Objective Abstraction. Term applied to the work of a group of British artists in the 1930s. It was used after the exhibition Objective Abstractions was held at the Zwemmer Gallery, London, from March to April 1934.
Objective Abstraction A style of non-geometric form of abstract art practised by a group of British artists in the early 1930s, notably in the 1934 show entitled Objective Abstraction staged at the Zwemmer Gallery in London, ...
into deeper and deeper levels of reality until you find God. In keeping with that tenet, Harris pared away the details of things in a search for the underlying essentials of creation. By the mid-30s, he had moved into total non-objective abstraction.
See also: Objective, School, Avant-garde, Modern art, Subject matter
 
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