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Modern
Arts
20th
Century Arts
Modern Art
• Refers to works produced during the approximate
period 1860- 1970.
(19th cent. to the mid-20th cent. )
• Throwing out of the OLD, embracing of the NEW.
• There is more of EXPERIMENTATION in new ways
of seeing ideas about how art functions.
• Modern art was about the people, places and ideas
that the artist had DIRECT CONTACT WITH.
• Modern Art also witnessed the emergence of NEW
MEDIA, like photography.
When did Modern Art Begin?
Édouard Manet showed his painting
Le déjeuner sur l'herbe (Lunch
on the Grass) in the Salon des
Refusés in Paris.
The World during 1860- 1970
1869 - Transcontinental Rail Service
Begun in the United States.
1871- Photographer W.H.
Jackson takes a number of
photographs on the Yellowstone
Expedition.
1872 – Yellowstone National Park
was established as the first
National Park in the United
States.
1876- Alexander Graham Bell made
the first successful telephone call,
saying, "Watson, come here, I
need you.“
1883- The Brooklyn Bridge was
opened with an enormous
celebration.
1896- The first modern Olympic
games, the idea of Pierre de
Coubertin, are held in Athens,
Greece.
The World during 20’th Century
1900- Sigmund Freud
Publishes The Interpretation of
Dreams.
1912- the titanic sinks.
1914- World War 1 starts
1918-World War 1 end
1928- First Mickey Mouse
Cartoon
1938 - Superman First Appears in
Comic Books
1939- world war II starts
1940- Cartoon Character Bugs
Bunny Debuts in “A Wild Hare”
1945 – Hitler commits suicide.
World War II ends
1955- James Dean dies in car
accident.
1963 - Martin Luther King Jr.
Makes His "I Have a Dream"
Speech
1964- Beatles Become Popular in
U.S.
1969- Neil Armstrong Becomes
the First Man on the Moon
Nearly every phase of modern art
was initially greeted by the public
with ridicule, but as the shock
wore off, the various movements
settled into history, influencing and
inspiring new generations of
artists.
The Scream (1893)
by Edvard Munch
The first modern art movement
Impressionist artists moved from the studio to the
streets and countryside, painting en plein air.
Representational art that did not necessarily
rely on realistic depictions.
loosened their brushwork and lightened their
palettes to include pure, intense colors.
They abandoned traditional linear perspective
and avoided the clarity of form.
records the effects of the massive mid-
nineteenth-century renovation of Paris.
Impression,
Sunrise
(1873),by
Claude Monet
Paris Street,
Rainy Day
(1877)
by Gustave
Caillebotte
Symbolism was both an artistic and a literary
movement that suggested ideas through symbols and
emphasized the meaning behind the forms, lines,
shapes, and colors.
Symbolism was both an artistic and a literary movement
that suggested ideas through symbols and emphasized
the meaning behind the forms, lines, shapes, and colors.
to express psychological
truth and the idea that
behind the physical world
lay a spiritual reality.
Symbolists combined religious mysticism, the perverse,
the erotic, and the decadent. Symbolist subject matter is
typically characterized by an interest in the occult, the
morbid, the dream world, melancholy, evil, and death.
Death and Masks
by James Ensor
Rejecting interest in depicting the observed world,
they instead looked to their memories and
emotions in order to connect with the viewer on a
deeper level.
Rather than merely represent their surroundings,
they relied upon the interrelations of color and
shape to describe the world around them.
movement that
swept through
the decorative
arts and
architecture
Aimed at modernizing design, seeking to escape the
eclectic historical styles that had previously been popular.
Artists drew inspiration from both organic and geometric
forms, evolving elegant designs that united flowing,
natural forms with more angular contours.
The desire to abandon the historical styles of the 19th
century was an important impetus
The Fauves ("wild
beasts") were a loosely
allied group of French
painters with shared
interests.
radical goal of separating color from its descriptive,
representational purpose and allowing it to exist on the
canvas as an independent element.
The artist's direct experience of his subjects, his
emotional response to nature, and his intuition were all
more important than academic theory or elevated
subject matter.
Color could project a mood and establish a structure
within the work of art without having to be true to the
natural world.
The Dance
(1909-1910)
by Henri
Matisse
Henri Matisse
The Red Room (1908-1909)
by Henri Matisse is an
example of the artist’s
Fauvist style, which was
expressive and emotional.
The process Matisse used to
create this painting involved
constantly checking his own
reactions to the piece
unfolding before him as he
worked and continuing in
this manner until the
painting “felt” finished.
Emerged in
Germany in
response to the
widespread
anxiety.
Art was now meant to come forth from within
the artist
employed swirling, swaying, and exaggeratedly
executed brushstrokes in the depiction of their
subjects.
meant to convey the turgid emotional state of
the artist reacting to the anxieties of the
modern world.
With the turn of the century in Europe, shifts in
artistic styles and vision erupted as a response
to the major changes in the atmosphere of
society.
The Scream (1893)
by Edvard Munch
Most Important Expressionist Art
Throughout his artistic career, Munch
focused on scenes of death, agony, and
anxiety in distorted and emotionally charged
portraits, all themes and styles that would
be adopted by the Expressionists.
Berlin Street Scene
(1913) by Ernest
Ludwig Kirchner
Cubism was one of
the first truly
modern movements
to emerge in art.
Analytic Cubism, in which forms seem to be
'analyzed' and fragmented
Synthetic Cubism, foreign materials are collaged
to the surface of the canvas as 'synthetic' signs
for depicted objects.
It abandoned perspective, which artists had used
to order space
turned away from the realistic modeling of
figures
Les Demoiselles
d'Avignon, Pablo
Picasso (1907)
Guitare
et Verre
by
Gorges
Braque
Dada was born in 1915, more or less simultaneously in
Switzerland and the United States (specifically in Zurich and
New York)—two countries that were at this time neutral
during the war.
The movement reflected disgust at the horrors of the war and
disillusionment with the values of the society from which it
had emerged.
Dada artists tried to shock people from complacency, and
many of them abandoned conventional materials and
techniques
Dada’s aesthetics,
marked by its
mockery of
materialistic and
nationalistic
attitudes, proved a
powerful influence
on artists in many
cities
Celebes by Max
ernst (1921)
Portrait du
Marquis de Sade
by Marcel
Duchamp (1938)
Constructivists proposed to replace art's traditional
concern with composition with a focus on construction.
Objects were to be created not in order to express
beauty, or the artist's outlook, or to represent the
world, but to carry out a fundamental analysis of the
materials and forms of art, one which might lead to the
design of functional objects.
Constructivist art often aimed
to demonstrate how materials
behaved
concerns with form and abstraction often seem tinged
with mysticism, Constructivism firmly embraced the
new social and cultural developments that grew out of
World War I
Column(1923) by Naum Gabo
Monument to the Third
International (1920), by Vladimir
Tatlin
artists who sought to channel the
unconscious as a means to
unlock the power of the
imagination.
powerfully influenced by Sigmund Freud, the
Surrealists believed the conscious mind
repressed the power of the imagination,
weighting it down with taboos.
Influenced also by Karl Marx, they hoped that
the psyche had the power to reveal the
contradictions in the everyday world and spur
on revolution.
Surrealists were interested in exposing the
complex and repressed inner worlds of
sexuality, desire, and violence, and interest in
these topics fostered transgressive behavior.
Son of Man
(1964) by René
Magritte
The
Persisten
ce of
Memory
by
Salvador
Dali
Vague umbrella term for any
painting or sculpture which
does not portray recognizable
objects or scenes.
a movement that they translated into a new style
fitted to the post-war mood of anxiety and trauma.
Their art was championed for being emphatically
American in spirit - monumental in scale, romantic in
mood, and expressive of a rugged individual freedom.
Abstract were profoundly influenced by the style and by
its focus on the unconscious.
It encouraged their interest in myth and archetypal
symbols.
Yellow Grey
Black by
Jackson
Pollock (1947)
Suprematism
by Kasimir
malevich
(1919)
Art that depends on movement for its effects
The Kinetic art movement represented a
revitalization of that tradition, by utilizing
mechanical or natural motion to bring about a new
relationship between art and technology.
The Kinetic art movement represented a
revitalization of that tradition, by utilizing
mechanical or natural motion to bring about a
new relationship between art and technology.
"Just as one can compose
colors, or forms, so one can
compose motions.“
- Alexander Calder
Pop's reintroduction of identifiable imagery was a
major shift for the direction of modernism.
Pop artists celebrated commonplace objects and
people of everyday life, in this way seeking to elevate
popular culture to the level of fine art.
Pop art has become
one of the most
recognizable styles of
modern art.
the Pop art movement aimed to blur the boundaries
between "high" art and "low" culture.
Pop artists searched for traces of the same trauma in
the mediated world of advertising, cartoons, and
popular imagery at large.
Pop artists seemingly embraced the post-WWII
manufacturing and media boom.
Artists have been intrigued
by the nature of
perception and by optical
effects and illusions for
many centuries.
Optical, art typically employs abstract patterns
composed with a stark contrast of foreground
and background - often in black and white for
maximum contrast - to produce effects that
confuse and excite the eye.
Op art seemed to supply a style that was highly
appropriate to modern society.
The pinnacle of the movement's success was
1965, when the Museum of Modern Art
embraced the style with the exhibition The
Responsive Eye, which showcased 123 paintings
and sculptures
Artists whose work depended heavily on
photographs, which they often projected onto
canvas allowing images to be replicated with
precision and accuracy.
Photorealists acknowledge the modern world's
mass production and proliferation of
photographs, and they do not deny their
dependence on photographs.
Avant-garde
(art forms)
“ Ahead of its time”.
Is traditionally used
to describe any
artist, group or style,
which is considered
to be significantly
ahead of the
majority in its
technique, subject
matter, or
application.
That’s All Thank You
Reference

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Modern 20th Century Arts Movements

  • 2. Modern Art • Refers to works produced during the approximate period 1860- 1970. (19th cent. to the mid-20th cent. ) • Throwing out of the OLD, embracing of the NEW. • There is more of EXPERIMENTATION in new ways of seeing ideas about how art functions. • Modern art was about the people, places and ideas that the artist had DIRECT CONTACT WITH. • Modern Art also witnessed the emergence of NEW MEDIA, like photography.
  • 3. When did Modern Art Begin? Édouard Manet showed his painting Le déjeuner sur l'herbe (Lunch on the Grass) in the Salon des Refusés in Paris.
  • 4.
  • 5. The World during 1860- 1970 1869 - Transcontinental Rail Service Begun in the United States. 1871- Photographer W.H. Jackson takes a number of photographs on the Yellowstone Expedition. 1872 – Yellowstone National Park was established as the first National Park in the United States. 1876- Alexander Graham Bell made the first successful telephone call, saying, "Watson, come here, I need you.“ 1883- The Brooklyn Bridge was opened with an enormous celebration. 1896- The first modern Olympic games, the idea of Pierre de Coubertin, are held in Athens, Greece.
  • 6. The World during 20’th Century 1900- Sigmund Freud Publishes The Interpretation of Dreams. 1912- the titanic sinks. 1914- World War 1 starts 1918-World War 1 end 1928- First Mickey Mouse Cartoon 1938 - Superman First Appears in Comic Books 1939- world war II starts 1940- Cartoon Character Bugs Bunny Debuts in “A Wild Hare” 1945 – Hitler commits suicide. World War II ends 1955- James Dean dies in car accident. 1963 - Martin Luther King Jr. Makes His "I Have a Dream" Speech 1964- Beatles Become Popular in U.S. 1969- Neil Armstrong Becomes the First Man on the Moon
  • 7.
  • 8. Nearly every phase of modern art was initially greeted by the public with ridicule, but as the shock wore off, the various movements settled into history, influencing and inspiring new generations of artists. The Scream (1893) by Edvard Munch
  • 9. The first modern art movement Impressionist artists moved from the studio to the streets and countryside, painting en plein air. Representational art that did not necessarily rely on realistic depictions. loosened their brushwork and lightened their palettes to include pure, intense colors. They abandoned traditional linear perspective and avoided the clarity of form. records the effects of the massive mid- nineteenth-century renovation of Paris.
  • 11. Paris Street, Rainy Day (1877) by Gustave Caillebotte
  • 12. Symbolism was both an artistic and a literary movement that suggested ideas through symbols and emphasized the meaning behind the forms, lines, shapes, and colors. Symbolism was both an artistic and a literary movement that suggested ideas through symbols and emphasized the meaning behind the forms, lines, shapes, and colors. to express psychological truth and the idea that behind the physical world lay a spiritual reality. Symbolists combined religious mysticism, the perverse, the erotic, and the decadent. Symbolist subject matter is typically characterized by an interest in the occult, the morbid, the dream world, melancholy, evil, and death.
  • 13. Death and Masks by James Ensor
  • 14.
  • 15. Rejecting interest in depicting the observed world, they instead looked to their memories and emotions in order to connect with the viewer on a deeper level. Rather than merely represent their surroundings, they relied upon the interrelations of color and shape to describe the world around them.
  • 16.
  • 17.
  • 18. movement that swept through the decorative arts and architecture Aimed at modernizing design, seeking to escape the eclectic historical styles that had previously been popular. Artists drew inspiration from both organic and geometric forms, evolving elegant designs that united flowing, natural forms with more angular contours. The desire to abandon the historical styles of the 19th century was an important impetus
  • 19.
  • 20.
  • 21. The Fauves ("wild beasts") were a loosely allied group of French painters with shared interests. radical goal of separating color from its descriptive, representational purpose and allowing it to exist on the canvas as an independent element. The artist's direct experience of his subjects, his emotional response to nature, and his intuition were all more important than academic theory or elevated subject matter. Color could project a mood and establish a structure within the work of art without having to be true to the natural world.
  • 23. Henri Matisse The Red Room (1908-1909) by Henri Matisse is an example of the artist’s Fauvist style, which was expressive and emotional. The process Matisse used to create this painting involved constantly checking his own reactions to the piece unfolding before him as he worked and continuing in this manner until the painting “felt” finished.
  • 24. Emerged in Germany in response to the widespread anxiety. Art was now meant to come forth from within the artist employed swirling, swaying, and exaggeratedly executed brushstrokes in the depiction of their subjects. meant to convey the turgid emotional state of the artist reacting to the anxieties of the modern world. With the turn of the century in Europe, shifts in artistic styles and vision erupted as a response to the major changes in the atmosphere of society.
  • 25.
  • 26. The Scream (1893) by Edvard Munch Most Important Expressionist Art Throughout his artistic career, Munch focused on scenes of death, agony, and anxiety in distorted and emotionally charged portraits, all themes and styles that would be adopted by the Expressionists.
  • 27. Berlin Street Scene (1913) by Ernest Ludwig Kirchner
  • 28. Cubism was one of the first truly modern movements to emerge in art. Analytic Cubism, in which forms seem to be 'analyzed' and fragmented Synthetic Cubism, foreign materials are collaged to the surface of the canvas as 'synthetic' signs for depicted objects. It abandoned perspective, which artists had used to order space turned away from the realistic modeling of figures
  • 31. Dada was born in 1915, more or less simultaneously in Switzerland and the United States (specifically in Zurich and New York)—two countries that were at this time neutral during the war. The movement reflected disgust at the horrors of the war and disillusionment with the values of the society from which it had emerged. Dada artists tried to shock people from complacency, and many of them abandoned conventional materials and techniques Dada’s aesthetics, marked by its mockery of materialistic and nationalistic attitudes, proved a powerful influence on artists in many cities
  • 33. Portrait du Marquis de Sade by Marcel Duchamp (1938)
  • 34. Constructivists proposed to replace art's traditional concern with composition with a focus on construction. Objects were to be created not in order to express beauty, or the artist's outlook, or to represent the world, but to carry out a fundamental analysis of the materials and forms of art, one which might lead to the design of functional objects. Constructivist art often aimed to demonstrate how materials behaved concerns with form and abstraction often seem tinged with mysticism, Constructivism firmly embraced the new social and cultural developments that grew out of World War I
  • 35. Column(1923) by Naum Gabo Monument to the Third International (1920), by Vladimir Tatlin
  • 36. artists who sought to channel the unconscious as a means to unlock the power of the imagination. powerfully influenced by Sigmund Freud, the Surrealists believed the conscious mind repressed the power of the imagination, weighting it down with taboos. Influenced also by Karl Marx, they hoped that the psyche had the power to reveal the contradictions in the everyday world and spur on revolution. Surrealists were interested in exposing the complex and repressed inner worlds of sexuality, desire, and violence, and interest in these topics fostered transgressive behavior.
  • 37. Son of Man (1964) by René Magritte
  • 39. Vague umbrella term for any painting or sculpture which does not portray recognizable objects or scenes. a movement that they translated into a new style fitted to the post-war mood of anxiety and trauma. Their art was championed for being emphatically American in spirit - monumental in scale, romantic in mood, and expressive of a rugged individual freedom. Abstract were profoundly influenced by the style and by its focus on the unconscious. It encouraged their interest in myth and archetypal symbols.
  • 42. Art that depends on movement for its effects The Kinetic art movement represented a revitalization of that tradition, by utilizing mechanical or natural motion to bring about a new relationship between art and technology. The Kinetic art movement represented a revitalization of that tradition, by utilizing mechanical or natural motion to bring about a new relationship between art and technology. "Just as one can compose colors, or forms, so one can compose motions.“ - Alexander Calder
  • 43.
  • 44. Pop's reintroduction of identifiable imagery was a major shift for the direction of modernism. Pop artists celebrated commonplace objects and people of everyday life, in this way seeking to elevate popular culture to the level of fine art. Pop art has become one of the most recognizable styles of modern art. the Pop art movement aimed to blur the boundaries between "high" art and "low" culture. Pop artists searched for traces of the same trauma in the mediated world of advertising, cartoons, and popular imagery at large. Pop artists seemingly embraced the post-WWII manufacturing and media boom.
  • 45.
  • 46.
  • 47. Artists have been intrigued by the nature of perception and by optical effects and illusions for many centuries. Optical, art typically employs abstract patterns composed with a stark contrast of foreground and background - often in black and white for maximum contrast - to produce effects that confuse and excite the eye. Op art seemed to supply a style that was highly appropriate to modern society. The pinnacle of the movement's success was 1965, when the Museum of Modern Art embraced the style with the exhibition The Responsive Eye, which showcased 123 paintings and sculptures
  • 48.
  • 49.
  • 50. Artists whose work depended heavily on photographs, which they often projected onto canvas allowing images to be replicated with precision and accuracy. Photorealists acknowledge the modern world's mass production and proliferation of photographs, and they do not deny their dependence on photographs.
  • 51.
  • 52.
  • 53. Avant-garde (art forms) “ Ahead of its time”. Is traditionally used to describe any artist, group or style, which is considered to be significantly ahead of the majority in its technique, subject matter, or application.

Editor's Notes

  1. Point 2: Typically, modern artists rejected previous Renaissance based traditions, in favour of new forms of artistic experimentation. Point 3: They used new materials, new techniques of painting, and developed new theories about how art should reflect the perceived world, and what their functions as artists should be. In addition, entirely new types of art were developed during the period.
  2. The date perhaps most commonly identified as marking the birth of modern art is 1863. The presence of a nude woman among clothed men is justified neither by mythological nor allegorical precedents. This, and the contemporary dress, rendered the strange and almost unreal scene obscene in the eyes of the public of the day. Manet himself jokingly nicknamed his painting "la partie carrée". In those days, Manet's style and treatment were considered as shocking as the subject itself. He made no transition between the light and dark elements of the picture, abandoning the usual subtle gradations in favour of brutal contrasts, thereby drawing reproaches for his "mania for seeing in blocks". And the characters seem to fit uncomfortably in the sketchy background of woods from which Manet has deliberately excluded both depth and perspective.
  3. Modernism in architecture is a more complex notion. The word "modernism“ in building design is normally used to describe a particular style which appeared around 1900, courtesy of Behrens, Le Corbusier, Gropius and others. However, in American architecture, one might say that modernism truly began with the Eiffel Tower (188789), that extraordinary icon of Wroughtiron architecture designed by Gustave Eiffel (1832-1923), as well as with the advent of highrise buildings in Chicago and New York during the last decade of the 19th century. This style of supertall Skyscraper architecture rapidly became the dominant form of modern building design during the 20thcentury.
  4. Historically it can be tied to the industrial revolution where there is a rapid changes in manufacturing, transportation and technology. Which influenced the social economic and cultural conditions of Western Europe and North America. . People are moving out urban spaces, traveling and having new world views and access to new ideas.
  5. of Sigmund Freud interpretation of dreams in 1900, artist became more interested in dreams, symbolism and iconography as ways to depict subjective experiences.
  6. Modern art is characterized by contemporary styles of visual art. It rejects the traditionally accepted or sanctioned forms and emphasizes individual experimentation and sensibility. The Scream is dominated by feelings of anxiety and alienation that were often associated with modern life at the turn of the century.  The Scream portrays is not a dream, but a nightmare. The Scream (1895) Edvard Munch ($119.9 million) (2012)
  7. First major Impressionist exhibition, seized on the title of Claude Monet's painting Impression, Sunrise (1873), and accused the group of painting nothing but impressions.
  8. Starry Night is often considered to be Van Gogh's pinnacle achievement. Unlike most of his works, Starry Night was painted from memory, and not out in the landscape. The emphasis on interior, emotional life is clear in his swirling, tumultuous depiction of the sky - a radical departure from his previous, more naturalistic landscapes. Here, Van Gogh followed a strict principal of structure and composition in which the forms are distributed across the surface of the canvas in an exact order to create balance and tension amidst the swirling torsion of the cypress trees and the night sky. The result is a landscape rendered through curves and lines, its seeming chaos subverted by a rigorous formal arrangement. 
  9. Entrance Gate to Paris Subway Station (1900) Artist: Hector Guimard
  10. French artist Henri Matisse sought to express emotion in his painting, rather than provide factual representation, and he achieved this by means of intense colour, simplified lines, and two-dimensional design. Matisse uses three colours—red, blue, and green—and five cavorting figures outlined against a flat background to communicate the joy and exuberance of dancing
  11. But in affirming the flatness of the red colour, the artist managed to create within it the impression of space, space within which the female figure bending over the vase could move and within which the sharp angled view of the chair seemed natural. The window, through which we see a green garden with flowering plants, allows the eye to move into the depths of the canvas.
  12. Pic1: Influenced by Fauvism, the Expressionist movement was dominated by German painters, notably members of Der Blaue Reiter (Blue Rider). Pic2: Wassily Kandinsky (1844-1944) his breakthrough canvas is a deceptively simple image — a lone rider racing across a landscape — yet it represents a decisive moment in Kandinsky's developing pictorial language. Here, the sun-dappled hillside reveals a keen interest in contrasts of light and dark as well as movement and stillness, all major themes throughout his oeuvre. 
  13. Modern art is characterized by contemporary styles of visual art. It rejects the traditionally accepted or sanctioned forms and emphasizes individual experimentation and sensibility. The Scream is dominated by feelings of anxiety and alienation that were often associated with modern life at the turn of the century.  The Scream portrays is not a dream, but a nightmare. The Scream (1895) Edvard Munch ($119.9 million) (2012)
  14. Berlin Street Scene (1913) was one of a series of street scenes that the German Expressionist painter Ernst Ludwig Kirchner made between 1912 and 1913. Kirchner’s paintings, with their vivid colours and emotional content, paralleled the art of the Fauvists. The distinctive brushwork and flattened space recalls the work of Cézanne.
  15. Les Demoiselles d'Avignon, Pablo Picasso Pablo Picasso’s cubist works date from around 1906, and a key early example announcing the arrival of the style is Les Demoiselles d’Avignon from 1907. The title of the work comes from the name of a street in the red-light district of Barcelona and the painting depicts five prostitutes, their figures aggressively distorted. So radical in style was this picture that it was not understood even by contemporary avant-garde painters like André Derain and Henri Matisse
  16. This painting by Georges Braque is in the synthetic Cubist style. Shapes are flat and fragmented, but colour and decoration play a role, and the technique of collage
  17. Max Ernst liked to create seemingly nonsensical art, often by representing human qualities in machinery. His painting Celebes (1921, Tate Gallery, London), in which an unrealistic scene is imbued with fantastic, dreamlike qualities, incorporates elements of Dadaism and Surrealism, both of which influenced his work.
  18. In the 1920s and 1930s, Man Ray produced portraits of celebrities in Parisian society and French history. His works include this portrait (1938) of the notorious late 18th-century French writer, the Marquis de Sade, whose avant-garde style and erotic writings appealed to Ray’s artistic sentiments.
  19. Model for Column - Abstract and geometric forms, and the use of transparent glass and plastic, were central to Constructivist sculpture. The model is part of the collection of the Tate Gallery, London.
  20. Son of Man (1964) by René Magritte juxtaposes images that the artist used many times in different combinations. The apple, the wall, and the anonymous bowler-hatted man are intended to be viewed as unrelated elements. Magritte’s work was not intended to be symbolic but was closer to the inexplicable quality of dreams.
  21. As in many of Salvador Dalí’s paintings, the hallucinatory character of The Persistence of Memory (1931) depends both on the dreamlike incongruity of objects in an eerie landscape and on a meticulous technique. Dalí referred to his work as “hand-painted dream photographs,” and claimed that his imagery often came directly from his own dreams. The strange form in this painting’s foreground, however, is based on an image from Hieronymus Bosch’s The Garden of Earthly Delights (c. 1505-1510).
  22. By the mid 1940s he was painting in a completely abstract manner, and the `drip and splash' style for which he is best known emerged with some abruptness in 1947. Instead of using the traditional easel he affixed his canvas to the floor or the wall and poured and dripped his paint from a can; instead of using brushes he manipulated it with `sticks, trowels or knives' (to use his own words), sometimes obtaining a heavy impasto by an admixture of `sand, broken glass or other foreign matter'.
  23. Attempting to reduce art to its purest essence, Russian artist Kasimir Malevich removed all outside references from his paintings, creating completely non-objective works. His radical abstraction, known as Suprematism, greatly influenced the development of art in the 20th century. The painting shown here, called Suprematism, was completed around 1919 and is in the collection of the Museum of Fine Arts in Krasnodar, Russia