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Analytical cubism

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Analytical Cubism
Fast Facts
Cubism was the most radical and influential "ism" in 20th Century art. It provided the catalyst to 20th Century art that the I5th Century Italian Renaissance provided to the I6th Century Italian High Renaissance.

 


Analytical Cubism:
The period from 1910 to 1912 is referred to as Analytical Cubism. Paintings executed during this period showed the breaking down, or analysis, of form.

Analytical Cubism See Cubism.
aperture In photography, the camera lens opening and its relative diameter. Measured in f-stops, such as f/8, f/ I 1, etc.

Analytical Cubism. A "montage"... We see it used everyday in movies or television. A series of vignettes flashing or tumbling over one another, usually reenforced by music, of the mean streets of New York or the excitement of a basket ball game.

Analytical Cubism (1908-1912)
Profoundly influenced by Cezanne's later work, Picasso and Braque initiated a series of landscape paintings in 1908.

Analytical Cubism is the first developmental phase of Cubism. More intellectual than the second phase of Cubism (Synthetic Cubism), the limited palette and rigid geometric forms are intentionally ambiguous and difficult to read.

Analytical Cubism: .The second phase in the development of European Cubism, from c. 1909 to c. 1913, when artists (usually disciples of Paul Cezanne) re-interpreted natural forms in terms of multi-perspective geometric shapes.

Analytical Cubism
Georges Braque (1882-1963)
Violin and Jug (oil on canvas, 1910)
Kunstmuseum, Basel ...

Picasso and Braque worked together closely during the next few years (1909-12)-the only time Picasso ever worked with another painter in this way-and they developed what came to be known as Analytical Cubism.

"The lines which had followed the lines of the boughs and branches and twigs of the trees gave way in 1912 to lines derived from the scaffolding in space of Analytical Cubism.

An early rudimentary form was Cubism, specifically analytical Cubism - which rejected linear perspective and the illusion of spatial depth in a painting, in order to focus on its 2-D aspects.

After 1909, Picasso and Braque began a more systematic study of structure which we know as "Analytical Cubism".

Analytical cubism had a sure effect on deconstructivism, as forms and content are dissected and viewed from different perspectives simultaneously. A synchronicity of disjoined space is evident in many of the works of Frank Gehry and Bernard Tschumi.

Characteristics of Cubism - Analytical Cubism (1910 - 1912)
Two main branches of Cubism are generally acknowledged - Analytical Cubism and the later Synthetic Cubism.

The period from 1910 to 1912 often is referred to as that of Analytical Cubism. In an analytical cubist painting, the object was "taken apart" and reshaped with the use of flat intersecting planes.

Their work to 1911 is known as Analytical Cubism, in which they avoided strong subjects and colors in favor of subdued palettes and neutral subjects.

The first phase is called Analytical Cubism concerned itself with fragmenting the image and presenting it in multiple facets. The second phase, Synthetic Cubism incorporated collage. The Cubist lay at the foundation of many other modern movements.

Initiated in 1907, Cubism took up Cezanne's search for basic geometric elements in nature and aimed first at taking apart the forms of nature (Analytical Cubism), and next at an ...

Mondrain moved to Paris in 1911 and began to try cubism. He started out using analytical cubism and eventually he moved into seminaturlism. He also painted several series of paintings including a series of Trees and Scaffoldings.
Gray Tree ...

Noun
1. an artistic movement in France beginning in 1907 that featured surfaces of geometrical planes
(hypernym) artistic movement, art movement
(hyponym) analytical cubism
(member-meronym) cubist ...

See also: Cubism, Painting, Movement, Expression, Synthetic cubism

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