Trends of art
Realism
Greek artists
Roman artists
Renaissance artists
Impressionism
1800s
emblematic works
played with light
Post-Impresionism
representatives
"Water lily pond" by Claude Monet
Vincent Van Gogh (1853-1890)
Sold just one paiting Red Vineyard at Arles
created more than 2000work
knew many paiting techniques
his favorite one was with thick brush strokes
Cubism
the moods certain colors convey (yellow suggested a world filled with energy)
Surrealism
after his death the fame catch him: his Portrait of Dr. Gachet was sold for 82.5 million dollars
Salvador Dali
Claude Monet
click to edit
Pablo Picasso
Fragmented people and objects to again move away from realistic portrayals
Pissarro
Renoir
The angles pay tribute to the African masks
The splatter paintings of Jackson Pollock, and
35 the Pop art of Andy Warhol to further show how abstract art has become.
click to edit
Others gallerys
click to edit
Textile gallery
Ceramics gallery
Photo gallery
Sculpture gallery
Margaret Bourke-White
Alfred Steiglist
Collaborate with his friend and fellow artist Georges Braque
Picasso challenged conventional, realistic forms of art through the establishment of Cubism. He wanted to develop a new way of seeing that reflected the modern age, and Cubism is how he achieved this goal.
Picasso believed in the concept of relativity – he took into account both his observations and his memories when creating a Cubist image.
As a result of this belief, Cubism became about how to see an object or figure rather than what the artist was looking at.
Pablo Picasso, “Girl With Mandolin”, 1910
Japanese tea bowls
Chinese vases
Native American pottery
rugs
“I am Surrealism” said Salvador Dali. Eccentric, over-the-top and totally narcissistic, he is one of the most famous Spanish painters of the 20th century.
quilts
scarves
Eccentric Genus
Claes Oldenburg
Henry Moore