Cubism

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    Pablo Picasso, known as one of the world’s most influential and well-documented artists of the twentieth century. Unlike most, Picasso’s legacy as a prominent rule breaker, an inventor of forms, an innovator of styles and techniques, a master of various media, has long since been recognized the genius in modern art. Picasso is known for producing an estimated 50,000 pieces of artwork, including paintings, sculptures, ceramics, drawings, prints, and even tapestries and rugs. Yet the medium in…

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    By wondering among rooms each with a specific style of art, I found the room showing Cubism, introducing Pablo Picasso and Georeges Braque especially fascinating. After leaving the museum, I realized that I spent most of the time watching at the paintings related to Cubism, because the ideas from the paintings were obscure in forms of patterns, I needed to stop and watch for a while in front of the paintings to understand them. The paintings performed just as the introduction suggested: cubist…

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    Picasso, also known as Pablo Picasso, was a Spanish painter, sculptor, printmaker, stage designer, poet, and playwright throughout the twentieth-century. During his career he geared more towards different types of Cubism, along with Surrealism. One of his most monumental paintings named “Guernica” combines both Analytic and Synthetic Cubist forms. It is said that this painting serves a political message towards Picasso’s powerful protest against the brutality of war. Dating to 1937, Pablo…

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    experience (“Pablo Picasso”). When he got older, he moved to Paris, France (“Pablo Picasso). He studied at the Real Academy of Bellas Arts of San Fernando (“Pablo Picasso”). There, he learned his popular techniques, which lead to his own creation known as cubism (“Pablo Picasso”). Picasso was meant to be a success since the start at a young age (“Who is Pablo Picasso”). His sketches were always catching the audience’s attention (“Who is Pablo Picasso”). The way he added the colors and shapes…

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    curtains that seem to highlight the figures below (Henri Matisse. n.d.). Picasso has made the stage smaller and more cramped yet the brown at the left and the blue-white at the right construct a similar stage that focuses the eye toward the figures (Cubism. n.d.). Now their breakaways. Matisse used such curves and arabesques in the shapes of the trees and then mirrored that in the curves of the bodies. This made that painting seem more sensual than Cezanne's (Fauvism-Matisse. n.d.). He also…

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    Guernica Comparison

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    Compare and Contrast Guernica and The Third of May Guernica is a very elaborate oil creation with a lot of meaning behind it. It was one of the most famous paintings in the twentieth century. This painting was created during the Spanish Civil War. 1 When an outbreak of conservative, traditional, and fascist forces led by General Francisco Franco were trying to topple the liberal government of the fledging Spanish Republic. Close Panel Suspected Entry: 75% match Uploaded - Critical Thinking.docx…

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    relied heavily on the belief that his subjective observations qualified his expertise in attribution. It is of no wonder why he feverishly discredited the “whole of contemporary art as degenerate” (Schapiro, 212), and even more so in relation to cubism, a misunderstanding of his notion of “tactile values” (Schapiro, 212). Modernity exposed the illusory foundation on which Berenson 's profession operated, thus denying itself from ever holding true…

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    Some art goes slightly glanced at, seen at the surface level as just art rather than what it is and why it’s like that. Most art even finds itself largely taken for granted, being a large part of our lives. We live in a world made up of and by art, for instance, all around us we see paintings, architecture, sculpture, fashion, and even technology. However what is art really? How did it become such a big part of our lives? And what would our lives be without it? This research is to find out…

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    often would feature heavily-built sculpturesque Grecian women, in traditional settings. This Period was again influenced with positive images and colors creating very pleasant looking pictures without the distortion found in other movements like Cubism or the next movement Surrealism. During this time period Picasso created works like “Three Woman at the spring" 1921 and…

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    Bonheur De Vivre

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    Cezanne’s paintings as the model for figuring out how to distill only the essence of nature, to achieve a cohesive surface that expressed the artist's singular vision. His experiments and mastering of the technique eventually led to the invention of Cubism (a style that was explored and spearheaded with his fellow artist named Braque). Picasso’s artwork, ’Les Demoiselles d’Avignon' was his response to 'The large Bathers’; in sense, an homage to Cezanne’s way that paved the way for new art. Le…

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