Cubism is a movement and painting school with great influence in modern western art, and its artistic pursuit is directly related to Cezanne's artistic view. Cubist painter himself once claimed that "whoever understands Cezanne will understand cubism" (Hudson Osborne, Sichuan Fine Arts Publishing House. 1978, page 87). Cubist painters, inspired by Cezanne's thought of "dealing with nature with cylinders, spheres and cones", tried to create structural beauty in their paintings. They try to reduce the descriptive and expressive components of their works and try to organize a geometric structure. Although their works still maintain certain concreteness, their goals are fundamentally different from objective reproduction. They developed a so-called [synchronous video] from Cezanne. Words. In a painting, different images of objects from different angles are combined on the same image. For example, Picasso's painting shows a side nose on the front and a side eye on the side. Generally speaking, it is the first cubist work. Cubist movement can usually be divided into two stages. One stage is the so-called analytical cubism before 19 12. Painters inherited it. The tradition of sexual analysis. This paper attempts to form a painting-style space and modeling structure through the decomposition and reconstruction of space and objects. After 05438+09 12, the cubist movement entered the second stage, usually called comprehensive cubism. At this time, color has played a powerful role in painting, but the shape is still fragmented, only bigger and more decorative. Artists have created a new artistic skill and method, collaging pictures and graphics with objects. It strengthens the texture change of the picture and raises the question of who is real and who is unreal between nature and painting. Cubism is a style in painting, but it also has a far-reaching impact on sculpture and architecture in the 20th century.
On behalf of:
Pablo Picasso (188 1- 1973),
Georges braque (georges braque. 1882- 1963),
Vern and Leger (1885- 1955),
Chris (juan gris. 1887- 1927),