STYLES OF ART
IMPRESSIONISM
IMPRESSIONISM
IMPRESSIONISM
IMPRESSIONISM
IMPRESSIONISM
IMPRESSIONISM
IMPRESSIONISM
IMPRESSIONISM
IMPRESSIONISM
EXPRESSIONISM
EXPRESSIONISM
EXPRESSIONISM
EXPRESSIONISM
EXPRESSIONISM
EXPRESSIONISM
EXPRESSIONISM
EXPRESSIONISM
EXPRESSIONISM
EXPRESSIONISM
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM
CUBISM
CUBISM
CUBISM
CUBISM
CUBISM
CUBISM
CUBISM
CUBISM
CUBISM
SURREALISM
SURREALISM
SURREALISM
SURREALISM
SURREALISM
SURREALISM
SURREALISM
SURREALISM
SURREALISM
SURREALISM
SURREALISM
REALISM
FAUVISM
FAUVISM
FAUVISM
FAUVISM
FAUVISM
FAUVISM
FAUVISM
DADAISM
DADAISM
DADAISM
DADAISM
DADAISM
DADAISM
DADAISM
DADAISM
DADAISM
Thank You!
18.23M
Category: artart

Styles of art

1. STYLES OF ART

2. IMPRESSIONISM

Characterized by short
brisk strokes of bright
colors used to recreate
the impression of light on
objects.

3. IMPRESSIONISM

It portrays the effects of experience
upon the consciousness of the artist
and the audience. The artist is
characterized as one concerned
more with the technique of
suggesting light and color to the
picture than with the subject matter

4. IMPRESSIONISM

A scene may either be in
natural setting or a man-made
landscape, but outdoors are
generally the subject, with
vibrant colors without an
emphasis on details.

5. IMPRESSIONISM

Impressionism enabled the
artist to paint an image in
the way that someone might
see it if they only caught a
quick glimpse of the subject.

6. IMPRESSIONISM

This method allowed the
artists to emphasize the
impression of their subject
matter rather than paint the
object in a more realistic
manner.

7. IMPRESSIONISM

SUNRISE
by
Claude Monet

8. IMPRESSIONISM

Rose Arches

9. IMPRESSIONISM

DANCE CLASS
by Degas

10. IMPRESSIONISM

SELF
PORTRAIT
by
Cassatt

11. EXPRESSIONISM

It is a manner of
painting and sculpturing
in which natural forms
and colors are distorted
and exaggerated.

12. EXPRESSIONISM

The artist uses free
distortion of form and
color through which he
gives visual form to inner
sensations or emotions.

13. EXPRESSIONISM

The paintings, the primary art
of which expressionism
influenced, are full of vivid
imagery and emotion and are
often described as showing a
touch of the dark side of human
nature.

14. EXPRESSIONISM

Expressionist artist show
emotions and personal
views in their work. They
portray subjective reality
rather than realism.

15. EXPRESSIONISM

Artist might incorporate
fantasy and violence in
their subject matter in
order to show the
extremes of emotion.

16. EXPRESSIONISM

17. EXPRESSIONISM

18. EXPRESSIONISM

19. EXPRESSIONISM

20. EXPRESSIONISM

21. ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM

Abstract art is conceived apart from any
realities, or specific objects. It pertains to
the formal aspects of art in emphasizing
lines, colors, and generalized geometric
forms. This kind of art is a logical
extension of cubism with its
fragmentation of the object.

22. ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM

It is a post-World War II art movement
that developed in New York in the 1940s.
There were actually no established
styles, although the works put an
emphasis on dynamic and energetic
gesture. The imagery used primarily still
abstract.

23. ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM

Two broad groupings:
1. ACTION PAINTERS
2. COLOR FIELD
PAINTERS

24. ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM

ACTION PAINTERS
The artists worked in a
spontaneous improvisatory
manner often using large brush to
make sweeping gestural marks.

25. ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM

COLOR FIELD PAINTERS
The artists were deeply interested in
religion and myth; and created simple
compositions with large areas of single
color intended to produce a contemplative
or meditational response in the viewer.

26. ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM

27. ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM

28. ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM

29. ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM

30. ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM

31. CUBISM

It is considered as the most
influential art movement in the 20th
century
Characterized by an emphasis on the
formal structure of a work of art and
the reduction of natural forms of their
geometrical equivalent.

32. CUBISM

33. CUBISM

34. CUBISM

35. CUBISM

36. CUBISM

37. CUBISM

38. CUBISM

39. CUBISM

40. SURREALISM

It was an art
movement that sought
to link the world of
dreams with real life.

41. SURREALISM

It was founded in Paris by a
small group of writers and
artist who sought to channel
the unconscious as a means to
unlock the power of the
imagination.

42. SURREALISM

SURREAL – means
beyond or above
reality

43. SURREALISM

44. SURREALISM

45. SURREALISM

46. SURREALISM

47. SURREALISM

48. SURREALISM

49. SURREALISM

50. SURREALISM

51. REALISM

Another style of art whose interest
and concern centers around the
actual or real problems. It deviates
on the treatment of forms, colors,
and space, as they appear in
actuality or ordinary visual
experience.

52. FAUVISM

Used pure, brilliant colors
applied straight from the paint
tubes in a bold direct manner to
create an explosive effect on the
canvas. Artist of this style were
called FAUVES

53. FAUVISM

54. FAUVISM

55. FAUVISM

56. FAUVISM

57. FAUVISM

58. FAUVISM

59. DADAISM

It is a style of painting which is a
protest against the horrors of
World War I, which artists
believed had been a show of
barbarism and oppressive
intellectual rigidity in both art and
everyday society.

60. DADAISM

The art was characterized
by a deliberate irrationality
and the rejection of the
prevailing standards of art.

61. DADAISM

DADA artists referred their
work as to have not been
influenced by any movement,
basic principles can be seen
greatly from Cubism, and
Expressionism.

62. DADAISM

63. DADAISM

64. DADAISM

65. DADAISM

66. DADAISM

67. DADAISM

68. Thank You!

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