CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of...

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CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914

Transcript of CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of...

Page 1: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.

CUBISMParis 1907 - 1914

Page 2: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.

• Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas.

• The Cubist artists of the early 20th Century felt it was more honest to depict multiple views of objects than to restrict viewers to a single point of view.

Page 3: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.

• Cubism was an intellectual approach to art rather than a descriptive or emotional one. Cubist artists thought their way through their paintings, trying to show what they knew was there, not what they saw or felt. Pablo Picasso, the founder of this movement said, “We have kept our eyes open to our surroundings, but also our brains.”

Page 4: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.

• Cubism owes a debt to the work of Paul Cezanne, who saw the surfaces of objects as geometric shapes that could be broken up into planes.

• When Picasso and Georges Braque (another major Cubist painter) met for the first time they spoke of their admiration for the work of Cezanne.

Page 5: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.

• A Cubist painting can confuse the viewer, as objects do not necessarily sit in space the way we expect them to. You can never be sure when one shape is ahead of another, because part of it might seem to be in front and part of it behind surrounding objects.

Page 6: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.

• Cubist painters used drab colours – a significant contrast with the vibrant, saturated palettes of the Impressionists, Fauves, and German Expressionists.

• The Cubist palette was made up of grays and browns; brighter colours were considered too romantic.

Page 7: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.

• Textured surfaces were an important feature of Cubist painting, especially in the period after 1911, when Picasso and Braque began to collage newspaper clippings, pieces of wallpaper and labels onto their canvases.

Page 8: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.

Major Cubist Painters:

1. Pablo Picasso (Spanish) 1881 - 1973

2. Georges Braque (French) 1882 – 1963

Followers:

3. Juan Gris 1887 - 1927

4. Albert Gleize 1881 - 1953

Page 9: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.

• The Cubist movement began in Paris, where Pablo Picasso, a Spaniard, settled in 1901.

• He lived with a number of other artists in a building known as the Bateau Lavoir, a ramshackle building in the Montmartre district of Paris. There was both rivalry and cameraderie among the artists and their concentration in one location created the conditions for innovative breakthroughs.

Page 10: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.

• In 1905,Picasso completed Les Demoiselles d’Avignon, and showed it to his friend and rival artist Georges Braque.

Page 11: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.
Page 12: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.

• Avignon is a city in southern France, but the Rue d’Avignon is also the red light district of Barcelona, Spain.

• The demoiselles, (the girls) pictured here are prostitutes. This is a brothel scene and it originally included a male figure.

Page 13: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.

• These figures are not modelled in any realistic way.

• Picasso has broken with spatial illusion and allowed the figures to sit on a 2 dimensional plane.

• Note the repetition of geometric shapes in the composition.

Page 14: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.

• The woman on the far right has a face that resembles an African mask. Although he denied any African influences in his art, Picasso is known to have visited museums where African masks were displayed.

Page 15: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.

Picasso – Three Musicians

Page 16: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.

• Picasso has abstracted the three figures and their musical instruments, rendering them as pattern and geometric shapes on a flat surface.

Page 17: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.

• Picasso – Woman• Here we see more

than one view of the woman simultaneously, in both profile and facing views.

Page 18: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.

• Picasso• Portrait of Ambroise

Vollard• This famous portrait

depicts Picasso’s dealer, Ambroise Vollard. Vollard took an early interest in the work of the Bateau Lavoir artists.

Page 19: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.

• The Guitar Player• A viewer can barely

make out the forms of a man and a guitar in this painting.

• Note the subdued palette and geometric shapes that characterize Cubist art.

Page 20: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.

• Picasso• Guitar Player

• Here is an altogether different guitar player, from Picasso’s blue period, just after he arrived, penniless and friendless, in Paris in 1901. His paintings from this period express his depressed state of mind.

Page 21: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.

• Picasso (Blue Period)• The Visit of the two

sisters

Page 22: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.
Page 23: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.
Page 24: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.
Page 25: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.

• Picasso• Boy with a Pipe• As Picasso’s fortunes

improved, he moved into his rose period, when his palette warmed up and he turned to happier subjects.

Page 26: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.

• Picasso (Rose Period)

• Circus Performers

Page 27: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.

• Picasso• Family of

Saltimbanques

Page 28: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.

• Picasso lived to a great age (91) and his style evolved throughout his life.

• This painting comes from a period in which he painted gigantesses in a sculptural style (1920 – 1921)

Page 29: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.
Page 30: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.
Page 31: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.

Guernica

• Guernica is Picasso’s famous anti war picture.• It was painted in 1937 to protest the Nazi bombing of the

Spanish town of Guernica.• At the far right, a woman crashes through the floor of a

burning building. In front of her, another woman dashes forward blindly in panic. A horse with a spear in its back screams in terror. A severed head with staring eyes rests on an outstretched arm, its hand reaching for nothing. Another hand tightly clutches a broken sword. A woman holds a dead child and raises her head skyward to scream out her horror at the planes overhead (Mittler. Art in Focus. 541).

Page 32: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.

• Picasso uses bold blacks, whites, and grays instead of color to give the impression of newsprint or newspaper photographs. Adding to the look of newsprint is the stippled effect on the horse.

• The painting’s powerful images, however, convey the full impact of the event far more effectively than could the words in a newspaper account, or even photographs (Mittler. Art in Focus. 542).

Page 33: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.

Georges Braque

Page 34: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.

• Georges Braque• House at L’Estaque

• The influence of Cezanne is obvious here.

Page 35: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.

• Georges Braque• La Roche

Page 36: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.

Georges Braque - Le Jour

Page 37: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.

Georges Braque – Little Violin

Page 38: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.

• Georges Braque• The Whole World’s a

stage

Page 39: CUBISM Paris 1907 - 1914. Cubism is a style of painting in which artists try to show all sides of three dimensional objects on a flat canvas. The Cubist.