Avant-Garde Essay

Sort By:
Page 4 of 50 - About 500 essays
  • Decent Essays

    The Psychedelic Era

    • 867 Words
    • 4 Pages

    The Psychedelic Era started in the 1960’s and went all the way to 1975. This movement not only influenced music and art but influenced a wide variety of things including pop culture, dress and wardrobe, language, literature and philosophy. The Psychedelic Era was mostly influenced by the drug culture, especially LSD, from the youth movements that were trying to create a society free from discrimination. After WWII, launched the “baby boom” where nearly 76 million babies were born in America between

    • 867 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Decent Essays

    deconstructionism to create avant-garde fashion. And that is certainly evident in each of their Paris collections, especially their debut shows. Through this fashion style, “Issey Miyake, Rei Kawakubo of Comme des Garcons and Yohji Yamamoto are considered the most successful and internationally known Japanese designers in the West, and they solidified their position in the French fashion establishment” (Kawamura 92). Issey Miyake is actual the first Japanese fashion designer who showed avant-garde fashion in

    • 1186 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Decent Essays

    family moved from Kiev to Kursk, Russia, where he began to paint in a post-impressionist manner. Malevich eventually settled in Moscow, in 1906. There he saw the works of French impressionists Seurat and Cézanne. He began to exhibit with Russian avant-garde Primitivists, in 1910. From 1912 to 1915, he joined the Russian Futurist group. During this time he experimented with connecting his Futurist paintings together, through the use of a theoretical language. In

    • 1694 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Lipsitzky Essay

    • 1002 Words
    • 5 Pages

    El Lissitzky’s real name was Lazar Markovich Lissitzky. He was born in Russia on November 23, 1890, in Pochinok, Russian Empire. He was a Russian artist, designer, typographer, photographer and architect in the early 20th century. In 1905, he started to draw and paint, being influenced by the Russian Painter, Mikhail Vrubel. Lissitzky’s father did not believe that the government in Russia would lead to a good future for him and his family so he decided that he would travel to America by himself

    • 1002 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Better Essays

    Communism And Cubo-Futurism

    • 3076 Words
    • 13 Pages

    demands of war and the overthrow of the Tsar, Russia was prepared to embrace the future. Communism was the new rule and it held a lot of promise for those who showed support. In Russia, as in Europe, war was intertwined with artistic innovation—avant-garde artists were clinging to new languages of expression. Cubism was emerging in Paris, and Futurism in Italy. Russia artists combined the two, calling it Cubo-Futurism. While Cubism abandoned traditional perspectives, Futurism rejected the past and

    • 3076 Words
    • 13 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Decent Essays

    aspects of the interwar avant-garde are an advanced socially trivial form of art which to a bigger extent is symbolic of the visual setting of the human community. It is the art of expressionism in any artistic work which greatly influence its adaptation by the target audience. It has been evidently claimed that most artistic works of the early twentieth century have had a number of varied themes all encompassing the political environment of the time. The interwar avant-garde is a direct expression

    • 852 Words
    • 4 Pages
    • 1 Works Cited
    Decent Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Virginia Woolf Virginia Woolf is considered one of the acknowledged avant–gardes of the 20th century. She is an English writer, a novelist, an author, and a publisher. Woolf is well – known for her unique writing style in her novels and essays. Although her misery at a young age, she insisted on continuing her education and becoming a writer. Unfortunately, she ended her life by committing suicide. Virginia’s works made a controversy around her even after her death which is still going in the 21st

    • 1241 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Decent Essays

    The Futurist movement of art has been regarded as a movement of “artistic rupture. It was the rupture of the already existing genres and verse forms, categories such as “prose” and “verse”, and also phenomena’s like “art” and “life” were put to question”[ ]. Futurism brought about the first collages and the different forms of the arts such as poetry, painting music and theater had started to be brought together into something new [ ]. Development in the movement of futurism brought about what we

    • 1172 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Decent Essays

    The book describes Bottom as a neighborhood atop the hills, overlooking the town of Medallion in Ohio. The time is 1919, immediately after WWI. The irony in the name of the neighborhood is that instead of being located at the bottom, it is actually above the town. The name came from a white landowner trying to fool a freed slave into thinking that this location was more desirable than the valley because it was the “bottom of heaven--best land there is.” (p. 5). The trick worked at the time, but after

    • 383 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Decent Essays

    composition style changed very little over the course of his career, remaining, at times, rhythmically quirky, but for the most part, lyrically Romantic - a style that was considered very “old-fashioned” in a musical scene dominated by the more avant-garde Benjamin Britten. Particularly after World War II, twentieth century audiences weren’t interested in the music of the past - of an age that hadn’t yet experienced the depth of devastation and loss that they had. In spite of his lack of widespread

    • 1009 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Decent Essays