Cubism: Difference between revisions

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(New page: {{subpages}} '''Cubism''' is a style of abstract art developed in France in 1908 by Georges Braque and Pablo Picasso. It was one of the most important and influential movements...)
 
imported>Ro Thorpe
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'''Cubism''' is a style of [[abstract art]] developed in France in 1908 by [[Georges Braque]] and [[Pablo Picasso]]. It was one of the most important and influential movements of the twentieth century; many later [[modern art|modernist]] styles, such as [[futurism]] and [[orphism (art)|orphism]], derived from cubist principles. Early cubist works (c. 1908-12) combined multiple viewpoints of a subject in a single image. This "analytic cubism" was based on the artists' direct observation of a model from various angles. Later cubist works relied less on observation, resulting in a more directly inventive style called "synthetic cubism."
'''Cubism''' is a style of [[art]] developed in France in 1908 by [[Georges Braque]] and [[Pablo Picasso]]. It was one of the most important and influential movements of the twentieth century: many later [[modern art|modernist]] styles, such as [[futurism]] and [[orphism (art)|orphism]], derived from cubist principles. Early cubist works (c. 1908-12) combined multiple viewpoints of a subject in a single image. This "analytic cubism" was based on the artists' direct observation of a model from various angles. Later cubist works relied less on observation, resulting in a more directly inventive style called "synthetic cubism."

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Cubism is a style of art developed in France in 1908 by Georges Braque and Pablo Picasso. It was one of the most important and influential movements of the twentieth century: many later modernist styles, such as futurism and orphism, derived from cubist principles. Early cubist works (c. 1908-12) combined multiple viewpoints of a subject in a single image. This "analytic cubism" was based on the artists' direct observation of a model from various angles. Later cubist works relied less on observation, resulting in a more directly inventive style called "synthetic cubism."