Home (Constructivism)
Home  
 
 
Home » Fine arts » Constructivism


 

Constructivism

Fine arts ConstructionismContemporary art

CONSTRUCTIVISM
KEY DATES: 1915-1940s
Constructivism was an invention of the Russian avant-garde that found adherents across the continent.

 


Constructivism
Constructivism was a movement that was active from 1915 to the 1940's. It was a movement created by the Russian avant-garde, but quickly spread to the rest of the continent.

Constructivism was an artistic and architectural philosophy that originated in Russia beginning in 1919, which was a rejection of the idea of autonomous art. The movement was in favour of art as a practice for social purposes.

Constructivism
Get Babylon's Translation Software! Free Download Now!
Babylon 8 - Your all-in-one solution ...

What is Constructivism
Constructivism was an artistic and architectural movement in Russia from 1914 onward (especially present after the October Revolution), and a term often used in modern art today, ...

Constructivism
(1914 - 1930)
Constructivism was first created in Russia in 1913 when the Russian sculptor Vladimir Tatlin, during his journey to Paris, discovered the works of Braque and Picasso.

Constructivism was one the first movements to adopt a strictly non-objective subject matter. The movement's work was mainly geometric and precisely composed, sometimes through mathematics and measuring tools.

Art Movement : Constructivism
Constructivism : Constructivism was an artistic movement in Russia from 1914 onward, which dismissed "pure" art in favour of art used as an instrument for social purposes (namedly, ...

Constructivism was an artistic and architectural movement in Russia from 1919 onward (especially present after the October Revolution) which dismissed "pure" art in favour of an art used as an instrument for social purposes, ...

Constructivism
Constructivism was an invention of the Russian avant-garde. Germany was the site of the most Constructivist activity outside of the Soviet Union.

Constructivism - Vladimir Tatlin -
'Model For 3rd international Tower' 1919 - 20
What Is Constructivism - Main Characteristics Of Constructivism ...

Constructivism

(Encyclopaedia Britannica)

Russian artistic and architectural movement that was first influenced by Cubism and Futurism and is generally considered to have been initiated in 1913 with the "painting reliefs"-abstract geometric ...

Constructivism was the last and most influential modern art movement to flourish in Russia in the 20th century.

Constructivism
An artistic movement in Russia from 1914 onward, which grew out of Collage ...

(1893-1930) and practised by David Burliuk (1882-1967), Velimir Khlebnikov and Alexei Kruchenykh (1886-1968); Rayonism (1912-15) invented by Mikhail Larionov and his partner Natalia Goncharova (1881-1962); Constructivism initiated ...

Constructivism (1919-1934)
Originated in Russia, a movement that rejected the idea of creating art just for creating art. Instead it focused its attention on creating art for social progress.

constructivism A Russian abstract movement founded by Tatlin, Gabo, and Antoine Pevsner, c. 1915. It focused on art for the industrial age. Tatlin believed in art with a utilitarian purpose.

Constructivism.
A term engendering considerable controversy and often applied to deeply differing modes of art. In general the notion of constructing with its implicaton of assembled, tectonic, and geometric configurations, underlies the term.

constructivism A Russian art movement, fully established by 1921, that was dedicated to nonobjective means of communication.

Constructivism
A form of sculpture using wood, metal, glass, and modern industrial materials to represent a technological society.
Contemporary ...

Constructivism (1913-1930): all media. This term refers to the branch of abstract art founded in Russia. The constructivist members believed that art should directly reflect the industrial world.

Constructivism
A modern aesthetic movement that rejects narrative content in art and turns to shapes in nature and machines for models of formal and functional autonomy.

Constructivism
1921-1928
Vladimir Tatline, Alexandre Rodtchenko, Liobov Popova, Naum Gabo, Kasimir Malevitch, El Lissitzky, Antoine Pevsner, Lioubov Popova ...

Deconstructivism
is a development of postmodern architecture that began in the late 1980s and early 1990s. It is spearheaded by ideas of fragmentation and a tendency to look like crystals.

Constructivism: Mainly based in the Soviet Union, this post-revolutionary art movement constructed sculpture out of metal, glass plastic, which stressed space rather than solidity, ...

Constructivism
This art movement originated in Russia in the early 20th century and typically characterizes sculptures made with industrial materials - metal, glass, plastic, etc., that emphasize space instead of mass.

Constructivism or constructivism
conté crayon and Conté Crayon
contemplate, contemplation is coming soon ...

See also: Constructivism
In 1909 the Italian Futurists published their manifesto in the Parisian newspaper, Le Figaro.

constructivism - in sculpture, an abstract, formal organization of mass and volume reflecting modern technology, characterized by the use of industrial materials and emphasis of a sculpture's relationship to space rather than its solidity ...

Constructivist Art (Constructivism) is a term used to define a type of totally abstract (non-representational) artwork that is very ordered and often minimal and geometric in style.

" (Old Sculplin Gallery) Fauvism, Cubism, Futurism, Constructivism, Surrealism and Abstract Expressionism continued the march of Abstraction into the 20th Century.

Neo-Plasticism was somewhat influential on Russian Constructivism.
Chronological Listing of Neo-Plasticists
Use ctrl-F (PC) or command-F (Mac) to search for a name ...

It emerged as Futurism in Italy (illustrated above), Vorticism in England, Suprematism and Constructivism in Russia, and Expressionism in Germany.

This movement was, in a sense, an amalgamation of many different styles and movements of the early 20th century, including Constructivism, Cubism, Modernism, Bauhaus, Art Nouveau, and Futurism. Its popularity peaked during the 1920s.

Its innovations gave rise to a host of other 20th-century art movements, including futurism in Italy, suprematism and constructivism in Russia, de Stijl in the Netherlands, and vorticism in England.

When designing interactive lessons, it helps to be guided by theories about how people learn. Read IDEA's articles about three theories of learning: Social Cognitive Theory, Constructivism and Cooperative Learning.
< Previous Next > ...

But art deco movement was influenced by a number of other avant-garde movements, including Cubism, Russian Constructivism, and Italian Futurism. Art deco borrows from Middle East design, Mayan and Egyptian art, and Greek and Roman themes.

Julio Alpuy (b. 1919), José Gurvich (1924-74), Francisco Matto (1911-95), Gonzalo Fonseca (1922-97), and Manuel Pailos (b. 1918). Guided by Torres Garcia, more in terms of ideas than technique, they were instrumental in establishing Constructivism, ...

Le futurisme italien prõnait la violence, la guerre. --- Tendance poétique et artistique moderniste (débarrassée des traits idéologiques du futurisme italien). Les futurismes et constructivismes des années 20.

The Futurism Manifesto demanded that artist run to the local library and "set fire to the library shelves". The movement influenced many painters, including Marcel Duchamp and such movements as Cubism and Russian Constructivism.

See also: Movement, Painting, Expression, Sculpture, School

Fine arts ConstructionismContemporary art

 
 rssRSS