Examples of Cubist in the following topics:
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- This painting is also considered a protocubist work bridging Picasso's African and Cubist periods.
- In Cubist artwork, objects were analyzed, broken up and reassembled in an abstracted form instead of being depicted from one viewpoint.
- Picasso, Braque and other Cubists depicted subjects from a multitude of viewpoints to create a greater scope of context.
- Cubist sculpture developed in parallel to Cubist painting.
- This work is influenced by primitivism and is considered to be one of the earliest examples of Cubist painting.
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- Pablo Picasso is one of most influential artists of the 20th century, known for Cubist art, constructed sculpture, and collage.
- As one of the greatest and most influential artists of the 20th century, he is widely known for co-founding the Cubist movement, the invention of constructed sculpture, the co-invention of collage, and for the wide variety of styles he helped develop and explore.
- Among his most famous works are the proto-Cubist Les Demoiselles d'Avignon (1907), and Guernica (1937), a portrayal of the German bombing of Guernica during the Spanish Civil War.
- Formal ideas developed during this period lead directly into the Cubist period that followed.
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- Cubist sculpture developed in parallel with cubist painting, centered in Paris beginning around 1909 and evolving through the early 1920s.
- During his period of Cubist innovation, Picasso revolutionized the art of sculpture by by combining disparate objects and materials into one sculptural work - the sculptural equivalent of collage in two dimensional art.
- Just as collage was a radical development in two dimensional art, so was Cubist construction a radical development in three dimensional sculpture .
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- In Cubist artwork, objects are analyzed, broken up, and reassembled in an abstracted form.
- Following a visit to Paris in 1911, the Futurist painters adopted the methods of the Cubists.
- Differentiate the artistic styles of Futurism and Constructivism from their Cubist origins.
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- Among the scandalously radical works of art were Marcel Duchamp's cubist/futurist style Nude Descending a Staircase (1912, ), in which he expressed motion with successive superimposed images.
- "A Slight Attack of Third Dimentia Brought on by Excessive Study of the Much Talked of Cubist Pictures in the International Exhibition at New York," drawn by John French Sloan in April 1913.
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- These new developments in form came about, in part, through Cubists' initial exploration of how to depict an object and the space around it by representing it from multiple viewpoints, incorporating all of them into a single image.
- Marcel Duchamp's "Nude Descending a Staircase" is known as a Futurist work with Cubist influences, and exemplifies a feeling of movement from the upper left to lower right corner of the piece .
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- Les Demoiselles d'Avignon is an example of cubist art, which has a tendency to flatten the picture plane, and its use of abstract shapes and irregular forms suggest multiple points of view within a single image.
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- Much of this concept of "creative destruction" is mirrored in the cubist movement, for example.
- It was the time when the first cubist landscapes, still-lives and portraits appeared; bright colors entered the palettes of painters, and the first non-objective paintings were displayed in the galleries.
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- This proto-Cubist period following Picasso's Blue Period and Rose Period has also been called the Black Period.
- Although Les Demoiselles is seen as a proto-cubist work, Picasso continued to develop a style derived from African art before beginning the analytic cubism phase of his painting in 1910.
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- The precise origin of the term constructed sculpture dates to the cubist constructions of Pablo Picasso circa 1912-1914, as well as those of Marcel Duchamp.