「cubism」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

cubism

1語右で並び替え

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  • His style of painting then shifted to Cubism, adopting a chiaroscuro tone that would become
  • Cubism and Abstract Art Cambridge: Belknap Press (198
  • He was influenced originally by Cubism, and later by Realism.
  • During those years he studied cubism and impressionism.
  • The influence of Cubism and the School of Paris can be clearly seen in
  • king in a Fauvist style, Lhote shifted towards Cubism and joined the Section d'Or group in 1912, exh
  • Russian Futurist painters adopted the forms of Cubism and combined them with the Italian Futurists'
  • the Parisian avant-garde, leading exponents of cubism, and inventors of the term Simultaneity.
  • eaffirm the basic and enduring grammar of both Cubism and Fauvism.
  • osenblum's many important publications include Cubism and Twentieth Century Art (1960), Transformati
  • gan to experiment with Orphism, an offshoot of Cubism, and a style that would be enhanced by his ass
  • group's stylistic similarities both to French Cubism and to the Italian avant-garde poet Marinetti'
  • the following academic year on modern art and Cubism at New York University.
  • le recommended readers to purchase the book on Cubism authored by French painters Jean Metzinger and
  • sh-American painter who worked in the style of cubism before migrating to Jewish themes towards the
  • d disseminated, Futurism was better known than Cubism before World War I, and in England at least ha
  • Werner Gutzeit prefers cubism, but he also paints modern icons and impressio
  • His style was influenced by cubism, constructivism, and surrealism.
  • inguish itself from the narrower definition of Cubism developed earlier by Pablo Picasso and Georges
  • Metzinger created the first major treatise on Cubism, Du Cubisme, in 1912.
  • came under the influence of expressionism and cubism during World War I.
  • He authored the book Cubism et Camouflage, 1914-1918.
  • s one of the most notable collections of Czech Cubism in Prague.
  • As American poet Kenneth Rexroth explains, Cubism in poetry "is the conscious, deliberate dissoc
  • However, with the end of Cubism in 1919, and the birth of Dada and Surrealism
  • ings by Braque, especially those of Analytical Cubism, it contains Surrealist inspired aspects, such
  • rice Vlaminck wrote, "I witnessed the birth of cubism, its growth, its decline.
  • The styles include historicism, Art Nouveau, Cubism, modernism, Functionalism, Socialist realism a
  • In the synthetic Cubism of Juan Gris the definite purpose is to create
  • e way they fuse high modern associations, like Cubism or Greenbergian all-overness, with kitsch asso
  • rody of the reaction against modern art (e.g., Cubism or the New York Armory Show).
  • realism, surrealism, American scene painting, cubism, pop art and impressionism.
  • military camouflage, painting artillery using Cubism techniques to deceive the eye.
  • Cubism, the child of M. Princet, was born.
  • ollinaire: His Life, His Work, the Theories of Cubism, The Problems of Literature, Keys to Hispanoam
  • It was he who introduced French cubism to Denmark.
  • e returned to New York and helped to introduce cubism to America.
  • ; he used external forms and the morphology of cubism to redo his language, characterized by the use
  • atter stages of his career, he moved away from cubism towards realism, while still retaining element
  • The interior reflects Neutra's interest in Cubism, transparency, and hygiene.
  • Synthetic Cubism was the second main movement within Cubism tha
  • Czech Cubism was an avant-garde art movement of Czech propo
  • those critics most favourably disposed towards Cubism, was such that until 1926 or 1927 he followed
  • Crash (with the members of Implant) and Modern Cubism, where he sings poems by Charles Baudelaire an
  • reating abstractions that combined elements of Cubism with the colour ideals of Der Blaue Reiter and