Art movement - Wikipedia Art movement From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to navigation Jump to search styles of art associated with periods of time and/or locations of artistic activity History of art Prehistoric Ancient European Christian Asian Buddhist Indian Arabic Art Islamic Painting (Western) Art history v t e An art movement is a tendency or style in art with a specific common philosophy or goal, followed by a group of artists during a specific period of time, (usually a few months, years or decades) or, at least, with the heyday of the movement defined within a number of years. Art movements were especially important in modern art, when each consecutive movement was considered as a new avant-garde. Contents 1 Concept 2 19th-, 20th- and 21st-century art movements 2.1 19th century 2.2 20th century 2.2.1 1900–1921 2.2.2 1920–1945 2.2.3 1940–1965 2.2.4 1965–2000 2.3 21st century 3 See also 4 References 5 External links Concept[edit] According to theories associated with modernism and the concept of postmodernism, art movements are especially important during the period of time corresponding to modern art.[1] The period of time called "modern art" is posited to have changed approximately halfway through the 20th century and art made afterward is generally called contemporary art. Postmodernism in visual art begins and functions as a parallel to late modernism[2] and refers to that period after the "modern" period called contemporary art.[3] The postmodern period began during late modernism (which is a contemporary continuation of modernism), and according to some theorists postmodernism ended in the 21st century.[4][5] During the period of time corresponding to "modern art" each consecutive movement was often considered a new avant-garde.[4] Also during the period of time referred to as "modern art" each movement was seen corresponding to a somewhat grandiose rethinking of all that came before it, concerning the visual arts. Generally there was a commonality of visual style linking the works and artists included in an art movement. Verbal expression and explanation of movements has come from the artists themselves, sometimes in the form of an art manifesto,[6][7] and sometimes from art critics and others who may explain their understanding of the meaning of the new art then being produced. In the visual arts, many artists, theorists, art critics, art collectors, art dealers and others mindful of the unbroken continuation of modernism and the continuation of modern art even into the contemporary era, ascribe to and welcome new philosophies of art as they appear.[8][9] Postmodernist theorists posit that the idea of art movements are no longer as applicable, or no longer as discernible, as the notion of art movements had been before the postmodern era.[10][11] There are many theorists however who doubt as to whether or not such an era was actually a fact;[4] or just a passing fad.[5][12] The term refers to tendencies in visual art, novel ideas and architecture, and sometimes literature. In music it is more common to speak about genres and styles instead. See also cultural movement, a term with a broader connotation. As the names of many art movements use the -ism suffix (for example cubism and futurism), they are sometimes referred to as isms. 19th-, 20th- and 21st-century art movements[edit] 19th century[edit] Jacques-Louis David, The Coronation of Napoleon, (1806), Musée du Louvre, Neoclassicism Eugène Delacroix, Liberty Leading the People 1830, Romanticism Thomas Cole, The Course of Empire: The Savage State, 1836, Hudson River School Gustave Courbet, Stone-Breakers, 1849, Realist School Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot, c. 1867, Ville d'Avray National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., Barbizon School[13] Claude Monet, Haystacks, (sunset), 1890–1891, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Impressionism Vincent van Gogh, The Starry Night, 1889, Post-Impressionism Edvard Munch, The Scream, early example of Expressionism Academic, c. 16th century–20th century Aesthetic Movement American Barbizon school American Impressionism Amsterdam Impressionism Art Nouveau, c. 1890–1910 Arts and Crafts Movement, founded 1860s Barbizon school, c. 1830s–1870s Biedermeier, c. 1815–1848 Cloisonnism, c. 1888–1900s (decade) Danish Golden Age c. 1800s-1850s Decadent movement Divisionism, c. 1880s–1910s Düsseldorf School Etching revival Expressionism, c. 1890s–1930s German Romanticism, c. 1790s–1850s Gründerzeit Hague School, c. 1860s–1890s Heidelberg School, c. 1880s–1900s (decade) Hoosier Group Hudson River School, c. 1820s–1900s (decade) Hurufiyya movement mid-20th-century in North Africa and the Middle East Impressionism, c. 1860s–1920s Incoherents, c. 1882-1890s Jugendstil Les Nabis, c. 1890s–1900s (decade) Les Vingt Letras y figuras, c. 1845-1900's Luminism Lyon School Macchiaioli c. 1850s–1900s (decade) Mir iskusstva, founded 1898 Modernism, c. 1860s-ongoing Naturalism Nazarene, c. 1810s–1830 Neo-Classicism, c. 1780s–1900s (decade) Neo-impressionism, c. 1880s–1910s Norwegian romantic nationalism, c. 1840–1867 Norwich School, founded 1803 Orientalism Peredvizhniki Pointillism, c. 1880s–1910s Pont-Aven School, c. 1850s–1890s Post-Impressionism, c. 1880s–1900s (decade) Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood Realism, c. 1850s–1900s (decade) Realism, c. 1850s–1900s (decade) Romanticism, c. 1750s–1890s Secession groups, c. 1890s–1910s Society of American Artists, c. 1877–1906 Spanish Eclecticism, c. 1845-1890s Symbolism Synthetism, c. 1877–1900s (decade) Tipos del País Tonalism, c. 1880–1915 Vienna Secession, founded 1897 White Mountain art, c. 1820s–1870s Spiritualist art, c. 1870– 20th century[edit] 1900–1921[edit] Wassily Kandinsky, 1903, Der Blaue Reiter painting, Der Blaue Reiter 21.1 cm × 54.6 cm (8.3 in × 21.5 in) Pablo Picasso, Family of Saltimbanques, 1905, Picasso's Rose Period Henri Matisse, The Open Window, 1905, Fauvism Pablo Picasso, Les Demoiselles d'Avignon, 1907, Proto-Cubism Georges Braque 1910, Analytic Cubism Kazimir Malevich, (Supremus No. 58), Museum of Art, 1916, Suprematism Marcel Duchamp, Fountain, 1917, photograph by Alfred Stieglitz, Dada Albert Gleizes, Woman with Black Glove, 1920, Crystal Cubism Piet Mondrian, Tableau I, 1921, De Stijl Academic, c. 1900s (decade)-ongoing American realism, c. 1890s–1920s Analytic Cubism, c. 1909–1912 Art Deco, c. 1920s–1940s Ashcan School, c. 1890s–1920s Australian tonalism, c. 1910s–1930s Berliner Sezession, founded 1898 Bloomsbury Group, c. 1900s (decade)–1960s Camden Town Group, c. 1911–1913 Constructivism, c. 1920–1922, 1920s–1940s Cubism, c. 1906–1919 Cubo-Futurism, c. 1912–1918 Czech Cubism, c. 1910–1914 Dada, c. 1916–1922 Der Blaue Reiter, c. 1911–1914 De Stijl, c. 1917–1931 Deutscher Werkbund, founded 1907 Die Brücke, founded 1905 Expressionism c. 1890s–1930s Fauvism, c. 1900–1910 Futurism, c. 1909–1916 German Expressionism, c. 1913–1930 Group of Seven (Canada), c. 1913–1930s Jack of Diamonds, founded 1909 Luminism (Impressionism), c. 1900s (decade)–1930s Modernism, c. 1860s–ongoing Neo-Classicism, c. 1900s (decade)–ongoing Neo-primitivism, from 1913 Neue Künstlervereinigung München Novembergruppe, founded 1918 Objective Abstraction, c. 1933–1936 Orphism, c. 1910–1913 Photo-Secession, founded c. 1902 Pittura Metafisica, c. 1911–1920 Proto-Cubism, c. 1906–1908 Purism, c. 1917–1930s Rayonism Section d'Or, c. 1912–1914 Suprematism, formed c. 1915–1916 Synchromism, founded 1912 Synthetic Cubism, c. 1912–1919 The Eight, c. 1909–1918 The Ten, c. 1897–1920 Vorticism, founded 1914 1920–1945[edit] Theo van Doesburg, Composition XX, 1920, De Stijl Max Ernst, The Elephant Celebes, 1921, Tate, Surrealism Charles Demuth, I Saw the Figure 5 in Gold, 1928, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Precisionism Grant Wood, American Gothic, 1930, Art Institute of Chicago, Social Realism American Scene painting, c. 1920s–1950s Arbeitsrat für Kunst Art Deco Bauhaus, c. 1919–1933 Concrete art Der Ring De Stijl, c. 1917–1931 Ecole de Paris Geometric abstraction Gruppo 7 International Style, c. 1920s–1970s Kapists, c. 1930s Magic Realism Neo-Romanticism Neue Sachlichkeit Novecento Italiano Novembergruppe, founded 1918 Precisionism, c. 1918–1940s Regionalism (art), c. 1930s–1940s Return to order, 1918–1922 Scuola Romana, c. 1928–1945 Social Realism, c. 1920s–1960s Socialist Realism Surrealism, c. 1920s–1960s Universal Constructivism, c. 1930–1970 1940–1965[edit] Arshile Gorky, The Liver is the Cock's Comb (1944), oil on canvas, 73​1⁄4 × 98" (186 × 249 cm) Albright–Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, New York. Gorky was an Armenian-born American painter who had a seminal influence on Abstract Expressionism. De Kooning said: "I met a lot of artists — but then I met Gorky... He had an extraordinary gift for hitting the nail on the head; remarkable. So I immediately attached myself to him and we became very good friends."[14] Abstract expressionism Action painting Arte Povera Art Informel Assemblage Beatnik art Chicago Imagists CoBrA, c. 1948–1951 Color Field painting Combine painting De-collage Fluxus Happening Hard-Edge Painting Kinetic Art Kitchen Sink School Lettrism Lyrical abstraction Neo-Dada New Brutalism Northwest School Nouveau Réalisme Op Art Organic abstraction Outsider Art Panic Movement Pop Art Post-painterly abstraction Process art Public art Retro art Serial art Shaped canvas Situationist International Tachism Video art 1965–2000[edit] Art & Language, Untitled Painting (1965), Tate, Conceptual art Art & Language, Art-Language Vol.3 No.1 (1974), Château de Montsoreau-Museum of Contemporary Art, Conceptual art Tony Smith, She Who Must Be Obeyed, 1975, Tony Smith Department of Labour Building, Minimalism Dan Flavin, Untitled (Corner Piece), 1930, Tate Liverpool, Installation art Abstract Illusionism Appropriation Arte Povera Art Photography Body Art Classical Realism Conceptual Art Dogme 95 Earth Art Figuration Libre Funk art Graffiti art Hyperrealism Installation art Internet Art Land art Late modernism Light and Space Lowbrow Lyrical Abstraction Mail art Massurrealism Minimalism Neo-Expressionism Neo-figurative Neo-pop Performance Art Postminimalism Postmodernism Photorealism Psychedelic art Relational art Site-specific art Sound Art Transavanguardia Young British Artists 21st century[edit] Algorithmic art Altermodernism Biomorphism Computer art Computer graphics Digital art Electronic Art Environmental art Excessivism Intentism Internet art Intervention art Metamodernism Modern European ink painting Neo-minimalism New Media Art Pixel art Post-postmodernism Relational art Remodernism Social practice (art) SoFlo Superflat Stuckism International Superflat Superstroke Transgressive art Toyism Unilalianism Vaporwave Postinternet See also[edit] 20th-century Western painting Art periods List of art movements Post-expressionism Western art history References[edit] ^ Man of his words: Pepe Karmel on Kirk Varnedoe — Passages – Critical Essay Artforum, Nov, 2003 by Pepe Karmel ^ The Originality of the Avant Garde and Other Modernist Myths Rosalind E. Krauss, Publisher: The MIT Press; Reprint edition (July 9, 1986), Part I, Modernist Myths, pp.8–171 ^ The Citadel of Modernism Falls to Deconstructionists, – 1992 critical essay, The Triumph of Modernism, 2006, Hilton Kramer, pp 218–221. ^ a b c Post-Modernism: The New Classicism in Art and Architecture Charles Jencks ^ a b William R. Everdell, The First Moderns: Profiles in the Origins of Twentieth-century Thought, University of Chicago Press, 1997, p4. ISBN 0-226-22480-5 ^ "Poetry of the Revolution. Marx, Manifestos, and the Avant-Gardes" introduction, Martin Puchner Archived 2005-12-27 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved April 4, 2006 ^ "Looking at Artists' Manifestos, 1945–1965", Stephen B. Petersen Archived September 27, 2011, at the Wayback Machine Retrieved April 4, 2006 ^ Clement Greenberg: Modernism and Postmodernism, seventh paragraph of the essay. URL accessed on June 15, 2006 ^ Clement Greenberg: Modernism and Postmodernism, William Dobell Memorial Lecture, Sydney, Australia, Oct 31, 1979, Arts 54, No.6 (February 1980). His final essay on modernism Retrieved October 26, 2011 ^ Ideas About Art by Desmond, Kathleen K. [1], John Wiley & Sons, 2011, p.148 ^ International postmodernism: theory and literary practice, Bertens, Hans [2], Routledge, 1997, p.236 ^ "The Death of Postmodernism And Beyond | Issue 58 | Philosophy Now". philosophynow.org. ^ National Gallery of Art ^ Willem de Kooning (1969) by Thomas B. Hess External links[edit] the-artists.org Art movements since 1900. 20th-Century Art Compiled by Dr.Witcombe, Sweet Briar College, Virginia. WebMuseum, Paris Themes index and detailed glossary of art periods. v t e Western art movements List of art movements Ancient Egyptian Greek Etruscan Roman Medieval Early Christian Migration Period Anglo-Saxon Visigothic Pre-Romanesque Insular Viking Byzantine Merovingian Carolingian Ottonian Romanesque Norman-Sicilian Gothic (International Gothic) Renaissance Italian Renaissance Early Netherlandish German Renaissance Antwerp Mannerists Danube school High Renaissance Venetian painting Romanism Mannerism Fontainebleau Northern Mannerism 17th century Baroque Caravaggisti Classicism Dutch Golden Age Flemish Baroque 18th century Rocaille Rococo Neoclassicism Romanticism 19th century Naïve Nazarene Realism / Realism Historicism Biedermeier Barbizon school Pre-Raphaelites Academic Hudson River School Aestheticism Art pottery Macchiaioli Peredvizhniki Impressionism Heidelberg School Decadent Symbolism Art Nouveau Post-Impressionism Neo-Impressionism Pointillism Cloisonnism Les Nabis Synthetism Costumbrismo 20th century Arts and Crafts Incoherents Fauvism Die Brücke Cubism Expressionism Neue Künstlervereinigung München Futurism Metaphysical art Rayonism Der Blaue Reiter Orphism Synchromism Vorticism Suprematism Ashcan Dada De Stijl Australian tonalism Purism Bauhaus Kinetic art New Objectivity Grosvenor School Neues Sehen Surrealism Neo-Fauvism Precisionism Scuola Romana Art Deco International Typographic Style Social realism Abstract expressionism Vienna School of Fantastic Realism Color Field Lyrical abstraction Tachisme COBRA Action painting New media art Letterist International Pop art Situationist International Lettrism Neo-Dada Op art Nouveau réalisme Art & Language Conceptual art Land art Systems art Video art Minimalism Fluxus Photorealism Performance art Installation art Endurance art Outsider art Neo-expressionism Lowbrow Young British Artists Amazonian pop art 21st century Art intervention Hyperrealism Neo-futurism Stuckism Sound art Superstroke Superflat Relational art Walking art Related History of art Avant-garde Contemporary art Feminist art movement (in the US) Modern art Modern sculpture Modernism Late modernism Postmodern art Western painting Category v t e Avant-garde movements Visual art Abstract expressionism Art Nouveau Art & Language Conceptual art Constructivism Cubism Grosvenor School Proto-Cubism Cubo-Futurism De Stijl Devětsil Divisionism Fauvism Impressionism Neo-Impressionism Post-Impressionism Color Field Incoherents Lyrical Abstraction Mail art Minimalism Mir iskusstva Multidimensional art Neue Slowenische Kunst Nonconformism Performance art Pop art Process art Rayonism Suprematism Vorticism Nouveau réalisme Literature and poetry Acmeism Angry Penguins Asemic writing Conceptual poetry Cyberpunk Ego-Futurism Experimental literature Flarf poetry Hungry generation Imaginism Language poets Neoavanguardia Neoteric Nouveau roman Oberiu Oulipo Slam poetry Ultraísmo Visual poetry Zaum Music By style Funk Jazz Yass Metal Pop Rock Prog Punk Others Aleatoric music Ars nova Ars subtilior Atonal music Electroacoustic music Electronic music Industrial music Experimental pop Free jazz Free improvisation Futurism Microtonal music Minimal music Drone music Music theatre Musique concrète New Complexity No wave Noise music Post-rock Rock in Opposition Second Viennese School Serialism Spectral music Stochastic music Textural music Totalism Twelve-tone technique Cinema and theatre Cinéma pur Dogme 95 Drop Art Epic theatre Experimental film Experimental theatre Postdramatic theatre Remodernist film Structural film Theatre of the Absurd Theatre of Cruelty General Bauhaus Constructivism Dada Expressionism Fluxus Futurism Lettrism Modernism Minimalism Postminimalism Neo-minimalism Neo-Dada Neoism Postmodernism Late modernism Primitivism Russian Futurism Russian symbolism Situationist International Social realism Socialist realism Surrealism Symbolism Book v t e Modernism Milestones Le Déjeuner sur l’herbe (1862–1863) Olympia (1863) A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte (1886) Mont Sainte-Victoir (1887) Don Juan (1888) The Starry Night (1889) Ubu Roi (1896) Verklärte Nacht (1899) Le bonheur de vivre (1905–1906) Les Demoiselles d'Avignon (1907) The Dance (1909–1910) The Firebird (1910) Afternoon of a Faun (1912) Nude Descending a Staircase, No. 2 (1912) The Rite of Spring (1913) In Search of Lost Time (1913–1927) The Metamorphosis (1915) Black Square (1915) Fountain (1917) The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920) Six Characters in Search of an Author (1921) Ulysses (1922) The Waste Land (1922) The Magic Mountain (1924) Battleship Potemkin (1925) The Sun Also Rises (1926) The Threepenny Opera (1928) The Sound and the Fury (1929) Un Chien Andalou (1929) Villa Savoye (1931) The Blue Lotus (1936) Fallingwater (1936) Waiting for Godot (1953) Literature Guillaume Apollinaire Djuna Barnes Tadeusz Borowski André Breton Mikhail Bulgakov Anton Chekhov Joseph Conrad Alfred Döblin E. M. Forster William Faulkner Gustave Flaubert Ford Madox Ford André Gide Knut Hamsun Jaroslav Hašek Ernest Hemingway Hermann Hesse James Joyce Franz Kafka Arthur Koestler D. H. Lawrence Wyndham Lewis Thomas Mann Katherine Mansfield Filippo Tommaso Marinetti Guy de Maupassant Robert Musil Katherine Anne Porter Marcel Proust Gertrude Stein Italo Svevo Virginia Woolf Poetry Anna Akhmatova Richard Aldington W. H. Auden Charles Baudelaire Luca Caragiale Constantine P. Cavafy Blaise Cendrars Hart Crane H.D. Robert Desnos T. S. Eliot Paul Éluard Odysseas Elytis F. S. Flint Stefan George Max Jacob Federico García Lorca Amy Lowell Robert Lowell Mina Loy Stéphane Mallarmé Marianne Moore Wilfred Owen Octavio Paz Fernando Pessoa Ezra Pound Lionel Richard Rainer Maria Rilke Arthur Rimbaud Giorgos Seferis Wallace Stevens Dylan Thomas Tristan Tzara Paul Valéry William Carlos Williams W. B. Yeats Visual art Josef Albers Jean Arp Balthus George Bellows Umberto Boccioni Pierre Bonnard Georges Braque Constantin Brâncuși Alexander Calder Mary Cassatt Paul Cézanne Marc Chagall Giorgio de Chirico Camille Claudel Joseph Cornell Joseph Csaky Salvador Dalí Edgar Degas Raoul Dufy Willem de Kooning Robert Delaunay Charles Demuth Otto Dix Theo van Doesburg Marcel Duchamp James Ensor Max Ernst Jacob Epstein Paul Gauguin Alberto Giacometti Vincent van Gogh Natalia Goncharova Julio González Juan Gris George Grosz Raoul Hausmann Jacques Hérold Hannah Höch Edward Hopper Frida Kahlo Wassily Kandinsky Ernst Ludwig Kirchner Paul Klee Oskar Kokoschka Pyotr Konchalovsky André Lhote Fernand Léger Franz Marc Albert Marque Jean Marchand René Magritte Kazimir Malevich Édouard Manet Henri Matisse Colin McCahon Jean Metzinger Joan Miró Amedeo Modigliani Piet Mondrian Claude Monet Henry Moore Edvard Munch Emil Nolde Georgia O'Keeffe Méret Oppenheim Francis Picabia Pablo Picasso Camille Pissarro Man Ray Odilon Redon Pierre-Auguste Renoir Auguste Rodin Henri Rousseau Egon Schiele Georges Seurat Paul Signac Alfred Sisley Edward Steichen Alfred Stieglitz Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec Édouard Vuillard Grant Wood Lin Fengmian Music George Antheil Milton Babbitt Jean Barraqué Béla Bartók Alban Berg Luciano Berio Nadia Boulanger Pierre Boulez John Cage Elliott Carter Aaron Copland Heitor Villa-Lobos Henry Cowell Henri Dutilleux Morton Feldman Henryk Górecki Josef Matthias Hauer Paul Hindemith Arthur Honegger Charles Ives Leoš Janáček György Ligeti Witold Lutosławski Olivier Messiaen Luigi Nono Harry Partch Krzysztof Penderecki Sergei Prokofiev Luigi Russolo Erik Satie Pierre Schaeffer Arnold Schoenberg Dmitri Shostakovich Richard Strauss Igor Stravinsky Karol Szymanowski Edgard Varèse Anton Webern Kurt Weill Iannis Xenakis Theatre Edward Albee Maxwell Anderson Jean Anouilh Antonin Artaud Samuel Beckett Bertolt Brecht Anton Chekhov Friedrich Dürrenmatt Jean Genet Maxim Gorky Walter Hasenclever Henrik Ibsen William Inge Eugène Ionesco Alfred Jarry Georg Kaiser Maurice Maeterlinck Vladimir Mayakovsky Arthur Miller Seán O'Casey Eugene O'Neill John Osborne Luigi Pirandello Erwin Piscator George Bernard Shaw August Strindberg John Millington Synge Ernst Toller Frank Wedekind Thornton Wilder Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz Film Robert Aldrich Michelangelo Antonioni Ingmar Bergman Anton Giulio Bragaglia Robert Bresson Luis Buñuel Marcel Carné Charlie Chaplin René Clair Jean Cocteau Maya Deren Alexander Dovzhenko Carl Theodor Dreyer Viking Eggeling Sergei Eisenstein Jean Epstein Federico Fellini Robert J. 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Murnau Georg Wilhelm Pabst Vsevolod Pudovkin Nicholas Ray Jean Renoir Walter Ruttmann Victor Sjöström Josef von Sternberg Dziga Vertov Jean Vigo Orson Welles Robert Wiene Dance George Balanchine Merce Cunningham Clotilde von Derp Sergei Diaghilev Isadora Duncan Michel Fokine Loie Fuller Martha Graham Hanya Holm Doris Humphrey Léonide Massine Vaslav Nijinsky Alwin Nikolais Alexander Sakharoff Ted Shawn Anna Sokolow Ruth St. Denis Helen Tamiris Charles Weidman Grete Wiesenthal Mary Wigman Architecture Marcel Breuer Gordon Bunshaft Jack Allen Charney Walter Gropius Hector Guimard Raymond Hood Victor Horta Friedensreich Hundertwasser Philip Johnson Louis Kahn Le Corbusier Adolf Loos Konstantin Melnikov Erich Mendelsohn Pier Luigi Nervi Richard Neutra Oscar Niemeyer Hans Poelzig Antonin Raymond Gerrit Rietveld Eero Saarinen Rudolf Steiner Edward Durell Stone Louis Sullivan Vladimir Tatlin Paul Troost Ludwig Mies van der Rohe Frank Lloyd Wright Related American modernism Armory Show Art Deco Art Nouveau Ashcan School Avant-garde Ballets Russes Bauhaus Buddhist modernism Constructivism Cubism Dada Degenerate art De Stijl Der Blaue Reiter Die Brücke Ecomodernism Expressionism Expressionist music Fauvism Fourth dimension in art Fourth dimension in literature Futurism Grosvenor School of Modern Art Hanshinkan Modernism High modernism Imagism Impressionism Incoherents International Style Late modernism Late modernity Lettrism List of art movements List of avant-garde artists List of modernist poets Lyrical abstraction Maximalism Minimalism Modern art Modernity Neo-Dada Neo-primitivism New Objectivity Orphism Post-Impressionism Postminimalism Postmodernism Postmodernist film Reactionary modernism Metamodernism Remodernism Romanticism Second Viennese School Structural film Surrealism Symbolism Synchromism Tonalism Warsaw Autumn v t e Visual arts and the art world Artwork Conceptual art Cultural artifact Fine art Installation art Mural Painting Plastic arts Printmaking Public art Street art Sculpture Site-specific art Roles Artist Collector Critic Curator Conservator-restorer Dealer Model Visual arts education Places and events Art auction Art colony Art commune Art exhibition Art gallery Contemporary art gallery Art museum Art school Arts centre Arts festival Artist collective Artist cooperative Artist-in-residence program Artist-run initiative Artist-run space Biennale Commission Virtual museum Alternative exhibition space Sculpture garden Sculpture trail History of art Timeline of art Art history (academic study) Art manifesto Art movements Criticism feminist History of painting outline Related Art market The arts Catalogue raisonné Classificatory disputes Museum collection management Deaccessioning Conservation-restoration Cultural policy Eclecticism in art Economics of art Art finance Art valuation Index of painting-related articles Outline of art Outline of painting Outline of sculpture Provenance Sociology of art Lists Art magazines Art media Art techniques Art movements Art museums largest most visited sculpture parks single artist Art reference books Modern artists Contemporary artists Contemporary art galleries Painters by name by nationality Photographers Sculptors Most expensive paintings, sculptures, works by living artists Painting portal Visual arts portal Arts portal Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Art_movement&oldid=1002683153" Categories: Art movements Art history Style Visual arts Hidden categories: Webarchive template wayback links Articles with short description Short description is different from Wikidata Navigation menu Personal tools Not logged in Talk Contributions Create account Log in Namespaces Article Talk Variants Views Read Edit View history More Search Navigation Main page Contents Current events Random article About Wikipedia Contact us Donate Contribute Help Learn to edit Community portal Recent changes Upload file Tools What links here Related changes Upload file Special pages Permanent link Page information Cite this page Wikidata item Print/export Download as PDF Printable version In other projects Wikimedia Commons Languages العربية Bân-lâm-gú Català Čeština Eesti Español Esperanto فارسی Français Galego Ido Italiano עברית ქართული Latina Português Română Simple English Slovenščina Svenska தமிழ் Türkçe Tiếng Việt 吴语 粵語 中文 Edit links This page was last edited on 25 January 2021, at 16:30 (UTC). 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