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American modernism

Fine arts American impressionismAmerican realism

What is American Modernism
American Modernism is an art and literary movement that was located in Northern America and spanned several artistic styles.

 


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"Rauschenberg, enfant terrible of American modernism in the 1950s and '60s, is now an ambassador for global good will.

For Modernism in an American context, see American modernism. ... Modernity is a term used to describe the condition of being modern. Since the term modern is used to describe a wide range of periods, modernity must be understood in its context. ...

com - Alfred Stieglitz, Georgia O'Keeffe & American Modernism
Traditional Fine Arts Organization site guide. Exibition University of Colorado at Boulder: Postmodernism ...

"The Figure 5 in Gold is deservedly one of the icons of American modernism, but it came almost at the end of Demuth's life and its author has always seemed a little elusive beside the heavier reputations of his contemporaries - Georgia O'Keeffe, ...

An important part of American Modernism, it was inspired by the development of Cubism in Europe, and by the rapid growth of industrialization of North America in the wake of innovators such as Henry Ford.

Alfred Barr later brought several of Malevich's Suprematist works to the Museum of Modern Art in New York, where they were included in Cubism and Abstract Art, a groundbreaking exhibition that greatly influenced American modernism.

Precisionism (also known as Cubist Realism) is a style of representation in which an object is rendered realistically, but with an emphasis on its geometrical form. An important development in American Modernism, ...

The exhibition and accompanying catalogue will provide insight into a figurative branch of postwar American modernism that has been often neglected in favor of abstract expressionism.

An important element in American Modernism, it was strongly influenced by the development of Cubism in Europe, as well as the rapid industrialization in North America.

See also: Modernism, Movement, Painting, Realism, School

Fine arts American impressionismAmerican realism

 
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