yide's tomb in the Qianling Mausoleum). There
were also figures such as early Tang-era painter
Zhan Ziqian, who painted superb landscape
paintings that were well ahead of his day in portrayal of realism.
However, landscape art did not reach greater level of maturity and
realism in general until the
Five Dynasties and Ten
Kingdoms period (907 - 960 AD). During this time, there were
exceptional landscape painters like
Dong
Yuan (refer to this article for an example of his artwork), and
those who painted more vivid and realistic depictions of domestic
scenes, like
Gu Hongzhong and his
Night Revels of Han Xizai.
During
the Chinese Song Dynasty (960 - 1279
AD), not only landscape art was improved upon, but portrait
painting became more standardized and sophisticated than before
(for example, refer to Emperor
Huizong of Song), and reached its classical age maturity during
the Ming
Dynasty
(1368 - 1644 AD). During the late 13th
century and first half of the 14th century, Chinese under the
Mongol-controlled Yuan Dynasty
were not allowed to enter higher posts of
government (reserved for Mongols or other ethnic groups from
Central Asia), and the Imperial
examination was ceased for the time being. Many
Confucian-educated Chinese who now lacked profession turned to the
arts of painting and theatre instead, as the Yuan period became one
of the most vibrant and abundant eras for Chinese artwork. An
example of such would be
Qian Xuan
(1235–1305 AD), who was an official of the Song Dynasty, but out of
patriotism, refused to serve the Yuan court and dedicated himself
to painting.
Examples of superb art from this period
include the rich and detailed painted murals of the Yongle Palace
[1779][1780], or "Dachunyang Longevity Palace", of 1262 AD,
a UNESCO
World
Heritage site. Within the palace, paintings cover an area of
more than 1000 square meters, and hold mostly Daoist themes. It was
during the Song Dynasty that painters would also gather in social
clubs or meetings to discuss their art or others' artwork, the
praising of which often led to persuasions to trade and sell
precious works of art. However, there were also many harsh critics
of others art as well, showing the difference in style and taste
amongst different painters. In 1088 AD, the polymath scientist and
statesman
Shen Kuo once wrote of the
artwork of one
Li Cheng, who he criticized
as follows:

Emperor Qianlong Practicing
Calligraphy, mid-18th century.
Although high level of stylization, mystical appeal, and surreal
elegance were often preferred over realism (such as in
shan shui style), beginning with the medieval Song
Dynasty there were many Chinese painters then and afterwards who
depicted scenes of nature that were vividly real. Later Ming
Dynasty artists would take after this Song Dynasty emphasis for
intricate detail and realism on objects in nature, especially in
depictions of animals (such as ducks, swans, sparrows, tigers,
etc.) amongst patches of brightly-colored flowers and thickets of
brush and wood (a good example would be the anonymous Ming Dynasty
painting
Birds and Plum Blossoms [1781], housed in the Freer Gallery of the
Smithsonian Museum in Washington, D.C.). There were many renowned
Ming Dynasty artists;
Qiu Ying is an
excellent example of a paramount Ming era painter (famous even in
his own day), utilizing in his artwork domestic scenes, bustling
palatial scenes, and nature scenes of river valleys and steeped
mountains shrouded in mist and swirling clouds. During the Ming
Dynasty there were also different and rivaling schools of art
associated with painting, such as the
Wu
School and the
Zhe School.
Classical
Chinese painting continued on into the early modern Qing Dynasty
, with highly realistic portrait paintings like seen
in the late Ming Dynasty of the early 17th century. The
portraits of
Kangxi Emperor,
Yongzheng Emperor, and
Qianlong Emperor are excellent examples of
realistic Chinese portrait painting. During the Qianlong reign
period and the continuing 19th century, European
Baroque styles of painting had noticeable influence
on Chinese portrait paintings, especially with painted visual
effects of lighting and shading. Likewise, East Asian paintings and
other works of art (such as
porcelain and
lacquerware) were highly prized in Europe since initial contact in
the 16th century.
Japanese painting
Japanese painting (絵画) is one of the oldest and most highly refined
of the Japanese arts, encompassing a wide variety on genre and
styles. As with the history of Japanese arts in general, the
history Japanese painting is a long history of synthesis and
competition between native Japanese
aesthetics and adaptation of imported ideas.
Ukiyo-e, "pictures of the floating world",
is a genre of Japanese
woodblock
prints (or
woodcuts) and
paintings produced between the 17th and the 20th
centuries, featuring motifs of landscapes, the theatre and pleasure
quarters. It is the main artistic genre of
woodblock printing in Japan.
Japanese printmaking especially from the
Edo
period exerted enormous influence on
Western painting in France during the 19th
century.
South Asian painting
Image:Südindischer Meister um 1540 001.jpg|A group of women from
South India, Hindupur, c. 1540.Image:Meister des
Gîtâ-Govinda-Manuskripts 001.jpg|
Krishna
embraces Gopîs, Gîtâ-Govinda-manuscript,
1760-1765.Image:Indischer Maler um 850 001.jpg|
Floating Figures
Dancing, a mural of c. 850.Image:Südindischer Meister um 1540
002.jpg|
Wild Pig Hunt, c.
1540.Image:ChandBibiHawking.png|
Chand Bibi Hawking, Deccan
style, 18th centuryImage:Indischer Maler um 1750 (III) 001.jpg|A
Lady Listening to Music, c. 1750.Image:Indischer Maler von 1720
001.jpg|Rasamañjarî manuscript of the Bhânudatta (erotic treatise),
1720.Image:Indischer Maler um 700 001.jpg|Mural fragment of a lady
with a parasol, c. 700.Image:Radha and Krishna in
Discussion.jpg|Bahsoli painting of Radha and Krishna in Discussion,
c. 1730.Image:Maharaja Sital Dev of Mankot in Devotion.jpg|Bahsoli
painting of Maharaja Sital Dev of Mankot in Devotion, c.
1690.Image:Indischer Maler um 1615 (I) 001.jpg|Portrait of
Ibrahim Adil Shah II (1580-1626) of
Bijapur, 1615.Image:Meister des
Nujûm-al-'Ulûm-Manuskripts 001.jpg|
The Throne of the
Wealth, Nujûm-al-' Ulûm-manuscript, 1570.Image:Elefant und
Jungtier aus dem Stall der Moghulkaiser.jpg|Elephant and cub out of
the stable of the
Moghul ruler, 17th
century.Image:Meister der Hamza-Nâma-Handschrift
001.jpg|
Mihrdukht Shoots an Arrow Through a Ring,
1564-1579.Image:Meister des Porträts des Govardhân Chand
001.jpg|Portrait of the Govardhân Chand,
Punjab style, c. 1750.Image:Ravi Varma-Ravana
Sita Jathayu.jpg|Ravana kills Jathayu; the captive Sita
despairs.
Image:Akbar and Tansen visit
Haridas.jpg|Akbar and Tansen Visit Haridas in Vrindavan,
Rajasthan
style, c. 1750.Image:Indischer Maler um 1760
001.jpg|A man with children,
Punjab
style, 1760.Image:Indischer Maler um 1770 001.jpg|
Râdhâ arrests
Krishna,
Punjab style,
1770.Image:Indischer Maler von 1780 001.jpg|
Rama and Sita in
the Forest,
Punjab style,
1780.
Indian painting
Indian paintings historically revolved around the religious deities
and kings. Indian art is a collective term for several different
schools of art that existed in the
Indian subcontinent.
The paintings varied
from large frescoes of Ellora
to the
intricate Mughal miniature paintings
to the metal embellished works from the Tanjore
school. The paintings from the Gandhar-Taxila
are
influenced by the Persian works in the
west. The eastern style of painting was mostly
developed around the Nalanda
school of art. The works are mostly inspired
by various scenes from
Indian
mythology.
History
The
earliest Indian paintings were the rock paintings of prehistoric times, the petroglyphs as found in places like the Rock Shelters
of Bhimbetka
, and some of them are older than 5500 BC.
Such
works continued and after several millennia, in the 7th century,
carved pillars of Ajanta
, Maharashtra
state present a fine example
of Indian paintings, and the colors, mostly various shades of red
and orange, were derived from minerals.
Bhimbetka rock painting
Ajanta Caves
in Maharashtra
, India are rock-cut cave monuments dating back to
the second century BCE and containing paintings
and sculpture considered to be masterpieces of both Buddhist
religious art and universal pictorial art.
- Madhubani painting
Madhubani painting is a style of
Indian painting, practiced in the Mithila region of Bihar state,
India. The origins of Madhubani painting are shrouded in antiquity.
- Rajput painting
Rajput painting, a style of
Indian painting, evolved and flourished,
during the 18th century, in the royal courts of
Rajputana, India. Each Rajput kingdom evolved a
distinct style, but with certain common features. Rajput paintings
depict a number of themes, events of epics like the Ramayana and
the Mahabharata, Krishna's life, beautiful landscapes, and humans.
Miniatures were the preferred medium of Rajput painting, but
several manuscripts also contain Rajput paintings, and paintings
were even done on the walls of palaces, inner chambers of the
forts, havelies, particularly, the havelis of Shekhawait.
The colors extracted from certain minerals, plant sources, conch
shells, and were even derived by processing precious stones, gold
and silver were used. The preparation of desired colors was a
lengthy process, sometimes taking weeks. Brushes used were very
fine.
- Mughal painting
Mughal painting is a particular
style of
Indian painting, generally
confined to illustrations on the book and done in miniatures, and
which emerged, developed and took shape during the period of the
Mughal Empire 16th -19th
centuries).
- Tanjore painting
Tanjore painting is an important form of
classical South Indian painting native
to the town of Tanjore
in Tamil
Nadu
. The art form dates back to the early 9th
century, a period dominated by the
Chola rulers, who encouraged
art and
literature. These
paintings are known for their elegance, rich colors, and attention
to detail. The themes for most of these paintings are
Hindu Gods and Goddesses and scenes from
Hindu mythology. In modern times, these
paintings have become a much sought after souvenir during festive
occasions in South India.
The process of making a Tanjore painting involves many stages. The
first stage involves the making of the preliminary sketch of the
image on the base. The base consists of a cloth pasted over a
wooden base. Then chalk powder or
zinc
oxide is mixed with water-soluble
adhesive and applied on the base. To make the base
smoother, a mild
abrasive is sometimes
used. After the drawing is made, decoration of the jewellery and
the apparels in the image is done with semi-precious stones. Laces
or threads are also used to decorate the jewellery. On top of this,
the gold foils are pasted. Finally,
dyes are
used to add colors to the figures in the paintings.
- The Madras School
During British rule in India, the crown found that Madras had some
of the most talented and intellectual artistic minds in the world.
As the British had also established a huge settlement in and around
Madras, Georgetown was chosen to establish an institute that would
cater to the artistic expectations of the royals in London. This
has come to be known as the
Madras
School. At first traditional artists were employed to produce
exquisite varieties of furniture, metal work, and curios and their
work was sent to the royal palaces of the Queen.
Unlike the Bengal School where 'copying' is the norm of teaching,
the Madras School flourishes on 'creating' new styles, arguments
and trends.
- The Bengal School
The
Bengal School of Art was an influential style
of art that flourished in
India during
the
British Raj in the early 20th
century. It was associated with Indian
nationalism, but was also promoted and supported
by many British arts administrators.
The Bengal School arose as an
avant
garde and nationalist movement reacting against the
academic art styles previously promoted in
India, both by Indian artists such as
Ravi
Varma and in British art schools. Following the widespread
influence of Indian spiritual ideas in the
West, the British art teacher
Ernest Binfield Havel attempted to
reform the teaching methods at the
Calcutta School of Art by encouraging
students to imitate
Mughal
miniatures. This caused immense controversy, leading to a strike by
students and complaints from the local press, including from
nationalists who considered it to be a retrogressive move. Havel
was supported by the artist
Abanindranath Tagore, a nephew of the
poet
Rabindranath Tagore. Tagore
painted a number of works influenced by Mughal art, a style that he
and Havel believed to be expressive of India's distinct spiritual
qualities, as opposed to the "materialism" of the West. Tagore's
best-known painting,
Bharat Mata (Mother India), depicted
a young woman, portrayed with four arms in the manner of Hindu
deities, holding objects symbolic of India's national aspirations.
Tagore later attempted to develop links with Japanese artists as
part of an aspiration to construct a
pan-Asianist model of art.
The Bengal School's influence in India declined with the spread of
modernist ideas in the 1920s. In the
post-independence period,
Indian
artists showed more adaptability as they borrowed freely from
european styles and amalgamated them freely with the Indian motifs
to new forms of art. While artists like
Francis Newton Souza and
Tyeb Mehta were more western in their approach,
there were others like
Ganesh Pyne and
Maqbool Fida Husain who
developed thoroughly indigenous styles of work. Today after the
process of liberalization of market in India, the artists are
experiencing more exposure to the international art-scene which is
helping them in emerging with newer forms of art which were
hitherto not seen in India.
Jitish
Kallat had shot to fame in the late 90s with his paintings
which were both modern and beyond the scope of generic definition.
However while artists in India in the new century are trying out
new styles, themes and metaphors, it would not have been possible
to get such quick recognition without the aid of the business
houses which are now entering the art field like they had never
before.
Western painting
Egypt, Greece and Rome
Ancient Egypt, a civilization with
very strong traditions of
architecture
and
sculpture (both originally painted in
bright colours) also had many mural paintings in temples and
buildings, and painted illustrations on
papyrus manuscripts.
Egyptian wall painting and decorative painting is often graphic,
sometimes more symbolic than realistic. Egyptian painting depicts
figures in bold outline and flat
silhouette, in which symmetry is a constant
characteristic.
Egyptian
painting has close connection with its written language -
called
Egyptian hieroglyphs.
Painted symbols are found amongst the first forms of written
language. The Egyptians also painted on
linen,
remnants of which survive today. Ancient Egyptian paintings
survived due to the extremely dry climate. The ancient Egyptians
created paintings to make the
afterlife of
the deceased a pleasant place. The themes included journey through
the afterworld or their protective deities introducing the deceased
to the gods of the underworld. Some examples of such paintings are
paintings of the gods and goddesses
Ra,
Horus,
Anubis,
Nut,
Osiris and
Isis. Some tomb paintings show activities that the
deceased were involved in when they were alive and wished to carry
on doing for eternity. In the
New
Kingdom and later, the
Book of the
Dead was buried with the entombed person. It was considered
important for an introduction to the afterlife.
Image:egypt paint.jpg|
Ancient
EgyptImage:Ägyptischer Maler um 1360 v. Chr. 001.jpg|
Ancient Egypt,
The Goddess Isis, wall painting, ca.1360 BCImage:Maler der
Grabkammer der Nefertari 004.jpg|
Ancient
Egypt,
Queen NefertariImage:egyptian papyrus.jpg|
Ancient Egypt,
papyrusImage:Ägyptischer Maler um 1355 v. Chr.
001.jpg|
Ancient
EgyptImage:Egypt.Ra-Apep.01.jpg|
Ancient EgyptImage:NAMA Sacrifice aux
Charites.jpg|
Pitsa panels, one of the
few surviving panel paintings from
Archaic Greece, ca. 540-530 BC
Image:Symposiumnorthwall.jpg|Symposium scene in the Tomb of the Diver at Paestum
, circa 480 BC Greek artImage:KnossosFrescoRepro06827.jpg|Knossos
Image:Pompejanischer Maler um 80 v. Chr.
001.jpg|Roman art,
Pompeii
File:Hercules-and-telephus.jpg|
Roman artFile:Boscoreale1.jpg|
Roman artImage:Pompeii Painter.jpg|
Roman artImage:Pompejanischer Maler um 10 20
001.jpg|
Roman artImage:Portrait du Fayoum
02.JPG|
Roman artImage:Fayum02.jpg|
Roman artTo the north of Egypt
was the
Minoan civilization on the
island of Crete
.
The wall
paintings found in the palace of Knossos
are similar to that of the Egyptians but much more free in style.
Around 1100 B.C., tribes from the north of Greece conquered Greece
and the Greek art took a new direction.
Ancient Greece had great painters,
great sculptors (though both endeavours were regarded as mere
manual labour at the time), and great architects.
The Parthenon
is an example of their architecture that has lasted
to modern days. Greek marble sculpture is often described as
the highest form of
Classical art.
Painting on
pottery of Ancient
Greece and
ceramics gives a
particularly informative glimpse into the way society in Ancient
Greece functioned.
Black-figure vase painting and
Red-figure vase painting
gives many surviving examples of what Greek painting was. Some
famous Greek painters on wooden panels who are mentioned in texts
are
Apelles,
Zeuxis and Parrhasius, however no
examples of Ancient Greek panel painting survive, only written
descriptions by their contemporaries or later Romans. Zeuxis lived
in 5-6 BC and was said to be the first to use
sfumato. According to
Pliny the Elder, the realism of his
paintings was such that birds tried to eat the painted grapes.
Apelles is described as the greatest painter of
Antiquity for perfect technique in
drawing, brilliant color and modeling.
Roman art was influenced by Greece and can
in part be taken as a descendant of ancient Greek painting.
However, Roman painting does have important unique characteristics.
The only surviving Roman paintings are wall paintings, many from
villas in
Campania, in Southern Italy. Such
painting can be grouped into 4 main "styles" or periods and may
contain the first examples of
trompe-l'œil, pseudo-perspective, and pure
landscape. Almost the only painted portraits surviving from the
Ancient world are a large number of
coffin-portraits of bust form found in
the
Late Antique cemetery of
Al-Fayum. Although these were neither of the best
period nor the highest quality, they are impressive in themselves,
and give an idea of the quality that the finest ancient work must
have had. A very small number of
miniatures from Late
Antique illustrated books also survive, and a rather larger number
of copies of them from the Early Medieval period.
Middle Ages
Image:CottonGenesisFragment26vAbrahamAndAngels.JPG|
Cotton Genesis a miniature of
Abraham meeting AngelsImage:Byzantine art1.jpg|
Byzantine artImage:Byzantine art2.jpg|
Byzantine
artImage:Meister_von_San_Vitale_in_Ravenna_003.jpg|
Byzantine art,
MosaicImage:Les Très Riches Heures du duc de Berry
Janvier.jpg|
Limbourg
BrothersImage:Les_Très_Riches_Heures_du_duc_de_Berry_juin.jpg|
Limbourg
BrothersImage:KellsFol292rIncipJohn.jpg|
Book of
KellsImage:KellsFol032vChristEnthroned.jpg|
Book of KellsImage:Book of hours1.jpg|
Book of
HoursImage:RossanoGospelsFolio121rStMark.jpg|
Evangelist portraitImage:Codexaureus
25.jpg|
CarolingianImage:Ebbo.Gospels.St.Mark.jpg|
Carolingian
Saint
MarkImage:Yaroslavl gospel.jpg|Yaroslavl
Gospels c. 1220sImage:Giottino
pieta.jpg|
GiottinoImage:Madonna dei
denti.jpg|
Vitale da
BolognaImage:Simone Martini 072.jpg|
Simone MartiniImage:Cimabue 025.jpg|
CimabueImage:Giotto Cruxifixion.jpg|
GiottoFile:Giotto - Scrovegni - -18- -
Adoration of the Magi.jpg|
GiottoImage:Andrej Rublëv 001.jpg|
Andrei RublevImage:Rublev
vosnesenie.jpg|
Andrei Rublev,
Ascension, 1408Image:Lorenzetti gov.jpg|
Ambrogio LorenzettiImage:Lorenzetti
Pietro Beata Umilta.jpg|
Pietro
LorenzettiImage:Duccio di Buoninsegna 036.jpg|
Duccio
The rise of Christianity imparted a different spirit and aim to
painting styles.
Byzantine art, once
its style was established by the 6th century, placed great emphasis
on retaining traditional
iconography and
style, and has changed relatively little through the thousand years
of the
Byzantine Empire and the
continuing traditions of Greek and Russian
Othodox icon-painting.
Byzantine painting has a particularly hieratic feeling and icons
were and still are seen as a reflection of the divine. There were
also many wall-paintings in
fresco, but fewer
of these have survived than Byzantine
mosaics. In general Byzantium art borders on
abstraction, in its flatness and highly
stylised depictions of figures and landscape. However there are
periods, especially in the so-called
Macedonian art of around the 10th
century, when Byzantine art became more flexible in approach.
In post-Antique Catholic Europe the first distinctive artistic
style to emerge that included painting was the
Insular art of the British Isles, where the only
surviving examples (and quite likely the only medium in which
painting was used) are miniatures in
Illuminated manuscripts such as the
Book of Kells. These are most famous
for their abstract decoration, although figures, and sometimes
scenes, were also depicted, especially in
Evangelist portraits.
Carolingian and
Ottonian art also survives mostly in
manuscripts, although some wall-painting remain, and more are
documented. The art of this period combines Insular and "barbarian"
influences with a strong Byzantine influence and an aspiration to
recover classical monumentality and poise.
Walls of
Romanesque and
Gothic churches were decorated with
frescoes as well as sculpture and many of the
few remaining
murals have great intensity,
and combine the decorative energy of Insular art with a new
monumentality in the treatment of figures. Far more miniatures in
Illuminated manuscripts
survive from the period, showing the same characteristics, which
continue into the
Gothic period.
Panel painting becomes more common during the
Romanesque period, under the heavy influence
of Byzantine icons. Towards the middle of the 13th century,
Medieval art and
Gothic painting became more realistic, with
the beginnings of interest in the depiction of volume and
perspective in Italy with
Cimabue and then his pupil
Giotto. From Giotto on, the treatment of composition
by the best painters also became much more free and innovative.
They are considered to be the two great medieval masters of
painting in western culture. Cimabue, within the Byzantine
tradition, used a more realistic and dramatic approach to his art.
His pupil, Giotto, took these innovations to a higher level which
in turn set the foundations for the western painting tradition.
Both artists were pioneers in the move towards naturalism.
Churches were built with more and more windows and the use of
colorful
stained glass become a staple
in decoration.
One of the most famous examples of this is
found in the cathedral of Notre Dame
de Paris
. By the 14th century Western societies were
both richer and more cultivated and painters found new patrons in
the nobility and even the
bourgeoisie.
Illuminated manuscripts took on a new character and slim,
fashionably dressed court women were shown in their landscapes.
This style soon became known as International style and
tempera panel paintings and altarpieces gained
importance.
Renaissance and Mannerism
Image:Fra Angelico 037.jpg|
Fra
AngelicoImage:Madonna and Child (Filippo Lippi).jpg|
Filippo LippiImage:Andrea Mantegna
036.jpg|
Andrea
MantegnaImage:Masaccio-TheExpulsionOfAdamAndEveFromEden-Restoration.jpg|
Masaccio
The Expulsion Of Adam and Eve from Eden, before and
after restorationFile:Paolo Uccello 047b.jpg|
Paolo UccelloImage:Mona Lisa.jpeg|
Leonardo da VinciFile:Raphael - The small
Cowper Madonna.jpg|
RaphaelImage:michelangelo-creation.jpg|
MichelangeloFile:Durer self portarit
28.jpg|
Albrecht
DürerImage:Bellini,_Giovanni_~_St_Francis_in_the_Desert,_c1480,_Tempera_and_oil_on_panel_Frick_Collection,_New_York.jpg|
Giovanni
BelliniImage:Tizian 090.jpg|
TitianImage:Leonardo da Vinci 002.jpg|
Leonardo da
VinciImage:Resurrection.JPG|
Piero della
FrancescaImage:Giorgione_tempest.jpg|
GiorgioneImage:Jacopo Tintoretto 001.jpg|
Jacopo TintorettoImage:Birth of
Venus.jpg|
Sandro
BotticelliImage:Campin_merode_altarpiece_big.jpg|
Robert CampinImage:Weyden Ivo.jpg|
Rogier van der WeydenImage:Jan van
Eyck 001.jpg|
Jan van
EyckImage:Jan_van_Eyck_091.jpg|
Jan van
EyckImage:GardenED edit1.jpg|
Hieronymous BoschImage:Pieter Bruegel the
Elder- The Corn Harvest (August).JPG|
Pieter BruegelImage:Hans Holbein d.
J. 065.jpg|
Hans Holbein the
YoungerImage:El Greco View of Toledo.jpg|
El
GrecoThe
Renaissance is said by many
to be the
golden age of
painting. Roughly spanning the 14th through the mid 17th century.
In Italy artists like
Paolo Uccello,
Fra Angelico,
Masaccio,
Piero
della Francesca,
Andrea
Mantegna,
Filippo Lippi,
Giorgione,
Tintoretto,
Sandro Botticelli,
Leonardo da Vinci,
Michelangelo Buonarroti,
Raphael,
Giovanni
Bellini, and
Titian took painting to a
higher level through the use of
perspective, the study of
human anatomy and proportion, and through
their development of an unprecedented refinement in drawing and
painting techniques.
Flemish, Dutch and German painters of the Renaissance such as
Hans Holbein the Younger,
Albrecht Dürer,
Lucas Cranach,
Matthias Grünewald,
Hieronymous Bosch, and
Pieter Brueghel represent a
different approach from their Italian colleagues, one that is more
realistic and less idealized.
Genre
painting became a popular idiom amongst such Northern painters
as Pieter Brueghel. A new
verisimilitude in depicting reality became
possible with the adoption of
oil
painting, whose invention was traditionally, but erroneously,
credited to
Jan Van Eyck (an important
transitional figure who bridges painting in the
Middle Ages with painting of the early
Renaissance). Unlike the Italians whose work
drew heavily from the art of ancient Greece and Rome, the
northerners retained a stylistic residue of the sculpture and
illuminated manuscripts of
the Middle Ages. These tendencies are also see in the
art of Tudor England, which was
heavily influenced by
Protestant refugees
from the
Low Countries.
Renaissance painting reflects the revolution of ideas and science
(
astronomy,
geography) that occur in this period, the
Reformation, and the invention of the
printing press. Dürer, considered one
of the greatest of printmakers, states that painters are not mere
artisans but
thinkers
as well. With the development of
easel
painting in the Renaissance, painting gained independence from
architecture. Following centuries dominated by religious imagery,
secular subject matter slowly returned to Western painting. Artists
included visions of the world around them, or the products of their
own imaginations in their paintings. Those who could afford the
expense could become patrons and commission portraits of themselves
or their family.
In the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries,
panel paintings which could be hung on walls
and moved around at will, became increasingly popular for both
churches and private houses, rather than
fresco wall-paintings or paintings incorporated into
on permanent structures, such as
altarpieces. The
High
Renaissance gave rise to a stylized art known as
Mannerism. In place of the balanced compositions
and rational approach to perspective that characterized art at the
dawn of the sixteenth century, the Mannerists sought instability,
artifice, and doubt. The unperturbed faces and gestures of
Piero della Francesca and the calm
Virgins of Raphael are replaced by the troubled expressions of
Pontormo and the emotional intensity of
El Greco. Some decades later
Northern Mannerism dominated
Netherlandish and German art until the arrival of the
Baroque.
Baroque and Rococo
Image:Caravaggio bacchus.jpg|
CaravaggioImage:GENTILESCHI Judith.jpg|
Artemesia GentileschiImage:Frans Hals
008.jpg|
Frans
HalsImage:Rubens_-_Judgement_of_Paris.jpg|
Peter Paul
RubensFile:JohannesVermeer-TheAstronomer(1668).jpg|
Jan
VermeerImage:The_Nightwatch_by_Rembrandt.jpg|
Rembrandt van
RijnImage:Velazquez-Meninas.jpg|
Diego VelazquezImage:Poussin
RapeSabineLouvre.jpg|
Nicolas
PoussinImage:El martirio de San Felipe 1639 José de
Ribera.jpg|
José de
RiberaImage:SPSalvatorRosa.jpg|
Salvatore RosaImage:Claude Lorrain
008.jpg|
Claude LorrainFile:Charles I
of England.jpg|
Antony Van
DyckImage:The_Death_of_Hyacinth.jpg|
Giovanni Battista
TiepoloImage:WatteauPierrot.jpg|
Antoine WatteauImage:Fragonard, The
Swing.jpg|
Jean-Honoré
Fragonard,
The
Swing, ca. 1767Image:Marie-Louise O'Murphy (1737-1818)
painted by Francois Boucher (1703–1770).jpg|
François
BoucherImage:Vigee-Lebrun1782.jpg|
Élisabeth
Vigée-LebrunImage:Pompadour6.jpg|
Maurice Quentin de La
TourImage:Thomas Gainsborough 008.jpg|
Thomas GainsboroughImage:Joshua
Reynolds; Colonel Acland and Lord Sydney, 'The Archers',
1769.jpg|
Joshua
ReynoldsImage:Jean-Baptiste Siméon Chardin 029.jpg|
Jean-Baptiste-Siméon
ChardinImage:William Hogarth by William Hogarth.jpg|
William HogarthImage:Francis Hayman
001.jpg|
Francis
HaymanImage:Sleepingnymph.jpg|
Angelica Kauffman
Baroque painting is associated with the
Baroque cultural
movement, a movement often identified with
Absolutism and the
Counter Reformation or Catholic Revival
; the existence of important Baroque painting in non-absolutist and
Protestant states also, however,
underscores its popularity, as the style spread throughout Western
Europe.
Baroque painting is characterized by great drama, rich, deep color,
and intense light and dark shadows. Baroque art was meant to evoke
emotion and passion instead of the calm rationality that had been
prized during the Renaissance. During the period beginning around
1600 and continuing throughout the 17th century, painting is
characterized as
Baroque. Among the greatest
painters of the
Baroque are
Caravaggio,
Rembrandt,
Frans Hals,
Rubens,
Velázquez,
Poussin, and
Jan
Vermeer. Caravaggio is an heir of the
humanist painting of the
High Renaissance. His
realistic approach to the human
figure, painted directly from life and dramatically spotlit against
a dark background, shocked his contemporaries and opened a new
chapter in the history of painting.Baroque painting often
dramatizes scenes using light effects; this can be seen in works by
Rembrandt, Vermeer,
Le Nain and
La Tour.
During the 18th century,
Rococo followed as a
lighter extension of Baroque, often frivolous and erotic.
Rococo developed first in the decorative arts and
interior design in France.
Louis
XV's succession brought a change in the court artists and
general artistic fashion. The 1730s represented the height of
Rococo development in France exemplified by the works of
Antoine Watteau and
François Boucher. Rococo still
maintained the Baroque taste for complex forms and intricate
patterns, but by this point, it had begun to integrate a variety of
diverse characteristics, including a taste for Oriental designs and
asymmetric compositions.
The Rococo style spread with French artists and engraved
publications.
It was readily received in the Catholic
parts of Germany
, Bohemia, and Austria
, where it was merged with the lively German Baroque
traditions. German Rococo was applied with enthusiasm to
churches and palaces, particularly in the south, while Frederician Rococo developed in the
Kingdom of
Prussia
.
The French masters
Watteau,
Boucher and
Fragonard represent the style, as
do
Giovanni Battista
Tiepolo and
Jean-Baptiste-Siméon
Chardin who was considered by some as the best French painter
of the 18th century - the
Anti-Rococo.
Portraiture was an important component of painting
in all countries, but especially in England, where the leaders were
William Hogarth, in a blunt realist
style, and
Francis Hayman,
Angelica Kauffman (who was Swiss),
Thomas Gainsborough and
Joshua Reynolds in more flattering styles
influenced by
Antony Van Dyck. While
in France during the Rococo era
Jean-Baptiste Greuze (the favorite
painter of
Denis Diderot),
Maurice Quentin de La Tour, and
Élisabeth
Vigée-Lebrun were highly accomplished
Portrait painters and
History painters.
William Hogarth helped develop a
theoretical foundation for Rococo beauty. Though not intentionally
referencing the movement, he argued in his
Analysis of
Beauty (1753) that the undulating lines and S-curves prominent
in Rococo were the basis for grace and beauty in art or nature
(unlike the straight line or the circle in
Classicism). The beginning of the end for Rococo
came in the early 1760s as figures like
Voltaire and
Jacques-François Blondel began
to voice their criticism of the superficiality and degeneracy of
the art. Blondel decried the "ridiculous jumble of shells, dragons,
reeds, palm-trees and plants" in contemporary interiors
[1782].By 1785, Rococo had passed out of
fashion in France, replaced by the order and seriousness of
Neoclassical artists like
Jacques Louis David.
19th century: Neo-classicism, History painting, Romanticism,
Impressionism, Post Impressionism, Symbolism
Image:David_-_The_Death_of_Socrates.jpg|
Jacques-Louis David
1787Image:Watsonandtheshark-original.jpg|
John Singleton Copley,
1778Image:Antoine-Jean Gros - Bonaparte visitant les pestiférés de
Jaffa.jpg|
Antoine-Jean Gros,
1804Image:IngresBainTurc.jpg|
Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres
1862Image:Constable DeadhamVale.jpg|
John
Constable 1802Image:Francisco de Goya y Lucientes
023.jpg|
Francisco de Goya
1814Image:Jean Louis Théodore Géricault 002.jpg|
Théodore Géricault
1819Image:Mondaufgang-am-meer-1822.jpg|
Caspar David Friedrich
c.1822Image:Eugène Delacroix - La liberté guidant le
peuple.jpg|
Eugène Delacroix,
1830Image:Turner,_J._M._W._-_The_Fighting_Téméraire_tugged_to_her_last_Berth_to_be_broken.jpg|
J.
M. W.
Turner 1838Image:Courbet
Ornans.jpg|
Gustave Courbet
1849-1850image:corot.villedavray.750pix.jpg|
Camille Corot
c.1867Image:Bierstadt-storm-in-the-rocky-mountains-1886.jpg|
Albert
Bierstadt 1886Image:Claude Monet, Impression, soleil levant,
1872.jpg|
Claude Monet
1872Image:Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Le Moulin de la
Galette.jpg|
Pierre-Auguste
Renoir 1876Image:Edgar Germain Hilaire Degas 012.jpg|
Edgar Degas 1876Image:Edouard Manet
004.jpg|
Édouard Manet
1882Image:Vincent Willem van Gogh 128.jpg|
Vincent van Gogh 1888

Image:Woher kommen wir Wer sind wir
Wohin gehen wir.jpg|
Paul Gauguin
1897-1898Image:Georges_Seurat_-_Un_dimanche_après-midi_à_l'Île_de_la_Grande_Jatte.jpg|
Georges
Seurat 1884-1886Image:Swimming hole.jpg|
Thomas Eakins, 1884-1885Image:Albert Pinkham
Ryder 003.jpg|
Albert Pinkham
Ryder, 1890Image:Winslow Homer 005.jpg|
Winslow Homer 1899Image:Paul Cézanne
047.jpg|
Paul Cézanne 1906After
Rococo there arose in the late 18th century,
in
architecture, and then in painting
severe
neo-classicism, best
represented by such artists as
David and his heir
Ingres. Ingres' work already
contains much of the sensuality, but none of the spontaneity, that
was to characterize
Romanticism.This
movement turned its attention toward landscape and nature as well
as the human figure and the supremacy of natural order above
mankind's will. There is a
pantheist
philosophy (see
Spinoza and
Hegel) within this conception
that opposes
Enlightenment
ideals by seeing mankind's destiny in a more tragic or pessimistic
light. The idea that human beings are not above the forces of
Nature is in contradiction to
Ancient Greek and Renaissance ideals where
mankind was above all things and owned his fate. This thinking led
romantic artists to depict the
sublime, ruined churches,
shipwrecks, massacres and madness.
By the mid-19th century painters became liberated from the demands
of their patronage to only depict scenes from religion, mythology,
portraiture or history. The idea "art for art's sake" began to find
expression in the work of painters like Francisco de Goya, John
Constable, and J.M.W. Turner. Romantic painters turned
landscape painting into a major genre,
considered until then as a minor genre or as a decorative
background for figure compositions.Some of the major painters of
this period are
Eugène
Delacroix,
Théodore
Géricault,
J. M. W.
Turner,
Caspar David Friedrich and
John Constable.
Francisco de Goya's late work demonstrates
the Romantic interest in the irrational, while the work of
Arnold Böcklin evokes mystery and the
paintings of
Aesthetic movement
artist
James McNeill Whistler
evoke both sophistication and
decadence. In the United States the
Romantic tradition of landscape painting was known as the
Hudson River School: exponents include
Thomas Cole,
Frederic Edwin Church,
Albert Bierstadt,
Thomas Moran, and
John Frederick Kensett.
Luminism was a movement in
American landscape painting related to the
Hudson River School.
The leading
Barbizon School painter
Camille Corot painted in
both a romantic and a
realistic vein; his work prefigures
Impressionism, as does the paintings
of
Eugène Boudin who was one of
the first French landscape painters to paint outdoors. Boudin was
also an important influence on the young
Claude Monet, whom in 1857 he introduced to
Plein air painting. A major force in the
turn towards
Realism at
mid-century was
Gustave Courbet. In
the latter third of the century Impressionists like
Édouard Manet,
Claude Monet,
Pierre-Auguste Renoir,
Camille Pissarro,
Alfred Sisley,
Berthe Morisot,
Mary
Cassatt, and
Edgar Degas worked in a
more direct approach than had previously been exhibited publicly.
They eschewed allegory and narrative in favor of individualized
responses to the modern world, sometimes painted with little or no
preparatory study, relying on deftness of drawing and a highly
chromatic pallette. Manet, Degas, Renoir, Morisot, and Cassatt
concentrated primarily on the human subject. Both Manet and Degas
reinterpreted classical figurative canons within contemporary
situations; in Manet's case the re-imaginings met with hostile
public reception. Renoir, Morisot, and Cassatt turned to domestic
life for inspiration, with Renoir focusing on the female nude.
Monet, Pissarro, and Sisley used the landscape as their primary
motif, the transience of light and weather playing a major role in
their work. While Sisley most closely adhered to the original
principals of the Impressionist perception of the landscape, Monet
sought challenges in increasingly chromatic and changeable
conditions, culminating in series of monumental works, and

Pissarro adopted some of the experiments of
Post-Impressionism. Slightly younger
Post-Impressionists like
Vincent van
Gogh,
Paul Gauguin, and
Georges Seurat, along with
Paul Cézanne led art to the edge of
modernism; for Gauguin Impressionism gave
way to a personal symbolism; Seurat transformed Impressionism's
broken color into a scientific optical study, structured on
frieze-likecompositions; Van Gogh's turbulent method of paint
application, coupled with a sonorous use of color, predicted
Expressionism and
Fauvism, and Cézanne, desiring to unite classical
composition with a revolutionary abstraction of natural forms,
would come to be seen as a precursor of 20th century art.The spell
of Impressionism was felt throughout the world, including in the
United States, where it became integral to the painting of
American Impressionists such as
Childe Hassam,
John Twachtman, and
Theodore Robinson. It also exerted
influence on painters who were not primarily Impressionistic in
theory, like the portrait and landscape painter
John Singer Sargent. At the same time in
America at the turn of the century there existed a native and
nearly insular realism, as richly embodied in the figurative work
of
Thomas Eakins, the
Ashcan School, and the landscapes and
seascapes of
Winslow Homer, all of
whose paintings were deeply invested in the solidity of natural
forms. The visionary landscape, a motive largely dependent on the
ambiguity of the nocturne, found its advocates in
Albert Pinkham Ryder and
Ralph Albert Blakelock.
In the late 19th century there also were several, rather
dissimilar, groups of
Symbolist
painters whose works resonated with younger artists of the 20th
century, especially with the
Fauvists and
the
Surrealists. Among them were
Gustave Moreau,
Odilon Redon,
Pierre Puvis de Chavannes,
Henri Fantin-Latour,
Arnold Böcklin,
Edvard Munch,
Félicien Rops, and
Jan Toorop, and
Gustave
Klimt amongst others including the
Russian Symbolists like
Mikhail Vrubel.
Symbolist painters mined
mythology and dream imagery for a visual language
of the soul, seeking evocative paintings that brought to mind a
static world of silence. The symbols used in Symbolism are not the
familiar
emblems of mainstream
iconography but intensely personal, private,
obscure and ambiguous references. More a philosophy than an actual
style of art, the Symbolist painters influenced the contemporary
Art Nouveau movement and
Les Nabis. In their exploration of dreamlike
subjects, symbolist painters are found across centuries and
cultures, as they are still today; Bernard Delvaille has described
René Magritte's surrealism as
"Symbolism plus
Freud".
20th century Modern and Contemporary
The heritage of painters like
Van Gogh,
Cézanne,
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 revolutionized the Paris art world with
"wild", multi-colored, expressive, landscapes and figure paintings
that the critics called
Fauvism.
Pablo Picasso made his first
cubist paintings based on Cézanne's idea that all
depiction of nature can be reduced to three solids:
cube,
sphere and
cone.
Pioneers of the 20th century
Image:Matisse-Open-Window.jpg|
Henri
Matisse 1905,
FauvismImage:Chicks-from-avignon.jpg|
Pablo Picasso 1907, early
CubismImage:Violcand.jpg|
Georges Braque 1910,
Analytic CubismImage:Henri Rousseau
005.jpg|
Henri Rousseau 1910
Primitive Surrealism
The heritage of painters like
Van Gogh,
Cézanne,
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,
André 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 - (as seen in the gallery above).
Henri Matisse's second version of
The Dance signifies a
key point in his career and in the development of modern painting.
It reflects Matisse's incipient fascination with
primitive art: the intense warm colors against
the cool blue-green background and the rhythmical succession of
dancing nudes convey the feelings of emotional liberation and
hedonism.
Pablo
Picasso made his first
cubist paintings
based on Cézanne'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, (see gallery) 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 (see gallery) was jointly
developed by Pablo Picasso and
Georges
Braque, exemplified by
Violin and Candlestick, Paris,
(seen above) from about 1908 through 1912. Analytic cubism, the
first clear manifestation of cubism, was followed by
Synthetic cubism, practised by Braque,
Picasso,
Fernand Léger,
Juan Gris,
Albert
Gleizes,
Marcel Duchamp and
countless other artists into the 1920s.
Synthetic cubism is characterized by the
introduction of different textures, surfaces,
collage elements,
papier collé and a large variety of merged
subject matter.
Les Fauves (French for
The Wild Beasts) were early 20th
century painters, experimenting with freedom of expression through
color. The name was given, humorously and not as a compliment, to
the group by art critic
Louis
Vauxcelles.
Fauvism was a short-lived
and loose grouping of early 20th century artists whose works
emphasized
painterly qualities, and the
imaginative use of deep color over the representational values.
Fauvists made the subject of the painting easy to read, exaggerated
perspectives and an interesting prescient prediction of the Fauves
was expressed in 1888 by
Paul Gauguin
to
Paul Sérusier,
"How do you see these trees? They are yellow.
So, put in yellow; this shadow, rather blue, paint it with pure
ultramarine; these red leaves?
Put in vermilion."
The leaders of the movement were
Henri
Matisse and
André Derain —
friendly rivals of a sort, each with his own followers. Ultimately
Matisse became the
yang to
Picasso's
yin in the 20th century. Fauvist
painters included
Albert Marquet,
Charles Camoin,
Maurice de Vlaminck,
Raoul Dufy,
Othon
Friesz, the Dutch painter
Kees van
Dongen, and Picasso's partner in Cubism,
Georges Braque amongst others.
Fauvism, as a movement, had no concrete theories, and was short
lived, beginning in 1905 and ending in 1907, they only had three
exhibitions. Matisse was seen as the leader of the movement, due to
his seniority in age and prior self-establishment in the academic
art world. His 1905 portrait of Mme. Matisse
The Green
Line, (above), caused a sensation in Paris when it was first
exhibited. He said he wanted to create art to delight; art as a
decoration was his purpose and it can be said that his use of
bright colors tries to maintain serenity of composition. In 1906 at
the suggestion of his dealer
Ambroise
Vollard,
André Derain went to
London and produced a series of paintings like
Charing Cross
Bridge, London (above) in the
Fauvist
style, paraphrasing the famous series by the
Impressionist painter
Claude Monet. Masters like
Henri Matisse and
Pierre Bonnard continued developing their
narrative styles independent of any movement throughout the 20th
century.
By 1907 Fauvism no longer was a shocking new movement, soon it was
replaced by
Cubism onthe critics radar screen
as the latest new development in
Contemporary Art of the time.In 1907
Appolinaire, commenting about
Matisse in an article published in La Falange, said, "We are not
here in the presence of an extravagant or an extremist undertaking:
Matisse's art is eminently reasonable."
Analytic cubism (see gallery) 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, practised by Braque,
Picasso,
Fernand Léger,
Juan Gris,
Albert
Gleizes,
Marcel Duchamp and
countless other artists into the 1920s.
Synthetic cubism is characterized by the
introduction of different textures, surfaces,
collage elements,
papier collé and a large variety of merged
subject matter.
During the years between 1910 and the end of World War I and after
the heyday of
cubism, several movements
emerged in Paris.
Giorgio De
Chirico moved to Paris in July 1911, where he joined his
brother Andrea (the poet and painter known as
Alberto Savinio). Through his brother he met
Pierre Laprade a member of the jury at the Salon d’Automne, where
he exhibited three of his dreamlike works:
Enigma of the
Oracle,
Enigma of an Afternoon and
Self-Portrait. During 1913 he exhibited his work at the
Salon des Indépendants
and Salon d’Automne, his work was noticed by
Pablo Picasso and
Guillaume Apollinaire and several
others. His compelling and mysterious paintings are considered
instrumental to the early beginnings of
Surrealism. (see gallery)
Pioneers of Modern art
Image:Chagall IandTheVillage.jpg|
Marc
Chagall 1911,
Expressionism and
SurrealismImage:Deer_in_the_Woods_II.jpg|
Franz Marc 1912,
Der
Blaue ReiterImage:Delaunay ChampDeMars.jpg|
Robert Delaunay, 1911,
OrphismImage:Leger railway
crossing.jpg|
Fernand Leger 1919,
Synthetic Cubism,
TubismIn the first two decades of the 20th century
and after
cubism, several other important
movements emerged;
Futurism (
Balla),
Abstract
art (
Kandinsky),
Der Blaue Reiter),
Bauhaus, (
Kandinsky) and
(
Klee),
Orphism,
(
Robert Delaunay and
František Kupka),
Synchromism (
Morgan
Russell),
De Stijl (
Mondrian),
Suprematism (
Malevich),
Constructivism (
Tatlin),
Dadaism (
Duchamp,
Picabia,
Arp) and
Surrealism
(
De Chirico,
André Breton,
Miró,
Magritte,
Dalí,
Ernst).
Modern painting influenced all the visual arts, from
Modernist architecture
and
design, to
avant-garde film, theatre and
modern dance and became an experimental
laboratory for the expression of visual experience, from
photography and
concrete poetry to
advertising art and
fashion. Van Gogh's painting exerted great influence
upon 20th century
Expressionism, as
can be seen in the work of the
Fauves,
Die Brücke (a group led by German
painter
Ernst Kirchner), and the
Expressionism of
Edvard Munch,
Egon
Schiele,
Marc Chagall,
Amedeo Modigliani,
Chaim Soutine and others..
Wassily Kandinsky a Russian
painter,
printmaker and art
theorist, one of the most famous 20th-century
artists is generally considered the first important painter of
modern abstract
art. As an early
modernist, in search
of new modes of visual expression, and spiritual expression, he
theorized as did contemporary
occultists
and
theosophists, that pure visual
abstraction had corollary vibrations with sound and music. They
posited that pure abstraction could express pure spirituality. His
earliest abstractions were generally titled as the example in the
(above gallery)
Composition VII, making connection to the
work of the composers of music. Kandinsky included many of his
theories about abstract art in his book
Concerning the
Spiritual in Art. Robert
Delaunay was a French artist who is associated with
Orphism, (reminiscent of a link between pure
abstraction and cubism). His later works were more abstract,
reminiscent of
Paul Klee. His key
contributions to abstract painting refer to his bold use of color,
and a clear love of experimentation of both depth and tone.
At the
invitation of Wassily Kandinsky,
Delaunay and his wife the artist Sonia
Delaunay, joined The Blue Rider (Der Blaue Reiter), a Munich
-based group
of abstract artists, in 1911, and his art
took a turn to the abstract. Other Major pioneers of early
abstraction include Russian
painter
Kasimir Malevich, who after the
Russian Revolution in
1917, and after pressure from the
Stalinist regime in 1924
returned to painting imagery and
Peasants and Workers in the
field, and
Swiss painter Paul Klee whose
masterful color experiments made him an important pioneer of
abstract painting at the
Bauhaus. Still other important pioneers of abstract
painting include the Swedish artist
Hilma
af Klint,
Czech painter,
František Kupka as well as American
artists
Stanton
MacDonald-Wright and
Morgan
Russell who, in 1912, founded
Synchromism, an art movement that closely
resembles
Orphism
Expressionism and
Symbolism are broad
rubrics that describes several important and related movements in
20th century painting that dominated much of the
avant-garde art being made in Western, Eastern
and Northern Europe. Expressionism was painted largely between
World War I and World War II, mostly in France, Germany, Norway,
Russia, Belgium, and Austria. Expressionist artists are related to
both Surrealism and Symbolism and are each uniquely and somewhat
eccentrically personal.
Fauvism,
Die Brücke, and
Der Blaue Reiter are three of the best
known groups of
Expressionist and
Symbolist painters. Artists as interesting and diverse as
Marc Chagall, whose painting
I and the Village, (above) tells an
autobiographical story that examines the relationship between the
artist and his origins, with a lexicon of artistic
Symbolism.
Gustav
Klimt,
Egon Schiele,
Edvard Munch,
Emil
Nolde,
Chaim Soutine,
James Ensor,
Oskar
Kokoschka,
Ernst Ludwig
Kirchner,
Max Beckmann,
Franz Marc,
Käthe Schmidt Kollwitz,
Georges Rouault,
Amedeo Modigliani and some of the
Americans abroad like
Marsden
Hartley, and
Stuart
Davis, were considered influential expressionist painters.
Although
Alberto Giacometti is
primarily thought of as an intense
Surrealist sculptor, he
made intense expressionist paintings as well.
Pioneers of abstraction
Image:Malevici06.jpg|
Kasimir
Malevich 1916,
SuprematismImage:Theo
van Doesburg Composition VII (the three graces).jpg|
Theo van Doesburg 1917,
De Stijl,
Neo-PlasticismImage:MacDonaldWright_AirplaneSynchYelOrng.jpg|
Stanton
MacDonald-Wright 1920,
SynchromismImage:Mondrian CompRYB.jpg|
Piet Mondrian 1937-1942,
De StijlPiet
Mondrian's art was also related to his spiritual and
philosophical studies. In 1908 he became interested in the
theosophical movement launched by
Helena Petrovna Blavatsky in the
late 19th century. Blavatsky believed that it was possible to
attain a knowledge of nature more profound than that provided by
empirical means, and much of Mondrian's work for the rest of his
life was inspired by his search for that spiritual knowledge.
De Stijl also known as
neoplasticism, was a Dutch
artistic movement founded in 1917. The term
De Stijl is used to refer to a body of work
from 1917 to 1931 founded in the Netherlands.
De Stijl is also the name of a journal that was published
by the Dutch painter, designer, writer, and critic
Theo van Doesburg propagating the group's
theories. Next to van Doesburg, the group's principal members were
the painters
Piet Mondrian,
Vilmos Huszàr, and
Bart van der Leck, and the architects
Gerrit Rietveld,
Robert van 't Hoff, and
J.J.P. Oud. The
artistic
philosophy that formed a basis
for the group's work is known as
neoplasticism — the new
plastic art (or
Nieuwe Beelding in Dutch).
Proponents of De Stijl sought to express a new
utopian ideal of spiritual harmony and order. They
advocated pure
abstraction and
universality by a reduction to the essentials of form and colour;
they simplified visual compositions to the vertical and horizontal
directions, and used only
primary
colors along with black and white.
Indeed, according to
the Tate
Gallery
's online article on neoplasticism, Mondrian himself
sets forth these delimitations in his essay 'Neo-Plasticism in
Pictorial Art'. He writes, "... this new plastic idea will
ignore the particulars of appearance, that is to say, natural form
and colour. On the contrary, it should find its expression in the
abstraction of form and colour, that is to say, in the straight
line and the clearly defined primary colour." The Tate article
further summarizes that this art allows "only primary colours and
non-colours, only squares and rectangles, only straight and
horizontal or vertical line." The [[Solomon R. Guggenheim
Museum|Guggenheim Museum's online article on De Stijl summarizes
these traits in similar terms: "It [De Stijl] was posited on the
fundamental principle of the geometry of the straight line, the
square, and the rectangle, combined with a strong asymmetricality;
the predominant use of pure primary colors with black and white;
and the relationship between positive and negative elements in an
arrangement of non-objective forms and lines."
De Stijl movement was influenced by
Cubist
painting as well as by the mysticism and the ideas about "ideal"
geometric forms (such as the "perfect straight line") in the
neoplatonic philosophy of
mathematician M.H.J. Schoenmaekers. The works of De Stijl
would influence the
Bauhaus style and the
international
style of architecture as well as clothing and interior
design. However, it did not follow the general
guidelines of an "ism" (Cubism, Futurism, Surrealism), nor did it
adhere to the principles of art schools like Bauhaus; it was a
collective project, a joint enterprise.
Dada and Surrealism

{Image:Duchamp
LargeGlass.jpg|
Marcel Duchamp,
1915-23,
Dada
Image:MenShallKnowNothingofThis.jpg|
Max
Ernst 1923, early
SurrealismImage:Mama,_Papa_is_Wounded!.jpg|
Yves
Tanguy, 1927,
Surrealism
Image:The_Persistence_of_Memory.jpg|
Salvador Dalí 1931,
Surrealism (super-realism)
Marcel Duchamp, came to international
prominence in the wake of his notorious success at the New York
City Armory
Show
in 1913, (soon after he denounced artmaking for
chess). After Duchamp's
Nude Descending a Staircase
became the international cause celebre at the 1913 Armory show in
New York he created the
The Bride
Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors, Even, Large Glass (see above). The
Large Glass pushed the art of painting to
radical new limits being part painting, part collage, part
construction.
Duchamp became closely associated with the
Dada movement that began in neutral Zürich,
Switzerland
, during World War I and peaked from 1916 to
1920. The movement primarily involved visual arts,
literature (poetry, art manifestoes, art theory), theatre, and
graphic design, and concentrated its anti war politic through a
rejection of the prevailing standards in
art
through
anti-art cultural works.
Francis Picabia (see above),
Man Ray,
Kurt
Schwitters,
Tristan Tzara,
Hans Richter,
Jean
Arp,
Sophie Taeuber-Arp,
along with Duchamp and many others are associated with the Dadaist
movement. Duchamp and several
Dadaists are
also associated with Surrealism, the movement that dominated
European painting in the 1920s and 1930s.
In 1924
André Breton published the
Surrealist Manifesto.
The
Surrealist movement in painting
became synonymous with the
avant-garde
and which featured artists whose works varied from the abstract to
the super-realist.
With works on paper like Machine Turn
Quickly, (above) Francis Picabia continued his involvement in
the Dada movement through 1919 in Zürich
and Paris, before breaking away from it after
developing an interest in Surrealist
art. Yves Tanguy,
René Magritte and
Salvador Dalí are particularly known for
their realistic depictions of dream imagery and fantastic
manifestations of the imagination.
Joan
Miró's
The Tilled Field of 1923-1924 verges on
abstraction, this early painting of a complex of objects and
figures, and arrangements of sexually active characters; was Miro's
first
Surrealist masterpiece. The more abstract
Joan Miró,
Jean Arp,
André Masson, and
Max Ernst were very influential, especially in the
United States during the 1940s.
Throughout the 1930s, Surrealism continued to become more visible
to the public at large. A
Surrealist group developed in
Britain and, according to Breton, their 1936
London International
Surrealist Exhibition was a high water mark of the period and
became the model for international exhibitions. Surrealist groups
in Japan, and especially in
Latin
America, the Caribbean and in Mexico produced innovative and
original works.
Dalí and
Magritte created some of
the most widely recognized images of the movement. The 1928/1929
painting
This Is Not A Pipe, by
Magritte is the subject of a
Michel Foucault 1973 book,
This is not a
Pipe (English edition, 1991), that discusses the painting and
its
paradox. Dalí joined the group in 1929,
and participated in the rapid establishment of the visual style
between 1930 and 1935.
Surrealism as a visual movement had found a method: to expose
psychological truth by stripping ordinary objects of their normal
significance, in order to create a compelling image that was beyond
ordinary formal organization, and perception, sometimes evoking
empathy from the viewer, sometimes laughter and sometimes outrage
and bewilderment.
1931 marked a year when several Surrealist painters produced works
which marked turning points in their stylistic evolution: in one
example (see gallery above) liquid shapes become the trademark of
Dalí, particularly in his
The Persistence of Memory,
which features the image of watches that sag as if they are
melting. Evocations of time and its compelling mystery and
absurdity.
The characteristics of this style - a combination of the depictive,
the abstract, and the psychological - came to stand for the
alienation which many people felt in the
modernist period, combined with the sense of
reaching more deeply into the psyche, to be "made whole with one's
individuality."
Max Ernst whose 1923 painting
Men Shall Know Nothing of
This, (seen above) studied philosophy and psychology in Bonn
and was interested in the alternative realities experienced by the
insane. This painting may have been inspired by the
psychoanalyst Sigmund
Freud's study of the delusions of a paranoiac, Daniel Paul
Schreber. Freud identified Schreber's fantasy of becoming a woman
as a
castration complex.
The central image of two pairs of legs refers to Schreber's
hermaphroditic desires. Ernst's inscription on the back of the
painting reads:
The picture is curious because of its
symmetry. The two sexes balance one another.
During the 1920s
André Masson's
work was enormously influential in helping the newly arrived in
Paris and young artist
Joan Miró find
his roots in the new
Surrealist painting.
Miró acknowledged in letters to his dealer
Pierre Matisse the importance of Masson as an
example to him in his early years in Paris.
Long after personal, political and professional tensions have
fragmented the Surrealist group into thin air and ether, Magritte,
Miro, Dalí and the other Surrealists continue to define a visual
program in the arts.
Between the Wars
Image:Egon Schiele 079.jpg|
Egon
Schiele,
Symbolism and
Expressionism 1912File:Kirchner 1913 Street,
Berlin.jpg|
Ernst Kirchner Die Brücke 1913Image:Amadeo Modigliani
012.jpg|
Amadeo Modigliani Symbolism and
Expressionism 1917Image:Davis steeple
street.jpg|
Stuart Davis
American
Modernism 1922
Der Blaue
Reiter was a German movement lasting from 1911 to 1914, fundamental
to Expressionism, along with Die
Brücke which was founded the previous decade in 1905 and was a
group of German expressionist artists
formed in Dresden
in 1905. Founding members of
Die Brücke were
Fritz
Bleyl,
Erich Heckel,
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner and
Karl Schmidt-Rottluff. Later members
included
Max Pechstein,
Otto Mueller and others. The group was one of
the seminal ones, which in due course had a major impact on the
evolution of
modern art in the 20th
century and created the style of
Expressionism.
Wassily Kandinsky,
Franz Marc,
August
Macke,
Alexej von
Jawlensky, whose psychically expressive painting of the Russian
dancer
Portrait of Alexander
Sakharoff, 1909 is in the gallery above,
Marianne von Werefkin,
Lyonel Feininger and others founded the
Der Blaue Reiter group in response
to the rejection of Kandinsky's painting
Last Judgement
from an exhibition. Der Blaue Reiter lacked a central artistic
manifesto, but was centered around Kandinsky and Marc. Artists
Gabriele Münter and
Paul Klee were also involved.
The name of the movement comes from a painting by Kandinsky created
in 1903 (see illustration). It is also claimed that the name could
have derived from Marc's enthusiasm for horses and Kandinsky's love
of the colour blue. For Kandinsky,
blue is the colour of
spirituality: the darker the blue, the more it awakens human desire
for the eternal.
In the USA during the period between World War I and World War II
painters tended to go to Europe for recognition. Artists like
Marsden Hartley,
Patrick Henry Bruce,
Gerald Murphy and
Stuart Davis, created reputations
abroad. In New York City,
Albert
Pinkham Ryder and
Ralph
Blakelock were influential and important figures in advanced
American painting between 1900 and 1920.
During the 1920s
photographer Alfred Stieglitz
exhibited Georgia O'Keeffe,
Arthur Dove, Alfred Henry Maurer, Charles Demuth, John
Marin and other artists including European Masters Henri Matisse, Auguste Rodin, Henri
Rousseau, Paul Cézanne, and
Pablo Picasso, at his gallery
the
291
.
Expressionism and
Symbolism are broad
rubrics that describes several important and related movements in
20th century painting that dominated much of the
avant-garde art being made in Western, Eastern
and Northern Europe.
Expressionism was
painted largely between World War I and World War II, mostly in
France, Germany, Norway, Russia, Belgium, and Austria.
Expressionist artists are related to both
Surrealism and
Symbolism
and are each uniquely and somewhat eccentrically personal.
Fauvism,
Die Brücke,
and
Der Blaue Reiter are three of
the best known groups of
Expressionist
and
Symbolist painters. Artists as
interesting and diverse as
Marc
Chagall,
Gustav Klimt,
Egon Schiele,
Edvard
Munch,
Emil Nolde,
Chaim Soutine,
James
Ensor,
Oskar Kokoschka,
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner,
Max Beckmann,
Franz
Marc,
Otto Dix,
Käthe Schmidt Kollwitz,
Georges Rouault,
Amedeo Modigliani and some of the
Americans abroad like
Marsden
Hartley, and
Stuart
Davis, were considered influential expressionist painters.
Although
Alberto Giacometti is
primarily thought of as an intense
Surrealist sculptor, he
made intense expressionist paintings of figures as well.
Social Consciousness
Image:People-of-Chilmark-Benton-1920-lrg.jpg|
Thomas Hart Benton 1920,
RegionalismImage:Bellows
George Dempsey and Firpo 1924.jpg|
George
Bellows, 1924,
American
realismImage:Demuth_Charles_I Saw the Figure 5 in
Gold_1928.jpg|
Charles Demuth 1928,
American
Precisionism (proto
Pop Art)Image:americangothic.jpg|
Grant Wood, 1930,
Social Realism
During the 1920s and the 1930s and the
Great Depression, Surrealism, late Cubism,
the
Bauhaus,
De
Stijl, Dada, German Expressionism, Expressionism, and
modernist and masterful color painters like
Henri Matisse and
Pierre Bonnard characterized the European art
scene. In Germany
Max Beckmann,
Otto Dix,
George
Grosz and others politicized their paintings, foreshadowing the
coming of World War II. While in America
American Scene painting and the
Social Realism and
Regionalism movements that contained both
political and social commentary dominated the art world. Artists
like
Ben Shahn,
Thomas Hart Benton,
Grant Wood,
George
Tooker,
John Steuart Curry,
Reginald Marsh, and others
became prominent.
In Latin
America besides the Uruguayan
painter Joaquín Torres García and
Rufino Tamayo from Mexico, the
muralist movement with Diego Rivera, David
Siqueiros, José Orozco,
Pedro Nel Gómez and Santiago Martinez Delgado and the
Symbolist paintings by Frida Kahlo began a renaissance of the arts for
the region, with a use of color and historic, and political
messages. Frida Kahlo's Symbolist
works also relate strongly to Surrealism and to the
Magic Realism movement in literature. The
psychological drama in many of Kahlo's self portraits (above)
underscore the vitality and relevance of her paintings to artists
in the 21st century.
American Gothic is a
painting by
Grant
Wood from 1930 (see gallery). Portraying a
pitchfork-holding farmer and a younger woman in
front of a house of
Carpenter
Gothic style, it is one of the most familiar images in 20th
century
American art. Art critics had
favorable opinions about the painting, like
Gertrude Stein and
Christopher Morley, they assumed the
painting was meant to be a satire of rural small-town life. It was
thus seen as part of the trend towards increasingly critical
depictions of rural America, along the lines of
Sherwood Anderson's
1919 Winesburg, Ohio,
Sinclair Lewis' 1920
Main Street, and
Carl Van Vechten's
The Tattooed
Countess in literature. However, with the onset of the
Great Depression, the painting came
to be seen as a depiction of steadfast American pioneer
spirit.
Diego
Rivera is perhaps best known by the public world for his 1933
mural, "Man at the
Crossroads", in the lobby of the RCA Building at Rockefeller
Center
. When his patron
Nelson Rockefeller discovered that the
mural included a portrait of
Lenin and other
communist imagery, he fired Rivera, and
the unfinished work was eventually destroyed by Rockefeller's
staff. The film
Cradle Will
Rock includes a dramatization of the controversy.
Frida Kahlo (Rivera's wife's) works are often
characterized by their stark portrayals of pain. Of her 143
paintings 55 are
self-portraits, which
frequently incorporate symbolic portrayals of her physical and
psychological wounds. Kahlo was deeply influenced by indigenous
Mexican culture, which is apparent in her paintings' bright colors
and dramatic symbolism.
Christian and
Jewish themes are often depicted in her work
as well; she combined elements of the classic religious Mexican
tradition—which were often bloody and violent—with
surrealist renderings. While her paintings are
not overtly Christian - she was, after all, an avowed communist -
they certainly contain elements of the macabre Mexican Christian
style of religious paintings.
Political activism was an important piece of
David Siqueiros' life, and frequently
inspired him to set aside his artistic career. His art was deeply
rooted in the
Mexican Revolution,
a violent and chaotic period in Mexican history in which various
social and political factions fought for recognition and power. The
period from the 1920s to the 1950s is known as the Mexican
Renaissance, and Siqueiros was active in the attempt to create an
art that was at once Mexican and universal. He briefly gave up
painting to focus on organizing miners in Jalisco. He ran a
political art workshop in New York City in preparation for the 1936
General Strike for Peace and
May Day
parade. The young
Jackson Pollock attended the workshop and
helped build
float for the parade.
Between 1937 and 1938 he fought in the
Spanish Civil War alongside the Spanish
Republican forces, in opposition to
Francisco Franco's military coup. He was
exiled twice from Mexico, once in 1932 and
again in 1940, following his assassination attempt on
Leon Trotsky.
World conflict
Image:Max Beckmann's 'Self-portrait with Horn',
1938-1940.jpg|
Max Beckmann 1938-1940,
ExpressionismImage:Kandinsky 1939
Composition-X.png|
Wassily
Kandinsky Composition X 1939,
Geometric
abstractionImage:master-bill.jpg|
Arshile Gorky 1929-1936, pre
Abstract
ExpressionismImage:PicassoGuernica.jpg|
Pablo Picasso Guernica 1937,
protest against
FascismDuring
the 1930s radical leftist politics characterized many of the
artists connected to
Surrealism,
including
Pablo Picasso.
On 26 April 1937,
during the Spanish Civil War, the
Basque
town of Gernika
was the scene of the "Bombing of Gernika" by the Condor Legion
of Nazi Germany's Luftwaffe. The Germans were attacking to
support the efforts of Francisco Franco to overthrow the Basque
Government and the Spanish Republican government. The town was
devastated, though the Biscayan assembly and the Oak of Gernika
survived. Pablo Picasso painted his mural sized
Guernica to commemorate the horrors
of the bombing.
In its final form,
Guernica is an immense black and white,
3.5 metre (11 ft) tall and 7.8 metre (23 ft) wide mural painted in
oil. The mural presents a scene of death, violence, brutality,
suffering, and helplessness without portraying their immediate
causes. The choice to paint in black and white contrasts with the
intensity of the scene depicted and invokes the immediacy of a
newspaper photograph.
Picasso painted the mural sized painting called
Guernica in protest of the bombing.
The
painting was first exhibited in Paris in 1937, then Scandinavia, then London in 1938 and finally in
1939 at Picasso's request the painting was sent to the United
States in an extended loan (for safekeeping) at MoMA
.
The
painting went on a tour of museums throughout the USA until its
final return to the Museum of Modern Art
in New York City where it was exhibited for nearly
thirty years. Finally in accord with
Pablo Picasso's wish to give the painting to
the people of Spain as a gift, it was sent to Spain in 1981.
During the
Great Depression of the
1930s, through the years of World War II American art was
characterized by
Social Realism and
American Scene Painting (as
seen above) in the work of
Grant Wood,
Edward Hopper,
Ben Shahn,
Thomas Hart Benton, and several
others.
Nighthawks (1942) is a
painting by
Edward Hopper that
portrays people sitting in a downtown
diner
late at night. It is not only Hopper's most famous painting, but
one of the most recognizable in American art.
It is currently in
the collection of the Art Institute of Chicago
. The scene was inspired by a diner (since demolished) in Greenwich
Village
, Hopper's home neighborhood in Manhattan
. Hopper began painting it immediately after
the attack on Pearl Harbor
. After this event there was a large
feeling of gloominess over the country, a feeling that is portrayed
in the painting. The urban street is empty outside the diner, and
inside none of the three patrons is apparently looking or talking
to the others but instead is lost in their own thoughts. This
portrayal of modern urban life as empty or lonely is a common theme
throughout Hopper's work.
The Dynamic for artists in Europe during the 1930s deteriorated
rapidly as the Nazi's power in Germany and across Eastern Europe
increased. The climate became so hostile for artists and art
associated with
Modernism and
abstraction that many left for the Americas.
Degenerate art was a term
adopted by the
Nazi regime in Germany to
describe virtually all
modern art. Such
art was banned on the grounds that it was
un-German or
Jewish Bolshevist in
nature, and those identified as degenerate artists were subjected
to sanctions. These included being dismissed from teaching
positions, being forbidden to exhibit or to sell their art, and in
some cases being forbidden to produce art entirely.
Degenerate Art was also the title
of an exhibition, mounted by the Nazis in Munich
in 1937,
consisting of modernist artworks chaotically hung and accompanied
by text labels deriding the art. Designed to inflame public
opinion against modernism, the exhibition subsequently traveled to
several other cities in Germany and Austria. German artist
Max Beckmann and scores of others fled Europe
for New York. In New York City a new generation of young and
exciting
Modernist painters led by
Arshile Gorky,
Willem de Kooning, and others were just
beginning to come of age.
Arshile Gorky's portrait of
Willem de Kooning (above) is an example of
the evolution of
Abstract
Expressionism from the context of figure painting,
cubism and
surrealism.
Along with his friends de Kooning and
John D. Graham
Gorky created bio-morphically shaped and abstracted figurative
compositions that by the 1940s evolved into totally abstract
paintings. Gorky's work seems to be a careful analysis of memory,
emotion and shape, using line and color to express feeling and
nature.
Towards Mid Century

Image:Frida Kahlo (self
portrait).jpg|
Frida Kahlo 1940,
Latin American SymbolismImage:Nighthawks.jpg|
Edward Hopper 1942,
American Scene
paintingImage:Christinasworld.jpg|
Andrew Wyeth 1948,
RealismImage:Freud,
girl-white-dog.jpg|
Lucien Freud 1951 -
1952, British
Figurative
painting
The 1940s in New York City heralded the triumph of American
abstract expressionism, a
modernist movement that combined lessons learned from
Henri Matisse,
Pablo
Picasso, Surrealism,
Joan Miró,
Cubism,
Fauvism, and early Modernism via
great teachers in America like
Hans
Hofmann and
John D. Graham.
American artists benefited from the presence
of Piet Mondrian, Fernand Léger, Max
Ernst and the André Breton
group, Pierre Matisse's gallery, and Peggy Guggenheim's gallery The Art of
This Century
, as well as other factors.
Post-
Second World War American
painting called Abstract expressionism included artists like
Jackson Pollock,
Willem de Kooning,
Arshile Gorky,
Mark
Rothko,
Hans Hofmann,
Clyfford Still,
Franz
Kline,
Adolph Gottlieb,
Mark Tobey,
Barnett
Newman,
James Brooks,
Philip Guston,
Robert Motherwell,
Conrad Marca-Relli,
Jack Tworkov,
William Baziotes,
Richard Pousette-Dart,
Ad Reinhardt,
Hedda
Sterne,
Jimmy Ernst,
Bradley Walker Tomlin, and
Theodoros Stamos, among others. American
Abstract expressionism got its name in 1946 from the art critic
Robert Coates. It is seen as
combining the emotional intensity and self-denial of the German
Expressionists with the anti-figurative aesthetic of the European
abstract schools such as
Futurism,
the
Bauhaus and Synthetic Cubism. Abstract
expressionism,
Action painting, and
Color Field painting are synonymous with
the
New York School.
Technically Surrealism was an important predecessor for Abstract
expressionism with its emphasis on spontaneous,
automatic or subconscious creation.
Jackson Pollock's dripping paint
onto a canvas laid on the floor is a technique that has its roots
in the work of
André Masson.
Another important early manifestation of what came to be abstract
expressionism is the work of American Northwest artist
Mark Tobey, especially his "white writing"
canvases, which, though generally not large in scale, anticipate
the "all over" look of Pollock's drip paintings.
Abstract Expressionism
Image:Newman-Onement 1.jpg|
Barnett
Newman,
Onement 1, 1948,
Color
Field -
Abstract
ExpressionismImage:Kooning_woman_v.jpg|
Willem De Kooning 1952-1953
Figurative Abstract ExpressionismImage:No. 5,
1948.jpg|
Jackson Pollock,
No. 5, 1948, Abstract
ExpressionismImage:Kline_no2.jpg|
Franz
Kline 1954
Action
paintingImage:Still 1957 D1.jpg|
Clyfford Still 1957
Color Field -
Abstract ExpressionismImage:Hans
Hofmann's painting 'The Gate', 1959–60.jpg|
Hans Hofmann 1959-1960
Abstract Expressionism and
Geometric abstractionImage:'Canticle',
casein on paper by Mark Tobey, 1954.jpg|
Mark
Tobey, 1954,
Canticle, Abstract Expressionism,
Calligraphy,
Northwest SchoolImage:Oil painting by
Sam Francis.jpg|
Sam Francis, 1950-1953,
Black and Red,Additionally, Abstract expressionism has an
image of being rebellious, anarchic, highly idiosyncratic and, some
feel, rather nihilistic. In practice, the term is applied to any
number of artists working (mostly) in New York who had quite
different styles, and even applied to work which is not especially
abstract nor expressionist. Pollock's energetic "
action paintings", with their "busy" feel,
are different both technically and aesthetically, to the violent
and grotesque
Women series of
Willem de Kooning. As seen above in the
gallery
Woman V is one of a series of six paintings made
by de Kooning between 1950 and 1953 that depict a
three-quarter-length female figure.
He began the first of these paintings,
Woman I collection: The Museum of Modern Art
, New York City, in June 1950, repeatedly
changing and painting out the image until January or February 1952,
when the painting was abandoned unfinished. The art
historian
Meyer Schapiro saw the
painting in de Kooning's studio soon afterwards and encouraged the
artist to persist.
De Kooning's response was to begin three
other paintings on the same theme; Woman II collection:
The Museum
of Modern Art
, New York City, Woman
III, Tehran
Museum of Contemporary Art, Woman IV, Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art
, Kansas City, Missouri
. During the summer of 1952, spent at East
Hampton
, de Kooning further explored the theme through
drawings and pastels. He may have finished work on
Woman
I by the end of June, or possibly as late as November 1952,
and probably the other three women pictures were concluded at much
the same time. The
Woman series are decidedly
figurative paintings. Another important
artist is
Franz Kline, as demonstrated
by his painting
Number 2, 1954 (see gallery) as with
Jackson Pollock and other Abstract
Expressionists, was labelled an "
action
painter because of his seemingly spontaneous and intense style,
focusing less, or not at all, on figures or imagery, but on the
actual brush strokes and use of canvas.
Clyfford Still,
Barnett Newman, (see above),
Adolph Gottlieb, and the serenely shimmering
blocks of color in
Mark Rothko's work
(which is not what would usually be called expressionist and which
Rothko denied was abstract), are classified as abstract
expressionists, albeit from what
Clement Greenberg termed the
Color field direction of abstract expressionism.
Both
Hans Hofmann (see gallery) and
Robert Motherwell (gallery) can be
comfortably described as practitioners of
action painting and
Color field painting.
Abstract Expressionism has many stylistic similarities to the
Russian artists of the early twentieth century such as
Wassily Kandinsky. Although it is true
that spontaneity or of the impression of spontaneity characterized
many of the abstract expressionists works, most of these paintings
involved careful planning, especially since their large size
demanded it. An exception might be the drip paintings of
Pollock.
Why this style gained mainstream acceptance in the 1950s is a
matter of debate. American
Social
realism had been the mainstream in the 1930s. It had been
influenced not only by the
Great
Depression but also by the
Social
Realists of Mexico such as
David Alfaro Siqueiros and
Diego Rivera. The political climate after World
War II did not long tolerate the social protests of those painters.
Abstract
expressionism arose during World War II and began to be showcased
during the early 1940s at galleries in New York like The Art of
This Century Gallery
. The late 1940s through the mid 1950s
ushered in the
McCarthy era. It was
after World War II and a time of political conservatism and extreme
artistic
censorship in the United States.
Some people have conjectured that since the subject matter was
often totally abstract, Abstract expressionism became a safe
strategy for artists to pursue this style. Abstract art could be
seen as apolitical. Or if the art was political, the message was
largely for the insiders. However those theorists are in the
minority. As the first truly original school of painting in
America, Abstract expressionism demonstrated the vitality and
creativity of the country in the post-war years, as well as its
ability (or need) to develop an aesthetic sense that was not
constrained by the European standards of beauty.
Although Abstract expressionism spread quickly throughout the
United States, the major centers of this style were New York City
and California, especially in the
New
York School, and the San Francisco Bay area. Abstract
expressionist paintings share certain characteristics, including
the use of large canvases, an "all-over" approach, in which the
whole canvas is treated with equal importance (as opposed to the
center being of more interest than the edges. The canvas as the
arena became a credo of
Action
painting, while the
integrity of the picture plane
became a credo of the Color Field painters.
During the 1950s Color Field painting initially referred to a
particular type of
abstract
expressionism, especially the work of
Mark Rothko,
Clyfford
Still,
Barnett Newman,
Robert Motherwell and
Adolph Gottlieb. It essentially described
abstract paintings with large, flat expanses of color that
expressed the sensual, and visual feelings and properties of large
areas of nuanced surface.
Art critic
Clement Greenberg perceived Color
Field painting as related to but different from Action painting.
The overall expanse and gestalt of the work of the early color
field painters speaks of an almost religious experience, awestruck
in the face of an expanding universe of sensuality, color and
surface. During the early to mid-1960s Color Field painting was the
term used to describe artists like
Jules
Olitski,
Kenneth Noland, and
Helen Frankenthaler, whose works
were related to second generation abstract expressionism, and to
younger artists like
Larry Zox, and
Frank Stella, - all moving in a new
direction. Artists like
Clyfford
Still,
Mark Rothko,
Hans Hofmann,
Morris
Louis,
Jules Olitski,
Kenneth Noland,
Helen Frankenthaler,
Larry Zox, and others often used greatly reduced
references to nature, and they painted with a highly articulated
and psychological use of color. In general these artists eliminated
recognizable imagery. In
Mountains and Sea, from 1952,
(see above) a seminal work of
Colorfield painting by
Helen Frankenthaler the artist used the
stain technique for the first time.
In Europe there was the continuation of Surrealism, Cubism, Dada
and the works of
Matisse. Also in Europe,
Tachisme (the European equivalent to
Abstract expressionism) took hold of the newest generation.
Serge Poliakoff,
Nicolas de Staël,
Georges Mathieu,
Vieira da Silva,
Jean Dubuffet,
Yves
Klein and
Pierre Soulages among
others are considered important figures in post-war European
painting.
Eventually abstract painting in America evolved into movements such
as
Neo-Dada, Color Field painting,
Post painterly abstraction,
Op art,
hard-edge painting,
Minimal art,
shaped
canvas painting,
Lyrical
Abstraction,
Neo-expressionism
and the continuation of Abstract expressionism. As a response to
the tendency toward abstraction imagery emerged through various new
movements, notably
Pop art.
Pop Art
Image:Jasper Johns's 'Flag', Encaustic, oil and collage on fabric
mounted on plywood,1954-55.jpg|
Jasper
Johns 1954-55 pre-
Pop ArtImage:Roy
Lichtenstein Whaam.jpg|
Roy
Lichtenstein, 1963
Pop
ArtImage:Campbells Soup Cans MOMA.jpg|
Andy Warhol 1962,
Pop Art
(
repetition)Image:Hockney, A Bigger
Splash.jpg|
David Hockney 1967, English
Pop ArtImage:'Still Life -20', mixed media
work by --Tom Wesselmann--, 1962, --Albright-Knox
Gallery--.jpg|
Tom Wesselmann, 1962,
Collage and
Pop
artImage:WayneThiebaudThreeMachines.jpg|
Wayne Thiebaud, 1963,
Pop
artImage:Alex Katz's 1970 painting of his son 'Vincent with
Open Mouth'.jpg|
Alex Katz 1970,
Pop artImage:'The Robe Following Her - 4', oil on
canvas painting by Jim Dine, 1984-5.jpg|
Jim
Dine, 1984-1985,
Pop artThe term "Pop
Art" was used by
Lawrence Alloway
in England in 1958 to describe paintings that celebrated
consumerism of the post World War II era. This movement rejected
Abstract expressionism and its focus on the hermeneutic and
psychological interior, in favor of art which depicted, and often
celebrated material consumer culture, advertising, and iconography
of the mass production age. The early works of
David Hockney and the works of
Richard Hamilton Peter Blake and
Eduardo Paolozzi were considered seminal
examples in the movement.
Pop Art in America was to a large degree
initially inspired by the works of
Jasper
Johns,
Larry Rivers, and
Robert Rauschenberg. Although the
paintings of
Gerald Murphy,
Stuart Davis and
Charles Demuth during the 1920s and 1930s set
the table for
Pop Art in America. In New
York City during the mid 1950s
Robert Rauschenberg and
Jasper Johns created works of art that at first
seemed to be continuations of
Abstract expressionist painting.
Actually their works and the work of
Larry
Rivers, were radical departures from abstract expressionism
especially in the use of banal and literal imagery and the
inclusion and the combining of mundane materials into their work.
The
innovations of Johns' specific use of various images and objects
like chairs, numbers, targets, beer cans and the American Flag; Rivers paintings of subjects
drawn from popular culture such as George Washington crossing the Delaware
, and his inclusions of images from advertisements
like the camel from Camel
cigarettes, and Rauschenberg's surprising constructions using
inclusions of objects and pictures taken from popular culture,
hardware stores, junkyards, the city streets, and taxidermy gave rise to a radical new movement in
American art. Eventually by 1963
the movement came to be known worldwide as
Pop
Art.
American
Pop-Art is exemplified by artists:
Andy Warhol,
Claes Oldenburg,
Wayne Thiebaud,
James Rosenquist,
Jim
Dine,
Tom Wesselmann and
Roy Lichtenstein among others.
Pop art merges popular and mass culture with fine
art, while injecting humor, irony, and recognizable imagery and
content into the mix. In October 1962 the
Sidney Janis Gallery mounted
The New
Realists the first major
Pop Art group
exhibition in an uptown art gallery in New York City.
Sidney Janis mounted the exhibition in a 57th
Street storefront near his gallery at 15 E. 57th Street. The show
sent shockwaves through the
New York
School and reverberated worldwide.
Earlier in the fall
of 1962 an historically important and ground-breaking New Painting of Common
Objects exhibition of Pop Art,
curated by Walter Hopps at the Pasadena Art
Museum
sent shock waves across the Western United
States.
While in
the downtown scene in New York City's East
Village
10th Street
galleries artists were formulating an American version of
Pop Art. Claes Oldenburg had his storefront, and the
Green Gallery on
57th Street began to show
Tom Wesselmann and
James Rosenquist. Later
Leo Castelli exhibited other American artists
including the bulk of the careers of Andy Warhol and Roy
Lichtenstein and his use of Benday dots, a technique used in
commercial reproduction. There is a connection between the radical
works of Duchamp, and
Man Ray, the
rebellious Dadaists - with a sense of humor; and Pop Artists like
Alex Katz,
Claes Oldenburg,
Andy
Warhol,
Roy Lichtenstein and
the others.
While throughout the 20th century many painters continued to
practice landscape and figurative painting with contemporary
subjects and solid technique, like
Milton
Avery,
John D. Graham,
Fairfield
Porter,
Edward Hopper,
Balthus,
Francis
Bacon,
Nicolas de Staël,
Andrew Wyeth,
Lucian Freud,
Frank
Auerbach,
Philip Pearlstein,
David Park,
Nathan Oliveira,
David Hockney,
Malcolm Morley,
Richard Estes,
Ralph
Goings,
Audrey Flack,
Chuck Close,
Susan
Rothenberg,
Eric Fischl,
Vija Celmins and
Richard Diebenkorn.
Figurative, Landscape, Still-Life, and Realism
Image:Balthusnude.jpg|
Balthus, 1951,
figurative expressionismImage:Office in a small city
hopper 1953.jpg|
Edward Hopper, 1953,
urbanImage:Milton Avery - 'Green Sea', oil
on canvas 1958, University of Kentucky Art Museum (Lexington,
Kentucky).jpg|
Milton Avery, 1958,
landscapeImage:Auerbach, Head
of Julia.jpg|Frank Auerbach, 1960,
British
Figurative
expressionismDuring the 1930s through the 1960s abstract
painting in America and Europe evolved into movements such as
Abstract Expressionism, Color
Field painting,
Post
painterly abstraction,
Op art,
hard-edge painting,
Minimal art,
shaped
canvas painting, and
Lyrical
Abstraction. Other artists reacted as a response to the
tendency toward abstraction, allowing figurative imagery to
continue through various new contexts like the
Bay Area Figurative Movement in
the 1950s and new forms of
expressionism from the 1940s through the
1960s. In Italy during this time,
Giorgio Morandi was the foremost still life
painter, exploring a wide variety of approaches to depicting
everyday bottles and kitchen implements. Throughout the 20th
century many painters practiced
Realism and used expressive imagery;
practicing landscape and figurative painting with contemporary
subjects and solid technique, and unique expressivity like
still-life painter
Giorgio Morandi,
Milton Avery,
John
D. Graham,
Fairfield Porter,
Edward Hopper,
Andrew
Wyeth,
Balthus,
Francis Bacon,
Leon Kossoff,
Frank
Auerbach,
Lucian Freud,
Philip Pearlstein,
Willem de Kooning,
Arshile Gorky,
Grace
Hartigan,
Robert De Niro,
Sr.,
Elaine de Kooning and
others. Along with
Henri Matisse,
Pablo Picasso,
Pierre Bonnard,
Georges Braque, and other 20th century
masters.
Study
after Velázquez's Portrait of Pope Innocent X, 1953 (see
above) is a painting by the Irish born artist
Francis Bacon and is an example of
Post World War II European
Expressionism. The work shows a distorted
version of the
Portrait of
Innocent X painted by the Spanish artist
Diego Velázquez in 1650. The work is
one of a series of variants of the Velázquez painting which Bacon
executed throughout the 1950s and early 1960s, over a total of
forty-five works. When asked why he was compelled to revisit the
subject so often, Bacon replied that he had nothing against the
Popes, that he merely "wanted an excuse to use these colours, and
you can't give ordinary clothes that purple colour without getting
into a sort of false
fauve manner." The Pope
in this version seethes with anger and aggression, and the dark
colors give the image a grotesque and nightmarish appearance. The
pleated curtains of the backdrop are rendered transparent, and seem
to fall through the Pope's face.
Italian painter
Giorgio Morandi was
an important 20th century, early pioneer of Minimalism.
Born in
Bologna,
Italy
in 1890, throughout his career, Morandi
concentrated almost exclusively on still lives and landscapes,
except for a few self-portraits. With great sensitivity to
tone, color, and compositional balance, he would depict the same
familiar bottles and vases again and again in paintings notable for
their simplicity of execution. Morandi executed 133 etchings, a
significant body of work in its own right, and his drawings and
watercolors often approach abstraction in their economy of means.
Through his simple and repetitive motifs and economical use of
color, value and surface, Morandi became a prescient and important
forerunner of
Minimalism. He died in
Bologna in 1964.
After World War II the term
School of
Paris often referred to
Tachisme, the
European equivalent of American Abstract expressionism and those
artists are also related to
Cobra. Important proponents
being
Jean Dubuffet,
Pierre Soulages,
Nicholas de Staël,
Hans Hartung,
Serge
Poliakoff, and
Georges Mathieu,
among several others. During the early 1950s
Dubuffet (who was always a figurative artist),
and
de Staël, abandoned
abstraction, and returned to imagery via figuration and landscape.
De Staël 's work was quickly recognised within the post-war art
world, and he became one of the most influential artists of the
1950s. His return to representation (seascapes, footballers, jazz
musicians, seagulls) during the early 1950s can be seen as an
influential precedent for the American
Bay Area Figurative Movement,
as many of those abstract painters like
Richard Diebenkorn,
David Park,
Elmer
Bischoff,
Wayne Thiebaud,
Nathan Oliveira,
Joan Brown and others made a similar move;
returning to imagery during the mid-1950s. Much of de Staël 's late
work - in particular his thinned, and diluted oil on canvas
abstract landscapes of the mid-1950s predicts Color Field painting
and
Lyrical Abstraction of the
1960s and 1970s.
Nicolas de
Staël 's bold and intensely vivid color in his last paintings
predict the direction of much of contemporary painting that came
after him including Pop art of the 1960s.
Art Brut, New Realism, Bay Area Figurative Movement, Neo-Dada,
Photorealism
Image:'Still Life with Cup', oil on canvas painting by Paul Wonner,
1959, private collection.jpg|
Paul
Wonner, 1959,
Bay Area
Figurative MovementImage:Jasper Johns's 'Map',
1961.jpg|
Jasper Johns, 1961,
Neo-DadaImage:Robert Rauschenberg's untitled
'combine', 1963.jpg|
Robert
Rauschenberg 1963,
Neo-DadaImage:20070624 Dubuffet - Court les
rues.JPG|
Jean Dubuffet, 1962,
Art BrutImage:Cityscape I 360.jpg|
Richard Diebenkorn 1963,
Bay Area Figurative
MovementImage:Richard Estes.jpg|
Richard Estes 1968,
PhotorealismImage:Fairfield Porter's painting
'Under the Elms', 1971 - 1972.jpg|
Fairfield Porter 1971-1972,
East Coast Figurative paintingImage:Ralph
Goings.jpg|
Ralph Goings, 1982,
Photorealism
During the 1950s and 1960s as abstract painting in America and
Europe evolved into movements such as
Color
Field painting,
Post
painterly abstraction,
Op art,
hard-edge painting,
Minimal art,
shaped
canvas painting,
Lyrical
Abstraction, and the continuation of
Abstract expressionism. Other artists
reacted as a response to the tendency toward abstraction with
Art brut,
Fluxus,
Neo-Dada,
New
Realism, allowing imagery to re-emerge through various new
contexts like
Pop art, the
Bay Area Figurative Movement
and later in the 1970s
Neo-expressionism.
The Bay Area Figurative Movement of
whom David Park, Elmer Bischoff, Nathan Oliveira and Richard Diebenkorn whose painting
Cityscape 1, 1963 is a typical example (see above) were
influential members flourished during the 1950s and 1960s in
California
. Although throughout the 20th century
painters continued to practice
Realism and use imagery, practicing
landscape and figurative painting with contemporary subjects and
solid technique, and unique expressivity like
Milton Avery,
Edward
Hopper,
Jean Dubuffet,
Francis Bacon,
Frank Auerbach,
Lucian Freud,
Philip Pearlstein, and others. Younger
painters practiced the use of imagery in new and radical ways.
Yves Klein,
Arman,
Martial Raysse,
Christo,
Niki de
Saint Phalle,
David Hockney,
Alex Katz,
Malcolm Morley,
Ralph
Goings,
Audrey Flack,
Richard Estes,
Chuck
Close,
Susan Rothenberg,
Eric Fischl, and
Vija Celmins were a few who became prominent
between the 1960s and the 1980s.
Fairfield Porter (see above) was largely
self-taught, and produced representational work in the midst of the
Abstract Expressionist
movement. His subjects were primarily landscapes, domestic
interiors and portraits of family, friends and fellow artists, many
of them affiliated with the
New York
School of writers, including
John
Ashbery,
Frank O'Hara, and
James Schuyler.
Many of his paintings
were set in or around the family summer house on Great Spruce
Head Island, Maine
.
Also during the 1960s and 1970s, there was a reaction against
painting. Critics like Douglas Crimp viewed the work of artists
like
Ad Reinhardt, and declared the
'death of painting'. Artists began to practice new ways of making
art. New movements gained prominence some of which are:
Postminimalism,
Earth
art,
Video art,
Installation art,
arte povera,
performance art,
body
art,
fluxus,
mail
art, the
situationists and
conceptual art among others.
Neo-Dada is also a movement that started 1n the 1950s and 1960s and
was related to Abstract expressionism only with imagery. Featuring
the emergence of combined manufactured items, with artist
materials, moving away from previous conventions of painting. This
trend in art is exemplified by the work of
Jasper Johns and
Robert Rauschenberg, whose "combines" in
the 1950s were forerunners of Pop Art and
Installation art, and made use of the
assemblage of large physical objects, including stuffed animals,
birds and commercial photography.
Robert Rauschenberg, (see
untitled
combine, 1963, above),
Jasper
Johns,
Larry Rivers,
John Chamberlain,
Claes Oldenburg,
George Segal,
Jim
Dine, and
Edward Kienholz among
others were important pioneers of both abstraction and Pop Art;
creating new conventions of art-making; they made acceptable in
serious contemporary art circles the radical inclusion of unlikely
materials as parts of their works of art.
New abstraction from the 1950s through the 1980s
Image: Meschers EK 42 (8355).jpg|
Ellsworth Kelly, 1951,
Hard-edge
paintingImage:Frankenthaler_Helen_Mountains and
Sea_1952.jpg|
Helen Frankenthaler
1952,
Color Field
paintingImage:'Where', 252 x 362 cm. magna on canvas painting
by Morris Louis, Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden,
1960.jpg|
Morris Louis 1960
Minimalism-
Color
fieldImage:'Bridge' by Kenneth Noland, 1964..jpg|
Kenneth Noland, 1964,
Post-Painterly
AbstractionImage:Josef Albers's painting 'Homage to the
Square', 1965.jpg|
Josef Albers 1965,
Geometric
abstractionImage:Newman-Who's Afraid of Red, Yellow and
Blue.jpg|
Barnett Newman, 1966,
Color Field -
MinimalismImage:Riley, Cataract 3.jpg|
Bridget Riley, 1967,
Op
artImage:TotRY.jpg|
Richard
Anuszkiewicz, 1985
Op ArtColor Field painting clearly pointed
toward a new direction in American painting, away from
abstract expressionism. Color Field
painting is related to
Post-painterly abstraction,
Suprematism,
Abstract Expressionism,
Hard-edge painting and
Lyrical Abstraction.
During the 1960s and 1970s abstract painting continued to develop
in America through varied styles.
Geometric abstraction, Op art,
hard-edge painting, Color Field
painting and
minimal painting, were some
interrelated directions for advanced abstract painting as well as
some other new movements.
Morris Louis
(see gallery) was an important pioneer in advanced
Colorfield painting, his work can serve
as a bridge between
Abstract
expressionism,
Colorfield
painting, and
Minimal Art. Two
influential teachers
Josef Albers and
Hans Hofmann introduced a new
generation of American artists to their advanced theories of color
and space.
Josef Albers is best
remembered for his work as an
Geometric abstractionist painter and
theorist. Most famous of all are the hundreds of paintings and
prints that make up the series
Homage to the Square, (see
gallery). In this rigorous series, begun in 1949, Albers explored
chromatic interactions with flat colored squares arranged
concentrically on the canvas. Albers' theories on art and education
were formative for the next generation of artists. His own
paintings form the foundation of both
hard-edge painting and Op art.
Josef Albers,
Hans Hofmann,
Ilya
Bolotowsky,
Burgoyne Diller,
Victor Vasarely,
Bridget Riley,
Richard Anuszkiewicz,
Frank Stella,
Morris
Louis,
Kenneth Noland,
Ellsworth Kelly,
Barnett Newman,
Larry
Poons,
Ronald Davis,
Larry Zox, and
Al Held are
artists closely associated with
Geometric abstraction, Op art, Color
Field painting, and in the case of Hofmann and Newman Abstract
expressionism as well.
In 1965, an exhibition called
The Responsive Eye, curated
by William C.
Seitz, was held at the Museum of
Modern Art
, in New York City. The works shown were wide
ranging, encompassing the[Minimalism of
Frank Stella, the Op art of Larry Poons, the
work of
Alexander Liberman,
alongside the masters of the Op Art movement:
Victor Vasarely,
Richard Anuszkiewicz,
Bridget Riley and others. The exhibition
focused on the perceptual aspects of art, which result both from
the illusion of movement and the interaction of color
relationships. Op art, also known as optical art, is used to
describe some paintings and other works of art which use
optical illusions. Op art is also closely
akin to
geometric abstraction
and
hard-edge painting. Although
sometimes the term used for it is perceptual abstraction.
Op art is a method of painting concerning the interaction between
illusion and picture plane, between understanding and seeing. Op
art works are abstract, with many of the better known pieces made
in only black and white. When the viewer looks at them, the
impression is given of movement, hidden images, flashing and
vibration, patterns, or alternatively, of swelling or
warping.
Color Field painting sought to rid art of superfluous rhetoric.
Artists like
Clyfford Still,
Mark Rothko,
Hans
Hofmann,
Morris Louis,
Jules Olitski,
Kenneth Noland,
Helen Frankenthaler,
Larry Zox, and others often used greatly reduced
references to nature, and they painted with a highly articulated
and psychological use of color. In general these artists eliminated
recognizable imagery. Certain artists quoted references to past or
present art, but in general color field painting presents
abstraction as an end in itself. In pursuing this direction of
modern art, artists wanted to present
each painting as one unified, cohesive, monolithic image.
Frank Stella,
Kenneth Noland,
Ellsworth Kelly,
Barnett Newman,
Ronald Davis, Neil Williams,
Robert Mangold, Charles Hinman,
Richard Tuttle, David Novros, and Al Loving
are examples of artists associated with the use of the
shaped canvas during the period beginning in
the early 1960s. Many
Geometric
abstract artists,
minimalists, and
Hard-edge painters elected to use the
edges of the image to define the shape of the painting rather than
accepting the rectangular format. In fact, the use of the
shaped canvas is primarily associated with
paintings of the 1960s and 1970s that are coolly
abstract, formalistic, geometrical, objective,
rationalistic, clean-lined, brashly sharp-edged, or
minimalist in character. The Andre Emmerich
Gallery, the
Leo Castelli Gallery, the
Richard Feigen Gallery, and the
Park
Place Gallery were important showcases for
Color Field painting,
shaped canvas painting and
Lyrical Abstraction in New York City
during the 1960s. There is a connection with
post-painterly abstraction, which
reacted against
abstract
expressionisms' mysticism, hyper-subjectivity, and emphasis on
making the act of painting itself dramatically visible - as well as
the solemn acceptance of the flat rectangle as an almost ritual
prerequisite for serious painting. During the 1960s Color Field
painting and
Minimal art were often
closely associated with each other. In actuality by the early 1970s
both movements became decidedly diverse.
Washington Color School, Shaped Canvas, Abstract Illusionism,
Lyrical Abstraction
Image:BlackGreyBeat.jpg|
Gene
Davis 1964,
Washington Color
SchoolImage:Frank Stella's 'Harran II', 1967.jpg|
Frank Stella 1967,
Shaped CanvasImage:P0055av_Ring.jpg|
Ronald Davis 1968,
Abstract
IllusionismImage:Forwilliamblake.jpg|
Ronnie Landfield, 1968,
Lyrical AbstractionAnother related
movement of the late 1960s
Lyrical
Abstraction is a European term that was borrowed by Larry
Aldrich (the founder of the
Aldrich Contemporary Art
Museum, Ridgefield Connecticut) in 1969 to describe what
Aldrich said he saw in the studios of many artists at that time.
It is
also the name of an exhibition that originated in the Aldrich
Museum and traveled to the Whitney
Museum of American Art
and other museums throughout the United States
between 1969 and 1971.
Lyrical Abstraction in the late
1960s is characterized by the paintings of
Dan Christensen,
Ronnie Landfield,
Peter Young and others, and along with
the
Fluxus movement and
Postminimalism (a term first coined by Robert
Pincus-Witten in the pages of
Artforum in
1969) sought to expand the boundaries of abstract painting and
Minimalism by focusing on process, new materials and new ways of
expression.
Postminimalism often
incorporating industrial materials, raw materials, fabrications,
found objects, installation, serial repetition, and often with
references to
Dada and
Surrealism is best exemplified in the sculptures
of
Eva Hesse. Lyrical Abstraction,
Conceptual Art,
Postminimalism,
Earth
Art,
Video,
Performance art,
Installation art, along with the
continuation of
Fluxus,
Abstract Expressionism,
Color Field Painting,
Hard-edge painting,
Minimal Art,
Op art,
Pop Art,
Photorealism and
New
Realism extended the boundaries of
Contemporary Art in the mid-1960s through
the 1970s. Lyrical Abstraction is a type of freewheeling abstract
painting that emerged in the mid-1960s when abstract painters
returned to various forms of painterly, pictorial, expressionism
with a predominate focus on process, gestalt and repetitive
compositional strategies in general.
Lyrical Abstraction shares
similarities with
Color Field Painting and
Abstract Expressionism,
Lyrical Abstraction as exemplified by
the 1968
Ronnie Landfield painting
For William Blake, (above) especially in the freewheeling
usage of paint - texture and surface. Direct drawing, calligraphic
use of line, the effects of brushed, splattered, stained,
squeegeed, poured, and splashed paint superficially resemble the
effects seen in
Abstract
Expressionism and
Color Field
Painting. However the styles are markedly
different. Setting it apart from
Abstract Expressionism and
Action Painting of the 1940s and 1950s is
the approach to composition and drama. As seen in
Action Painting there is an emphasis on
brushstrokes, high compositional drama, dynamic compositional
tension. While in Lyrical Abstraction there is a sense of
compositional randomness, all over composition, low key and relaxed
compositional drama and an emphasis on process, repetition, and an
all over sensibility.,
Hard-edge painting, Minimalism, Postminimalism, Monochrome
painting
Image:Untitled painting by Larry Poons, ca.1964.jpg|
Larry Poons, ca. 1964,
Hard-edge paintingImage:Robert Mangold's
acrylic and pencil 'X Within X Orange', 1981.jpg|
Robert Mangold 1981,
MinimalismImage:'Red Canvas' by Richard Tuttle,
1967, Corcoran Gallery of Art.jpg|
Richard
Tuttle, 1967,
PostminimalismImage: The Dylan
Painting.jpg|
Brice Marden, 1966/1986,
Monochrome painting
Agnes Martin,
Robert Mangold (see above),
Brice Marden,
Jo Baer,
Robert Ryman,
Richard Tuttle, Neil Williams, David Novros,
Paul Mogenson, are examples of artists associated with
Minimalism and (exceptions of Martin, Baer and
Marden) the use of the
shaped canvas
also during the period beginning in the early 1960s. Many
Geometric abstract artists,
minimalists, and
Hard-edge painters
elected to use the edges of the image to define the shape of the
painting rather than accepting the rectangular format. In fact, the
use of the
shaped canvas is primarily
associated with paintings of the 1960s and 1970s that are coolly
abstract, formalistic, geometrical, objective, rationalistic,
clean-lined, brashly sharp-edged, or
minimalist in character. The
Bykert Gallery, and the
Park Place Gallery were important
showcases for
Minimalism and
shaped canvas painting in New York City during
the 1960s.
During the 1960s and 1970s artists as powerful and influential as
Robert Motherwell,
Adolph Gottlieb,
Phillip Guston,
Lee
Krasner,
Cy Twombly,
Robert Rauschenberg,
Jasper Johns,
Richard Diebenkorn,
Josef Albers,
Elmer
Bischoff,
Agnes Martin,
Al Held,
Sam Francis,
Ellsworth Kelly,
Morris Louis,
Helen Frankenthaler,
Gene Davis,
Frank Stella,
Kenneth
Noland,
Joan Mitchell,
Friedel Dzubas, and younger artists like
Brice Marden,
Robert Mangold,
Sam
Gilliam,
Sean Scully,
Pat Steir,
Elizabeth Murray,
Larry Poons,
Walter Darby Bannard,
Larry Zox,
Ronnie
Landfield,
Ronald Davis,
Dan Christensen, Joan Snyder,
Ross Bleckner,
Archie
Rand,
Susan Crile, and dozens of
others produced vital and influential paintings.
During the 1960s and 1970s, there was a reaction against abstract
painting. Some critics viewed the work of artists like
Ad Reinhardt, and declared the 'death of
painting'. Artists began to practice new ways of making art. New
movements gained prominence some of which are:
Postminimalism,
Earth
art,
Video art,
Installation art,
arte povera,
performance art,
body
art,
fluxus,
mail
art, the
situationists and
conceptual art among others.
However still other important innovations in abstract painting took
place during the 1960s and the 1970s characterized by
Monochrome painting and
Hard-edge painting inspired by
Ad Reinhardt,
Barnett
Newman,
Milton Resnick, and
Ellsworth Kelly. Artists as
diversified as
Agnes Martin,
Al Held,
Larry Zox,
Frank Stella,
Larry Poons,
Brice
Marden and others explored the the power of simplification. The
convergence of
Color Field painting,
Minimal art,
Hard-edge painting,
Lyrical Abstraction, and
Postminimalism blurredthe distinction between
movements that became more apparent in the 1980s and 1990s. The
Neo-expressionism movement is
related to earlier developments in
Abstract expressionism,
Neo-Dada,
Lyrical
Abstraction and
Postminimal
painting.
Neo Expressionism
Image:gustonphilip.jpg|
Philip Guston
1972, pre-
Neo-expressionismImage:Rothhorse2.jpg|
Susan
Rothenberg 1979,
Neo-expressionismImage:Badboy.jpg|
Eric Fischl 1981, Figurative
Neo-expressionismImage:Kiefer.jpg|
Anselm Kiefer 1983, European
Neo-expressionism
In the late 1960s the
abstract
expressionist painter
Philip
Guston helped to lead a transition from abstract expressionism
to
Neo-expressionism in painting,
abandoning the so-called "pure abstraction" of abstract
expressionism in favor of more cartoonish renderings of various
personal symbols and objects. These works were inspirational to a
new generation of painters interested in a revival of expressive
imagery. His painting
Painting, Smoking, Eating 1973, seen
above in the gallery is an example of Guston's final and conclusive
return to representation.
In the
late 1970s and early 1980s, there was also a return to painting
that occurred almost simultaneously in Italy, Germany, France and
Britain
. These movements were called
Transavantguardia,
Neue Wilde,
Figuration Libre,
Neo-expressionism and the
School of London respectively. These
painting were characterized by large formats, free expressive mark
making, figuration, myth and imagination. All work in this genre
came to be labeled
neo-expressionism. Critical reaction was
divided. Some critics regarded it as driven by profit motivations
by large commercial galleries. This type of art continues in
popularity into the 21st century, even after the art crash of the
late 1980s.
Anselm Kiefer
is a leading figure in European Neo-expressionism by the 1980s, (see
To the Unknown Painter 1983, in the gallery above)
Kiefer's themes widened from a focus on Germany's
role in civilization to the fate of art and culture
in general. His work became more sculptural and involves not
only national identity and collective memory, but also
occult symbolism,
theology and
mysticism.
The theme of all the work is the trauma experienced by entire
societies, and the continual rebirth and renewal in life.
During the late 1970s in the United States painters who began
working with invigorated surfaces and who returned to imagery like
Susan Rothenberg gained in
popularity, especially as seen above in paintings like
Horse
2, 1979. During the 1980s American artists like
Eric Fischl, (see
Bad Boy, 1981,
above),
David Salle,
Jean-Michel Basquiat,
Julian Schnabel, and
Keith Haring, and Italian painters like
Mimmo Paladino,
Sandro Chia, and
Enzo
Cucchi, among others defined the idea of
Neo-expressionism in America.
Neo-expressionism was a style of
modern
painting that became popular in the late
1970s and dominated the art market until the mid-1980s. It
developed in Europe as a reaction against the conceptual and
minimalistic art of the 1960s and 1970s.
Neo-expressionists returned to portraying recognizable objects,
such as the human body (although sometimes in a virtually abstract
manner), in a rough and violently emotional way using vivid colours
and banal colour harmonies. The veteran painters
Philip Guston,
Frank
Auerbach,
Leon Kossoff,
Gerhard Richter,
A. R. Penck and
Georg
Baselitz, along with slightly younger artists like
Anselm Kiefer,
Eric
Fischl,
Susan Rothenberg,
Francesco Clemente,
Jean-Michel Basquiat,
Julian Schnabel,
Keith Haring, and many others became known for
working in this intense expressionist vein of painting.
Painting still holds a respected position in
contemporary art. Art is an open field no
longer divided by the objective versus non-objective dichotomy.
Artists can achieve critical success whether their images are
representational or abstract. What has currency is content,
exploring the boundaries of the medium, and a refusal to
recapitulate the works of the past as an end goal.
Contemporary painting into the 21st Century
Image:La scienza della laziness (The Science of Laziness) by Frank
Stella, 1984, oil, enamel and alkyd paint on canvas, etched
magnesium, aluminum and fiberglass, National Gallery of Art
(Washington, D. C.).jpg|
Frank Stella,
1984

.jpg/180px-'Zim_Zum'_by_Anselm_Kiefer,_1990,_acrylic,_emulsion,_crayon,_shellac,_ashes_and_canvas_on_lead,_National_Gallery_of_Art_(Washington,_D._C.).jpg)
Image:Riley, Shadowplay.jpg|
Bridget Riley, 1990

Image:Brice Marden Vine.jpg|
Brice Marden,
1992-1993Image:Thedeluge.jpg|
Ronnie
Landfield, 1999Image:Morley, Red Arrows.jpg|
Malcolm Morley,
2000Image:Hirst-Beautiful.jpg|
Damien
Hirst, 2003Image:Torso2.jpg|
Jenny
Saville, 2004Image:Yan Pei-Ming2005, oil on canvas, 'Eros
Center, prostituée de Francfort '.jpg|
Yan
Pei-Ming, 2005
Contemporary
painting from ChinaAt the beginning of the
21st century Contemporary painting and Contemporary art in general
continues in several contiguous modes, characterized by the idea of
pluralism. The "crisis" in
painting and current art and current
art
criticism today is brought about by
pluralism. There is no consensus, nor
need there be, as to a representative style of the age. There is an
anything goes attitude that prevails; an "everything going
on", and consequently "nothing going on" syndrome; this creates an
aesthetic traffic jam with no firm and clear direction and with
every lane on the artistic
superhighway
filled to capacity. Consequently magnificent and important works of
art continue to be made albeit in a wide variety of styles and
aesthetic temperaments, the marketplace being left to judge
merit.
Hard-edge painting,
Geometric abstraction,
Appropriation,
Hyperrealism,
Photorealism,
Expressionism,
Minimalism,
Lyrical Abstraction,
Pop Art,
Op Art,
Abstract Expressionism,
Color Field painting,
Monochrome painting,
Neo-expressionism,
Collage,
Intermedia
painting,
Assemblage painting,
Digital painting,
Postmodern painting,
Neo-Dada painting,
Shaped
canvas painting, environmental
mural
painting, traditional
figure painting,
Landscape painting,
Portrait painting, are a few continuing
and current directions in painting at the beginning of the 21st
century.
Painting in the Americas
During the period before and after European exploration and
settlement of the Americas, including North America,
Central America, South America and the
Islands of the Caribbean, the
Antilles, the
Lesser Antilles and other island
groups, indigenous native cultures produced creative works
including
architecture,
pottery,
ceramics,
weaving,
carving,
sculpture,
painting and
murals
as well as other religious and utilitarian objects. Each continent
of the Americas hosted societies that were unique and individually
developed cultures; that produced totems, works of religious
symbolism, and decorative and expressive painted works. African
influence was especially strong in the art of the Caribbean and
South America. The arts of the indigenous people of the Americas
had an enormous impact and influence on
European art and vice-versa during and after
the
Age of Exploration. Spain,
Portugal, France, The Netherlands, and England were all powerful
and influential
colonial powers in
the Americas during and after the 15th century. By the 19th century
cultural influence began to flow both ways across the
Atlantic
Mexico and Central America
Image:Tetitla Teotihuacan Great Goddess
mural (Abracapocus).jpg|Great Goddess mural from the site at
Teotihuacán
, MexicoImage:Tepantitla Mountain Stream
mural Teotihuacan (Luis Tello).jpg|A portion of the actual mural
from the Tepantitla compound which appears under the Great Goddess
portrait, Mexico
Image:Great Goddess of Teotihuacan (T
Aleto).jpg|Mural from the Tepantitla compound showing what has been
identified as an aspect of the Great Goddess of Teotihuacan,
from a reproduction in the National
Museum of Anthropology
in Mexico CityImage:Jaguar Mural,
Teotihuacan.jpg|Jaguar mural from the site at Teotihuacán
, MexicoImage:SBmural.jpg|A Mayan mural from Guatemala
, Pre-Classical period (1–250 AD)Image:Jaguar
vase.jpg|Painting on the Lord of the jaguar pelt throne vase, a
scene of the
Maya court, 700-800
AD.
Image:Bonampak painting.jpg|A Mayan mural
from Bonampak
, Mexico, 580–800 AD.Image:Bonampakmural3.jpg|A Mayan mural from
Bonampak
, 580–800 ADImage:Dresden Codex
p09.jpg|Painting from a
Maya
codexImage:Jaina-style Drunkard
Figurine.jpg|Painted pottery figurine of a drunkard from the burial
site at Jaina
Island
, Mayan art, 400–800 AD.Image:Palenque
Relief.jpg|Painted relief of the Maya site Palenque
, featuring the son of K'inich Ahkal Mo' Naab' III
(678–730s?, r. 722–729).
Image:Mayanvase.jpg|Painting on a Maya vase
from the Late Classical Period (600–900), from Copán
, Honduras
Image:Quetzalcoatl Ehecatl.jpg|An
Aztec painting from the
Codex
BorgiaImage:Codex Borbonicus, p11 trecena13.PNG|An
Aztec painting from the
Codex BorbonicusImage:Mexico.Tlax.Cacaxtla.01.jpg|Detail
from the Battle Mural, c.600-700, Cacaxtla
, MexicoImage:Aztec5figure9.jpg|
A
painting from Codex Mendoza showing
elder Aztecs being given intoxicants,
Mexico, c.1553
South America
Image:Orca_mitica_nasca.jpg|Killer
Whale, painted pottery, Nazca
culture, 300 BC–800 AD, Larco Museum
. Lima,
Peru
Image:Nazca-pottery-(01).png|Painted pottery
from the Nazca culture of Peru
, 300
BC–800 ADImage:H Luna Frisorestaurado lou.jpg|A
Moche mural of a decapitator from the Huaca de la
Luna
site, Peru
, 100–700
AD.Image:Huaca de la Luna - Août
2007.jpg|Moche murals from the Huaca de la
Luna
site, Peru
, 100–700
AD.Image:Huari pottery 01.png|Painted pottery
from the Huari culture of Peru
, 500–1200
ADImage:Brazilian-Indians.jpg|Body painting,
Indigenous peoples in Brazil, a
Brazilian Indian couple, c.2000
North America
United States
Image:GreatGalleryPanel.jpg|The Great
Gallery, Pictographs, Canyonlands
National Park
, Horseshoe Canyon,
Utah
, by , c. 1500 BCE
Image:pictograph_jqjacobs.jpg|Pictograph, southeastern Utah
, c.
1200 BC
Pueblo cultureImage:Chaco Anasazi
canteen NPS.jpg|Painted pottery, Anasazi, North America: A canteen (pot) excavated
from the ruins in Chaco
Canyon
, New
Mexico
, c. 700 AD–1100 AD
Image:Mississippian
Underwater Panther ceramic.JPG|Painted ceramic jug showing the
underwater panther from the
Mississippian culture, found
at
Rose Mound in Cross County, Arkansas
, c. 1400-1600.Image:Dahlem Wolfsmaske
Haida.jpg|A
Haida wolf mask, 1880.
Image:Ceramic Hopi
jar - by-Nampeyo - date-ca. 1880 - from-DC1.jpg|A Hopi jar by Nampeyo, made in
Arizona
, 1880.Image:Zuni-girl-with-jar2.png|A girl from
the Zuni tribe of New Mexico
with a painted pottery jar, photographed in
c. 1903.Image:Navajo sandpainting.jpg|
Edward S. Curtis,
Navajo sandpainting, sepia
photogravure c.
1907Image:Zahadolzhá--Navaho.jpg|
Navajo man in ceremonial dress with mask and
body paint, c. 1904Image:UteHideArt3.jpg|An
Uncompaghre Ute,
Shaved Beaver Hide
Painting. The Northern Ute would trap beavers, shave images
into the animals' stretched and cured hides, and use them to
decorate their personal and ceremonial dwellings, c. 19th
century.
Image:Tlingit totem pole.jpg|Tlingit totem pole in Ketchikan, Alaska
, circa 1901.Image:Tlingit
K'alyaan Totem Pole August 2005.jpg|The K'alyaan Totem
Pole of the Tlingit Kiks.ádi Clan, erected
at Sitka
National Historical Park
to commemorate the lives lost in the 1804 Battle of Sitka.Image:Ketchican totem
pole 2 stub.jpg|A totem pole in Ketchikan
, Alaska
, in the
Tlingit style.Image:Yupik mask
Branly 70-1999-1-2.jpg|Fish mask of the Yupi'k people, painted wood, Yukon/Kuskokwim
region Alaska
, c. early
20th centuryImage:Totem pole (js) 2.jpg|From Saxman
Totem Park, Ketchikan,
Alaska
Image:Totem pole (js) 3.jpg|From Saxman
Totem Park, Ketchikan,
Alaska
Canada
Image:Totem Park pole 1.jpg|A totem pole in
Totem Park, Victoria, British Columbia
.Image:Totem Park pole 2.jpg|From Totem Park,
Victoria,
British Columbia
.
Caribbean
Image:Petroglyph at Caguana.jpg|
Rock petroglyph overlayed with chalk, Caguana
Indigenous Ceremonial Center.
Utuado, Puerto Rico
.
Islamic painting
Image:Yahyâ ibn Mahmûd al-Wâsitî 007.jpg|
Yahyâ ibn Mahmûd al-Wâsitî, Iraq,
1237Image:Yahyâ ibn Mahmûd al-Wâsitî 004.jpg|Yahyâ ibn Mahmûd
al-Wâsitî, Iraq, 1237
Image:Syrischer Maler um 1315
001.jpg|Syrischer Maler, 1315 Metropolitan Museum of Art
Image:Iskandar (Alexander the Great) at the
Talking Tree.jpg|Ilkhanid Shahnameh, ca. 1330-1340, Smithsonian
Image:Kamal-ud-din Bihzad 001.jpg|Behzād,
1494-45, British
Museum
Image:Miraj_by_Sultan_Muhammad.jpg|
Persian miniature painting, CE
1550Image:Saki - Reza Abbasi - Moraqqa’-e Golshan 1609 Golestan
Palace.jpg|
Reza Abbasi, 1609
Image:Meister des
Razm-Nâma-Manuskripts 001.jpg|Razmnama, 1616, British
Museum
Image:Twolovers.jpg|Two Lovers by
Reza Abbasi, 1630Image:Harun Al-Rashid
and the World of the Thousand and One Nights.jpg|
Persian miniature Harun al-Rashid in Thousand and One
NightsImage:Georgian prince by Reza Abbasi.jpg|
Reza Abbasi, 1620Image:Adam and Eve from a copy
of the Falnama.jpg|
Adam and Eve,
Safavid Iran, c. 1550 AD.Image:Arabischer
Maler um 1335 002.jpg|A painting depicting Abû Zayd, 1335
AD.Image:Irakischer Maler um 1210 001.jpg|A scene from the book of
Ahmad ibn al-Husayn ibn al-Ahnaf, showing two galloping horsemen,
1210 AD.Image:Irakischer Maler um 1280 001.jpg|The angel Isrâfîl,
Iraq, 1280 AD.Image:Irakischer Maler von 1287 002.jpg|
The
Clerk, Iraq, 1287.Image:Al-Bawwâb 001.jpg|An ornamental Quran,
by al-Bawwâb, 11th century AD.
Image:Sarayi_Album_10a.jpg|Mehmet II, from the Sarai Albums of Istanbul
, Turkey, 15th century AD.Image:Maiden fur cap
Louvre OA7128.jpg|Maiden in a fur cap, by Muhammad ‘Alî,
Isfahan
, Iran, mid 17th century.Image:Youth and
suitors.jpg|Youth and Suitors, Mashhad
, Iran, 1556-1565 AD.
The depiction of humans, animals or any another figurative subjects
is forbidden within Islam to prevent believers from
idolatry so there is no religiously motivated
painting (or sculpture) tradition within Muslim culture. Pictorial
activity was reduced to
Arabesque, mainly
abstract, with
geometrical configuration or floral and
plant-like patterns. Strongly connected to
architecture and
calligraphy, it can be widely seen as used for
the painting of
tiles in
mosques or in illuminations around the text of the
Koran and other books. In fact abstract art is not an invention of
modern art but it is present in
pre-classical,
barbarian and non-western cultures many centuries
before it and is essentially a decorative or
applied art. Notable
illustrator M.
C. Escher
was influenced by this geometrical and
pattern based art.
Art
Nouveau (
Aubrey Beardsley and
the architect
Antonio Gaudi)
re-introduced abstract floral patterns into western art.
Note that despite the taboo of figurative visualization, some
muslim countries did cultivate a rich tradition in painting, though
not in its own right, but as a companion to the written word.
Iranian or Persian art, widely known as Persian miniature,
concentrates on the illustration of epic or romantic works of
literature. Persian illustrators deliberately avoided the use of
shading and perspective, though familiar with it in their
pre-islamic history, in order to abide by the rule of not creating
any life-like illusion of the real world. Their aim was not to
depict the world as it is, but to create images of an ideal world
of timeless beauty and perfect order.
In present days, painting by art students or professional artists
in
arab and non-arab muslim countries follow
the same tendencies of Western culture art.
Iran
Oriental historian Basil Gray believes "Iran has offered a
particularly unique [sic] art to the world which is excellent in
its kind".
Caves in Iran's Lorestan province exhibit painted imagery of
animals and hunting scenes. Some such as those in Fars Province and
Sialk are at least 5,000 years old.
Painting in Iran is thought to have reached a climax during the
Tamerlane era when outstanding masters such as Kamaleddin Behzad
gave birth to a new style of painting.
Paintings of the Qajar period, are a combination of European
influences and Safavid miniature schools of painting such as those
introduced by Reza Abbasi. Masters such as Kamal-ol-molk, further
pushed forward the European influence in Iran. It was during the
Qajar era when "Coffee House painting" emerged. Subjects of this
style were often religious in nature depicting scenes from Shia
epics and the like.
Pakistan
Image:LAgha_Star.jpg|
Lubna Agha,
Star - a painting inspired by the artisans of
MoroccoImage:Anarkali.jpg|
AR
Chughtai,
Anarkali
Australia
Africa
Image:Himba_lady_preparing_deodorant.jpg|
Himba
woman covered with traditional
red ochre
pigment. Traditional
body paint symbolic of the
earth and of
blood, and also worn
for protection from the sun.Image:KikuyuWoman.jpg|A
Kĩkũyũ woman in traditional dress.
Ceremonial Face
Painting.Image:Young Maasai Warrior.jpg|
Young Maasai Warrior, with head-dress and
Face Painting.
Image:Dogon Circumsion Cave
Painting.jpg|Dogon, circumcision
cave, with paintings Mali
c.
contemporary
African traditional culture and tribes do not seem to have great
interest in two-dimensional representations in favour of
sculpture and
Relief.
However, decorative painting in African culture is often abstract
and geometrical. Another pictorial manifestation is
body painting, and
face painting present for example in
Maasai and
Kĩkũyũ culture in their ceremony
rituals. Ceremonial
Cave painting in
certain villages can be found to be still in use. Note that
Pablo Picasso and other modern artists
were influenced by
African
sculpture and
Masks in their varied
styles.Contemporary African artists follow western art movements
and their paintings have little difference from occidental art
works.
Influence on Western art
At the start of the 20th century, artists like
Picasso,
Matisse,
Vincent van Gogh,
Paul Gauguin and
Modigliani became aware of, and were
inspired by, African art. In a situation where the established
avant garde was straining against the
constraints imposed by serving the world of appearances, African
Art demonstrated the power of supremely well organised forms;
produced not only by responding to the faculty of sight, but also
and often primarily, the faculty of
imagination,
emotion and
mystical and
religious experience. These artists saw
in African Art a
formal perfection
and sophistication unified with phenomenal expressive power.
See also
References
- Art of the Western World: From Ancient Greece to Post Modernism
(Paperback) by Bruce Cole, Simon and Shuster, 1981,[1] accessed 27 October 2007
- The Meeting of Eastern and Western Art, Revised and
Expanded edition (Hardcover)by Michael Sullivan,
- [2] NY Times, Holland Cotter, accessed online
27 October 2007]
- Japonisme: The Japanese Influence on Western Art Since 1858
(Paperback) by Siegfried Wichmann# Publisher: Thames & Hudson;
New Ed edition (19 November 1999), ISBN 0500281637, ISBN
978-0500281635
- The Meeting of Eastern and Western Art, Revised and
Expanded edition (Hardcover)by Michael Sullivan, Publisher:
University of California Press; Rev Exp Su edition (1 June 1989),
ISBN 0520059026, ISBN 978 0520059023
- M. Hoover, Art of the Paleolithic and Neolithic Eras]", from
Art History Survey 1, San Antonio College (July 2001;
accessed 11 June 2005).
- UNESCO World Heritage Site. Ajanta
Caves, India: Brief Description. Retrieved 27 October
2006.
- UNESCO International
Council on Monuments and Sites. 1982. Ajanta Caves: Advisory Body
Evaluation. Retrieved 27 October 2006.
- Roman Painting
- Roman Wall Painting
- Counter Reformation, from Encyclopædia Britannica
Online, latest edition, full-article.
- Counter Reformation, from The
Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-05.
- Helen Gardner, Fred S. Kleiner, and Christin J. Mamiya,
"Gardner's Art Through the Ages" (Belmont, CA: Thomson/Wadsworth,
2005)
- Edmond and Jules de
Goncourt, French Eighteenth-Century Painters. Cornell
Paperbacks, 1981, pp.222-225. ISBN 0-8014-9218-1
- Novack, Barbara American Sublime Artforum,
2002, retrieved October 30, 2008
- Delvaille, Bernard, La poésie symboliste: anthologie,
introduction. ISBN 2-221-50161-6
- Russell T. Clement. Four French Symbolists. Greenwood
Press, 1996. Page 114.
- The "Wild Beasts" Fauvism and its Affinities,
John
Elderfield, Museum of Modern Art 1976, ISBN 0-87070-638-1
- Picasso and Braque pioneering cubism William Rubin,
published by the Museum of Modern Art, New York,
copyright 1989, ISBN 0 87070-676-4 p.348.
- Der Blaue Reiter, Tate Glossaryretrieved August
10, 2009
- [3]
- [4]
- Spector, Nancy. " The Tilled Field, 1923-1924". Guggenheim display caption.
Retrieved on 30 May 2008.
- Persistence of Memory in the MoMA Online
Collection
- From the Tate Modern
- "The Artists' Association 'Brücke'", Brücke Museum.
Retrieved 7 September 2007.
- Fineman, Mia, The Most Famous Farm Couple in the World: Why
American Gothic still fascinates., Slate, 8 June
2005
- Lewis, Helena. Dada Turns Red. 1990. University of
Edinburgh Press. A history of the uneasy relations between
Surrealists and Communists from the 1920s through the 1950s.
- Pablo Picasso - Biography, Quotes &
Paintings, retrieved 14 June 2007.
- [5]National Gallery of
Australia
- Topics in American Art since 1945, Pop Art the words, p.119-122, by
Lawrence
Alloway, copyright 1975 by W.W.Norton and Company, NYC ISBN
0-393-04401-7
- David Piper, p. 635
- Schmied, Wieland (1996). Francis Bacon: Commitment and
Conflict. (Munich) Prestel. ISBN 3-7913-1664-8, p.17
- Peppiatt, Michael, Anatomy of an Enigma. Westview
Press. ISBN 0-8133-3520-5 (1996), p.147
- Schmied (1996), p20
- Peppiatt (1996), p148
- Jean
Dubuffet: L’Art brut préféré aux arts culturels
[1949](=engl in: Art brut. Madness and Marginalia, special
issue of Art & Text, No. 27, 1987, p. 31-33)
- Terry Fenton, online essay about Kenneth Noland, and acrylic paint, [6]
accessed 30 April 2007
- John Lancaster. Introducing Op Art, London: BT
Batsford Ltd, 1973, p. 28.
- Aldrich, Larry. Young Lyrical Painters, Art in America, v.57,
n6, November-December 1969, pp.104-113.
- Lyrical Abstraction, Exhibition Catalogue, the Aldrich Museum
of Contemporary Art, Ridgefield, Conn. 1970.
- Movers and Shakers, New York, "Leaving C&M", by
Sarah Douglas, Art and Auction, March 2007, V.XXXNo7.
- Martin, Ann Ray, and Howard Junker. The New Art: It's Way, Way
Out, Newsweek 29 July 1968: pp.3,55-63.
- The Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art, Lyrical
Abstraction, exhibition: 5 April through 7 June 1970
- Lyrical Abstraction Whitney Museum of American Art,
New York, 25 May - 6 July 1971
- Tate online glossary
Further reading
- Clement Greenberg, Art and
Culture, Beacon Press, 1961
- Lyrical
Abstraction, Exhibition Catalogue, Whitney
Museum of American Art
, NYC, 1971.
- O'Connor, Francis V. Jackson
Pollock Exhibition Catalogue, (New York, Museum of
Modern Art
, [1967]) OCLC 165852
- Pictures of Nothing: Abstract Art since Pollock (A.W.
Mellon Lectures in the Fine Arts), Kirk
Varnedoe, 2003
- The Triumph of Modernism: The
Art World, 1985-2005, Hilton Kramer,
2006, ISBN 0 1-56663-708
- David Piper, The Illustrated Library of Art, Portland House,
New York, 1986, ISBN 0-517-62336-6
External links