Buying Cubism
Paintings
What started out as a rather avant-garde art movement has
become one of the greatest examples of artistic forms breaking
that mold of convention, revolutionizing European painting and
sculpture up to the present century, and was first developed
between 1908 and 1912 during a collaboration between Georges
Braque and Pablo Picasso with influences from the works of Paul
Cezanne and Tribal art. Though the movement itself was
not long-lived, it began an immense creative explosion that has
had long lasting repercussions, and focused on the underlying
concept that the essence of an object can only be captured by
showing it from multiple points of view simultaneously.
The movement had run its’ course by the end of World War I,
and influenced similar ideal qualities in the Precisionism,
Futurism, and Expressionistic movements. In the paintings
representative of Cubist artworks, objects are broken up and
reassembled in an abstracted form, and the artist depicts the
subject in a multitude of viewpoints instead of one particular
perspective. Surfaces seemingly intersecting at random
angles to produce no real sense of depth, with background and
object interpenetrating with one another, and creating the
shallow space characteristic of Cubism.
French art critic Louis Vauxcelles first used the term
cubism, and it was after viewing a piece of artwork produced by
Braque, the term was in wide use though the creators kept from
using the term for quite some time. The Cubist movement
expanded from France during this time, and became such a
popular movement so quickly that critics began referring to a
Cubist school of artists influenced by Braque and Picasso, many
of those artists to Cubism into different directions while the
originators went through several distinct phases before
1920.
As Braque and Picasso worked to further to advance their
concepts along, they went through a few distinct phases in
Cubism, and which culminated in both Analytic and Synthetic
Cubism. With Analytic Cubism, a style was created that
incorporated densely patterned near-monochrome surfaces of
incomplete directional lines and modeled forms that play
against each other, the first phases of which came before the
full artistic swing of Cubism. Some art historians have
also pegged a smaller “Hermetic” phase within this Analytical
state, and in which the work produced is characterized by being
monochromatic and hard to decipher.
In the case with Synthetic Cubism, which began in 1912 as
the second primary phase to Cubism, these works are composed of
distinct superimposed parts. These parts, painted or
pasted on the canvas, were characterized by brighter
colors. Unlike the points of Analytical Cubism, which
fragmented objects into composing parts, Synthetic Cubism
attempted to bring many different objects to create new
forms. This phase of Cubism also contributed to creating
the collage and papier colle, Picasso used collage complete a
piece of work, and later influenced Braque to first incorporate
papier colle into his work.
Similar to collage in practice, but very much a different
style, papier colle consists of pasting materials to a canvas
with the pasted shapes representing objects themselves.
Braque had previously used lettering, but the works of the two
artists began to take this idea to new extremes at this
point. Letters that had previously hinted at objects
became objects as well, newspaper scraps began the exercise,
but from wood prints to advertisements were all elements
incorporated later as well. Using mixed media and other
combinations of techniques to create new works, and Picasso
began utilizing pointillism and dot patterns to suggest planes
and space.
By the end of the movement, with help from Picasso and
Braque, Cubism had influenced more than just visual art.
The Russian composer Igor Stravinsky was inspired by Cubism in
some examples of his music that reassembled pieces of rhythm
from ragtime music with the melodies from his own country’s
influence. In literature, Cubism influenced poets and
their poetry with elements parallel with Analytical and
Synthetic Cubism, and this poetry frequently overlaps other
movements such as Surrealism and Dadaism.
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