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ARTISTIC MOVEMENTS - Coggle Diagram
ARTISTIC MOVEMENTS
Stone Age
(30,000 b.c.–2500 b.c.)
Cave painting, fertility goddesses
Nuts, seeds and bones and to grind clay into pigment.
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Middle Ages
(500–1400)
Wall frescoes, altarpieces and triptychs, decorative paintings and manuscript illumination.
Shallow relief, deep relief and freestanding sculpture. Wood, stone, and ivory
Celtic art, Carolingian
Renaissance, Romanesque,
Gothic
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Mannerism
(1527–1580)
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Porcelain-skinned figures, tempered light, “cold” or “aloof"
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Baroque
(1600–1750)
Chiaroscuro technique, interplay between light and dark, close-up action and strong diagonals
Materials: Colorful marble, bronze, or even gilded with gold.
Neoclassical
(1750–1850)
Materials: Porcelain, ormolu and silver
straight lines, a smooth paint surface, the depiction of light, a minimal use of color, and the clear, crisp definition of forms.
Romanticism
(1780–1850)
Techniques: small, close strokes, complementary colors, brilliant and vivid visual effect
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Realistic and human figures, sharper brush strokes, precise lines
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Realism
(1848–1900)
Techniques: detailed, unembellished depiction of nature or of contemporary life
Emphasize the mundane, ugly or sordid
it attempted to represent subject matter truthfully, without artificiality and avoiding speculative fiction and supernatural elements.
Impressionism
(1865–1885)
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Layers of colours, leaving gaps in the top layers to reveal the colours underneath
Techniques: hatching, cross-hatching, stippling, drybrushing, and sgraffito
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Cubism (1905–1920)
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flat, two-dimensional surface of the picture plane
techniques of perspective, foreshortening, modeling, and chiaroscuro
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