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ABSTRACT ART, CUBISM AND EXPRESSIONISM

ABSTRACT ART, CUBISM AND EXPRESSIONISM. Expressive art Radical for that time Post war 1930’s The movement was one ideal for painter Canvases with fields of colour and abstract forms I nterest in the unconscious E xpressive art of profound emotion and universal themes

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ABSTRACT ART, CUBISM AND EXPRESSIONISM

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  1. ABSTRACT ART, CUBISM ANDEXPRESSIONISM • Expressive art • Radical for that time • Post war 1930’s • The movement was one ideal for painter • Canvases with fields of colour and abstract forms • Interest in the unconscious • Expressive art of profound emotion and universal themes • Shaped by the legacy of Surrealism

  2. What Are the Key Characteristics of Abstract Expressionism? • Unconventional application of paint, usually without a recognizable subject (de Kooning'sWoman series is an exception) that tends toward amorphous shapes in brilliant colors. • Dripping, smearing, slathering, and flinging lots of paint on to the canvas (often an unprimed canvas). • Sometimes gestural "writing" in a loosely calligraphic manner. • In the case of Color Field artists: carefully filling the picture plane with zones of color that create tension between the shapes and hues.

  3. William de Kooning ‘Gotham News’, 1955

  4. Jackson Pollock “Convergence” 1952

  5. Provincetown House, 1940Hans Hofmann (American, b. Germany, 1880-1966)

  6. Hanns Hoffman “Equinox” “Pompeii”

  7. Sonia Delauney ‘Danced with Colour’ ‘Market at Minho’

  8. Sonia Delauney‘Electric Prisms’ Create a painting using this as an example to work fromUse of complementary, primary and secondary coloursPick one shape to work from for example diamond or circle

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