Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque worked very closely together in the years 1907 - 1908, till the beginning of World War 1. In the summer of 1911 the two artists painted early cubist landscapes side by side in Ceret, in the French Pyrenees; their paintings and their approach then was almost identical. The influence of Cézanne was very strong in the paintings of this period. Later both artists started to make collages together in Paris.
In 1915 Braque was severely wounded in his head during a battle in World War 1. In 1917 he was recovered and developed a more personal and rather delicate style in his Cubism, stil-life became his main motif. Then started a close friendship with Juan Gris.
A Famous man called Pablo Picasso created and named cubism
The name Impressionism comes from a comment that a critic made about Claude Monet's Impression: Sunrise saying that the piece only looked like an impression because of its sketchy quality and visible brushstrokes. The artist like the name so it stuck.
Fauvism is a name for the art of Henri Matisse and his colleagues (e.g. André Derain, Maurice Vlaminck and others) exhibited in the Autumn Salon in Paris 1905. They were called 'Les Fauves' (Wild animals) by a critic. They used very strong colors which did not represent the natural colors of the object, but were intended to evoke strong emotions. Cubism was a way for Picasso and Georges Braque to present objects as seen simultaneously from different viewpoints, thus bridging the gap between sculpture and painting. In this connection color was of no interest. Fauvism lasted about two years, analytic cubism not much longer. Picasso-Braque went on to synthetic cubism, which is collage.
Claude Monet.
critic A.D. Coleman. See "Disappearing Witness: Change in Twentieth-Century American Photography" By Gretchen Garner for details....
Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque began the Cubist movement in the early 1900s. Picasso's Les Demoiselles d'Avignon (1907) was the first step into Cubist theory. The duo was inspired by Paul Cezanne's The Great Bathers (1898-1906), which had geometric structure and bare pieces of canvas, when they ventured off into Analytic Cubism. This type of Cubism sought to capture the 4th dimension, or the portrayal of figures on all sides (see Braque's The Portuguese). Picasso and Braque then moved on to Synthetic Cubism, which analyzed the contrasts between 2-D and 3-D by integrating real objects onto flat surfaces (see Picasso's Still Life With Chair Caning).
Louis Vauxcelles saw a picture of Braque's and described it as a bunch of "little cubes". Thus, he coined the phrase 'Cubism'. While Braque, and many other cubists, never actually used the term to classify their work, the word 'cubism' caught on and still used today.
Magic realism was first used by German art critic Franz Roh in 1925.
The term "abstract expressionism" was first applied to American art in 1946 by the art critic Robert Coates.
The British art critic Lawrence Alloway, in 1954. He was married to the feminist realist painter Sylvia Sleigh.
The British art critic Lawrence Alloway, in 1954. He was married to the feminist realist painter Sylvia Sleigh.
A food taster may be a Food Critic.
roger fry
Another term for "first name" is "given name".
Post-impressionism took place in France. It is a term that was coined by a British artist and art critic Roger Fry, and used to describe the development of French art since Manet.
A critic is a person who knows about the subject in question and gives their opinion on it
The name Impressionism comes from a comment that a critic made about Claude Monet's Impression: Sunrise saying that the piece only looked like an impression because of its sketchy quality and visible brushstrokes. The artist like the name so it stuck.
The name of the first scientist who used the term element was Johan Gadolin in the year 1760.