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         Cubism:     more books (100)
  1. Shadows of Reality: The Fourth Dimension in Relativity, Cubism, and Modern Thought by Mr. Tony Robbin, 2006-03-31
  2. Cubism (25) by Anne Gantefuhrer-Trier, 2009-10-01
  3. Cubism (Art of Century) by Dorothea Eimert, Guillaume Apollinaire, 2010-05-30
  4. Picasso and the Invention of Cubism by Mr. Pepe Karmel, 2003-10-11
  5. A Cubism Reader: Documents and Criticism, 1906-1914 by Mark Antliff, Patricia Leighten, 2008-08-01
  6. Architecture and Cubism
  7. Primitivism, Cubism, Abstraction: The Early Twentieth Century (Modern Art : Practices and Debates) by Gill Perry, Francis Frascina, et all 1993-05-26
  8. Inheriting Cubism: The Impact of Cubism on American Art, 1909-1936 by John Cauman, 2001
  9. Cubism and Culture (World of Art) by Mark Antliff, Patricia Leighten, 2001-12
  10. Rise of Cubism by Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler, 2008-05
  11. Cubism a History and an Analysis, 1907-1914 by J. Golding, 2000-01
  12. A Sum of Destructions: Picasso's Cultures and the Creation of Cubism by Natasha Staller, 2001-06-01
  13. Cubism and 20th Century Art by Robert Rosenblum, 2001-03-01
  14. Cubism (Movements in Modern Art) by David Cottington, 1998-07-13

1. Cubism, Cubists: Picasso And Braque, And Their Great Influences
and explanation of cubism, similarities and differences between two cubists, Pablo Picasso and Georges Braques.......
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Cubism, cubists: Picasso and Braque, and their great influences
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Pablo Picasso Georges Braque Picasso and Braque : Similarities and Differences ... Annotated Bibliography What is Cubism Cubism is a highly influential visual arts style of the 20th century that was created principally by the painters Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque in Paris between 1907 and 1914. The Cubist style emphasized the flat, two-dimensional surface of the picture plane, rejecting the traditional techniques of perspective, foreshortening, modeling, and chiaroscuro and refuting time-honoured theories of art as the imitation of nature. Cubist painters were not bound to copying form, texture, colour, and space; instead, they presented a new reality in paintings that depicted radically fragmented objects, whose several sides were seen simultaneously. Cubism derived its name from remarks that were made by the painter Henri Matisse and the critic Louis Vauxcelles, who derisively described Braque's 1908 work House at L'Ebstaque Les Demoiselles d'Avignon The period from 1910 to 1912 often is referred to as that of Analytical Cubism. In an analytical cubist painting, the object was "taken apart" and reshaped with the use of flat intersecting planes. Paintings frequently combine representational motifs with letters, the latter emphasizing the painter's concern with abstraction; favourite motifs are musical instruments, bottles, pitchers, glasses, newspapers, still lifes, and the human face and figure.

2. CUBISM GALLERY ASADA
Our gallery deal in Europian cubic paintings, like Braque, SoniaDelaunay Marcoussis Valmier Herbin Gleizes etc. Copyright 1996-2000 cubism Gallerry Asada, All rights resertved.
http://www.cubism-asada.com/

3. Cubism
Presents a collection of images that display the before and after effects of a variety of plugins for the GIMP. Artistic cubism. Artistic. cubism . Mosaic. Oilify
http://www.xach.com/gimp/previews/cubism.html
Artistic > Cubism Artistic
Cubism
Mosaic

Oilify

Blur
Motion Blur (Zoom)

Darkroom
Film

Distorts
Apply lens

Emboss
Noisify Ripple ... Whirl Edge-detect Edge Laplace Effects Bump-map Gflare Supernova Image Auto-Stretch HSV Contrast Auto-Stretch Engrave Pixelize ... Value Invert Render IfsCompose Grid Textures Sinus Cubism Original These pages describe plugins for GIMP , a freely available image manipulation tool for Unix. For the latest news on GIMP, check out my GIMP News page. Zachary Beane

4. WebMuseum: Cubism
cubism. Timeline Picasso and cubism. An early 20thcentury schoolof painting and sculpture in which the subject matter is portrayed
http://www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/glo/cubism/
Cubism
Timeline: Picasso and Cubism An early 20th-century school of painting and sculpture in which the subject matter is portrayed by geometric forms without realistic detail, stressing abstract form at the expense of other pictorial elements largely by use of intersecting often transparent cubes and cones. Cubism, highly influential visual arts style of the 20th century that was created principally by the painters Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque in Paris between 1907 and 1914. The Cubist style emphasized the flat, two-dimensional surface of the picture plane, rejecting the traditional techniques of perspective, foreshortening, modeling, and chiaroscuro and refuting time-honoured theories of art as the imitation of nature. Cubist painters were not bound to copying form, texture, colour, and space; instead, they presented a new reality in paintings that depicted radically fragmented objects, whose several sides were seen simultaneously. 1908; attribué parfois à une boutade de Matisse parlant d'un tableau de Braque, parfois à la critique. École de peinture, florissante de 1910 à 1930, qui se proposait de représenter les objets décomposés en éléments géométriques simples (rappelant le cube) sans restituer leur perspective. Le cubisme est surtout connu par les toiles de Picasso, de Braque, de Juan Gris Braque avoue «quand nous avons fait du Cubisme, nous n'avions aucune intention de faire du Cubisme, mais d'exprimer ce qui était en nous». Et Picasso s'exprime dans le même sens. Mais, si proches l'un de l'autre qu'ils aient été, si ressemblants à certains égards, ce qui les unit demeure moins important que ce qui les divise. Leurs voies s'écartent de plus en plus au fur et à mesure qu'ils feront du Cubisme une aventure personnelle. Le terme, Cubisme, étant d'ailleurs né d'une manière toute fortuite sous la plume du critique d'art de Gil Blas, Louis Vauxcelles, qui avait écrit en effet que «Braque méprise les formes, réduit tout, sites, figures et maisons romaines, à des schémas géométriques, à des cubes». Le mot avait fait fortune et, l'année suivante, les toiles présentées au Salon des Indépendants étaient définies bizarreries cubiques.

5. Artcyclopedia: Cubism
Europe, 19081920. cubism was developed between about 1908 and 1912 in a collaboration between Pablo Picasso and Georges
http://www.artcyclopedia.com/history/cubism.html
Browse artists by: Movement Medium Subject Nationality ... Women Artists
Artists by Movement:
Cubism
Europe, 1908-1920
Cubism was developed between about 1908 and 1912 in a collaboration between Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque . Their immediate influences are said to be Tribal Art (although Braque later disputed this) and the work of Paul Cezanne . The movement itself was not long-lived or widespread, but it began an immense creative explosion which resonated through all of 20th century art.
The key concept of Cubism is that the essence of objects can only be captured by showing it from multiple points of view simultaneously.
Cubism had run its course by the end of World War I, but among the movements directly influenced by it were Orphism, Purism, Precisionism Futurism , Constructivism, and, to some degree, Expressionism
Chronological Listing of Cubists
Use ctrl-F (PC) or command-F (Mac) to search for a name Lyonel Feininger American Painter
Buy Art Prints Jacques Villon French Painter Raymond Duchamp-Villon French Sculptor Kasimir Malevich Ukrainian Painter
Buy Art Prints Patrick Henry Bruce American Painter Albert Gleizes French Painter
Buy Art Prints Natalia Goncharova Russian Painter Fernand Leger French Painter
Buy Art Prints Mikhail Larionov Russian Painter Henri Le Fauconnier French Painter Pablo Picasso Spanish Painter/Sculptor Buy Art Prints Georges Braque French Painter Buy Art Prints Louis Marcoussis Polish/French Painter Buy Art Prints Jean Metzinger French Painter Gino Severini Italian Painter Robert Delaunay French Painter

6. ArtLex On Cubism
cubism and cubists, defined, with images of examples from art history, great quotations,and links to other resources. Click Here. The WebMuseum's cubism page.
http://www.artlex.com/ArtLex/c/cubism.html
C ubism or cubism - One of the most influential art movements (1907-1914) of the twentieth century, Cubism was begun by Pablo Picasso (Spanish, 1882-1973) and Georges Braque (French, 1882-1963) in 1907. They were greatly inspired by African sculpture, by painters (French, 1839-1906) and Georges Seurat (French, 1859-1991), and by the Fauves In Cubism the subject matter is broken up, analyzed , and reassembled in an abstracted form nature "in terms of the cylinder , the sphere and the cone ." There were three phases in the development of Cubism: Facet Cubism Analytic Cubism , and Synthetic Cubism landscapes with simplified forms and a limited variety of colors . The controversy surrounding their exhibition at the Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler Gallery brought Cubism its name. In effect, the art critic Louis Vauxcelles described the works in this way: "M. Braque scorns form and reduces everything, sites, figures and houses, to geometric schemas and cubes." The break with homogeneous form was completed the following year. Braque and Picasso's similar compositions are broken into planes with open edges , sliding into each other while denying all depth . Color is reduced to a gray-tan cameo , applied uniformly in small brushstrokes creating vibrations of light . The interpenetration of the forms lends these paintings a previously unknown aspect of continuity and density . Withdrawing before the abstract and hermetic character of this new space , Braque and Picasso brought recognizable illusionistic letters , fragments of words

7. CUBISM
cubism. cubism (a name suggested by Henri Matisse in 1909) is a nonobjective approach to painting developed originally
http://www.rollins.edu/Foreign_Lang/Russian/cubism.html
Cubism
Two Figures (1913-14), Liubov' Popova beautifully demonstrates the artistic possibilities of a Cubist reconstruction and, at the same time, her talent to transcend simple imitation. The painting might have been influenced by Umberto Boccioni's 1912 Technical Manifesto of Futurist Sculpture (published in Moscow in 1914), in which he suggested "a translation in plaster, bronze, glass, wood, or any other material of those atmospheric planes which bind and intersect things" ( Costakis , 352). [B.B., C.B., and A.B.]
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8. Pär Lagerkvist And Cubism
Essay in PDF format to be downloaded.
http://hem.fyristorg.com/ALL/LAGERKVIST/

9. WebMuseum: Picasso And Cubism
Picasso and cubism. The art of painting original Guillaume Apollinaire,The Beginnings of cubism , 1912. After cubism, the world never
http://www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/tl/20th/cubism.html
Picasso and Cubism
The art of painting original arrangements composed of elements taken from conceived rather than perceived reality.
Guillaume Apollinaire, The Beginnings of Cubism After Cubism, the world never looked the same again: it was one of the most influential and revolutionary movements in art. The Spaniard Pablo Picasso and the Frenchman Georges Braque splintered the visual world not wantonly, but sensuously and beautifully with their new art. They provided what we could almost call a God's-eye view of reality: every aspect of the whole subject, seen simultaneously in a single dimension. The Cubist movement in painting was developed by Picasso and Braque around 1907 and became a major influence on Western art. The artists chose to break down the subjects they were painting into a number of facets, showing several different aspects of one object simultaneously. The work up to 1912 is known as Analytical Cubism, concentrating on geometrical forms using subdued colors. The second phase, known as Synthetic Cubism, used more decorative shapes, stencilling, collage, and brighter colors. It was then that artists such as Picasso and Braque started to use pieces of cut-up newspaper in their paintings. © 14 Oct 2002

10. Mark Phillips' Pages: Blog
Mark Phillip's thoughts interleaved, counterposed or otherwise muddledup
http://www.markphillips.com/blog/index.html
Elizabeth Catlett, Sharecropper What's a "blog"? The term is short for "web log," a new form of expression enabled by the Web. They're like a half-way form between personal diaries and traditional journalism. This one's a bit wacky 'cause I'm using it sorta kinda like the way Kafka used his diaries . It's part diary, part sketchbook for fiction and other works, and the various "voices" are interleaved or counterposed or otherwise muddled-up. " Blogging as Cubism " explains. Trouble Tickets has a Lexicon entry for blog with more information. Recently several of these pieces have appeared in Comrades Physik Garden The SoMa Literary Review Inkburns ... Word Riot , and Epiphany . During the month of November 2002, The Blue Moon Review linked to them as their first-ever "Guest Blog." These are among the best lit zines on the 'net. Totally rad. Here's the publication history. Here are a handful of recommended examples.

11. Michael Simonelli - Artist
Original artworks of wood and metal sculpture, oil and acrylic. Mainly surrealism, cubism, modern and abstract art.
http://hometown.aol.com/omega323/index.htm
htmlAdWH('7003077', '120', '30'); htmlAdWH('7002044', '234', '60'); Main Create Edit Help Home
Gallery One

Gallery Two

To Purchase
Michael's Studio Introducing the Artist Michael Simonelli was born in New Haven, Connecticut in Oct. of 1946. Except for a tour of duty with the US Marine Corp (including13 months spent in active combat in Vietnam), he has spent most of his life working in the greater New Haven area. Michael attended Paier College of Art in Hamden, Connecticut where he studied Fine Arts, mechanical drafting, and technical illustration; New Haven College for mechanical engineering; and recently took classes in metal welding at the Creative Workshop in New Haven. Michael has pursued his love of the fine arts over the years, while raising two daughters, and making his living first by contracting for project work in mechanical design and drafting with companies such as Sikorsky Aircraft, Pratt and Whitney, Aerospace, and IBM; then working as a removal business specializ ing in the removal of large trees in treacherous locations requiring careful planning and the aid of cranes, and now contracting for smaller scale construction projects so that he can turn more attention to art once again. The artist currently lives within blocks of New Haven center in one direction, and the

12. Abstract Art
Learn about the artists and styles of the abstract art movement including cubism, Neoplasticism, and Abstract Expressionism.
http://abstractart.20m.com/
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Abstract Styles:
Cubism

Neoplasticism

Expressionism

Abstract Artists: Cubists:
Pablo Picasso

Georges Braque
Neoplasticism
Piet Mondrian
Abstract Expressionism:
Mark Rothko

Jackson Pollock
Links and References E-Mail me ... Mark Rothko "Untitled" Abstract Art is art that is not an accurate representation of a form or object. This representation can be differed in many ways including the shape, color, and form. The artist takes the object and then either simplifies it or exaggerates it using these things. There are many different abstract styles. There are three forms of abstraction that really stands out: Cubism Neoplasticism , and Abstract Expressionism . There are many abstract artists who painted in these styles, however there are some that are more well know in a particular field than the rest. For example, the some of the most famous cubist were Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque . One of the best examples of Neoplasticism is Piet Mondrian . Two of the most famous examples of Abstract Expressionism are Mark Rothko and Jackson Pollock.

13. WebMuseum: Picasso And Cubism
Pablo Picasso "Guernica" "The Cubists threw out the traditional techniques of perspective, rejected foreshortening and the imitation of nature.
http://sunsite.unc.edu/wm/paint/tl/20th/cubism.html
Picasso and Cubism
The art of painting original arrangements composed of elements taken from conceived rather than perceived reality.
Guillaume Apollinaire, The Beginnings of Cubism After Cubism, the world never looked the same again: it was one of the most influential and revolutionary movements in art. The Spaniard Pablo Picasso and the Frenchman Georges Braque splintered the visual world not wantonly, but sensuously and beautifully with their new art. They provided what we could almost call a God's-eye view of reality: every aspect of the whole subject, seen simultaneously in a single dimension. The Cubist movement in painting was developed by Picasso and Braque around 1907 and became a major influence on Western art. The artists chose to break down the subjects they were painting into a number of facets, showing several different aspects of one object simultaneously. The work up to 1912 is known as Analytical Cubism, concentrating on geometrical forms using subdued colors. The second phase, known as Synthetic Cubism, used more decorative shapes, stencilling, collage, and brighter colors. It was then that artists such as Picasso and Braque started to use pieces of cut-up newspaper in their paintings. © 14 Oct 2002

14. What Is Cubism.
Our gallery in Japan deals in cubic paintings. cubism proved to have a huge influenceon modem art and later generations. cubism Gallery Asada Kenji Asada.
http://www.cubism-asada.com/what_cubism.html
Our gallery in Japan deals in cubic paintings.
Cubism proved to have a huge influence on modem art and later generations. It has still a fresh impression on our mind.
We would like to reconfirm this cubism again and introduce the cubist painters who are not so well known today.
Take for instance Albert Gleizes, he was important cubist for spreading the Cubist movement throughout Europe .
He published the treatise Du Cubime in I 9 1 2 along with Jean Metzinger.
We would like to introduce the cubist painters like Gleizes, Marcoussis, Valmier, Herbin etc. on our web. Cubism Gallery Asada
Kenji Asada Tamon Miki
October2 - November 14,1976
The National Museum of Modern Art,Tokyo. There are several opinions concerning when cubism began,but I feel it rather appropriate to regard the year 1907 as its starting point.This was the year in which the poet Apollinaire introduced Picasso to Braque who was almost as old as Picasso.It is widely known that at that time both Picasso and Braque were influenced greatly by Cezanne. It need hardly be mentioned that Cezanne stood at the juncture.of the 19th and 20th centuries,and solidly constructed an ordered and ballanced world of art. He surpassed the visual realism of the Impressionists,ignored the traditional roles of perspective,and effectively used a self-controlling function in form and color.Cezanne remark that "Nature should be handled with the cylinder,sphere and cone" is famous,but Picasso and Braque followed Cezanne's lead,and up to that time had searched separately for new plastic forms by their own respective means apart from each other.But after this encounter, Cubism advanced rapidly.Also in the same year, a retrospective exhibition of Cezanne was held at the

15. Irrelevent
Included within is philosophy, poetry, a section for bored people, and prose. The prose takes the form of surrealism, irrealism and cubism.
http://www.rotworm.com/index.html

16. Redirect
Analytical cubism, original paintings and prints
http://www.analyticalart.com

17. Www.connectint.co.jp/cubism-asada/
Similar pages www.artchive.com/artchive/cubism.html Similar pages cubism, Masters, Artists, Art History and Visual Arts, Artist cubism, Masters, Artists, Art History and Visual Arts, Artist Resources at WorldWide Arts ResourcesWorld Wide Arts Resources provides access to the visual arts
http://www.connectint.co.jp/cubism-asada/

18. Picasso For The Man In The Street
Criticism of the major works of the artist Guernica, Artist before his Canvas, Seated Woman, cubism, the Mirror, Demoiselles d'Avignon, SelfPortraits, Vollard Suite by Paul Scaman.
http://www.picassoforthemaninthestreet.org
Picasso for the Man in the Street
Contents
Introduction
  • Chapter One: Some early works
  • Chapter Two: Self-Portrait 1907
  • Chapter Three: Les Demoiselles d'Avignon 1907 ... Introduction
    Our aim is not only to show an amateur in art like you or I can appreciate Picasso's work but that our innocent approach can explain it more convincingly than the critics have done. There are three problems that the latter tend to side-step and that we intend to face head-on. The first is the artist's distortion of the human form; the second is attributing value to the various works; and the third is the relationship between the works and the society in which they were produced.
    Chapter One: Some early works
    "La Vie" is the most mature of Picasso's early works, but not, as some people think, because of the blue light. "The Blue Period" is a term bandied about as though any picture painted by Picasso which is blue is of great artistic value. There are, of course, critics who believe that Expressionist paintings are good because, for instance, the sky is painted red or yellow instead of blue but the mature critic must ask: "How does the blue light contribute to the meaning of the picture?"
    Chapter Two: Self-Portrait 1907
    But if skillfulness were the picture's only merit then the man in the street would be right that the picture was pointless for any philosopher of art will tell you that mere ability is not the proof of art or a pea-shooter who never missed his target would be a great artist.

19. Motherhood Art, Mystic Paintings, Art Judaica - Benjamin Shiff - Israeli Art
Original paintings and reproductions from Israeli artist Benjamin Shiff, who focuses on four main themes Motherhood art, Jerusalem paintings, Art Judaica and Mystic paintings. A modern style that sometimes inclines towards cubism.
http://www.shiffstudio.com

Benjamin Shiff at International Exhibitions
Benjamin Shiff paintings are distinctive. Whether you see his motherhood art, Jerusalem paintings art judaica or mystic paintings , you can immediately sense his unique style. Motherhood art and personal relationships, in particular, reflect his attraction to the metaphysical and the mystic . Highly original, too are the Shiff paintings of Jerusalem and Shiff art judaica , which express the Israeli artist's individuality and spark. Motherhood Art Index Mothers and babies A mother and her children Mothers resting ... Contact
Constructed by Multimedia Productions Ltd. 03-6912988

20. Cubism Bibliography
An annotated bibliography that focuces on the cubism movement and the influencethat cubism gave on other forms of art. Cottington, David. cubism.
http://sachiyoasakawa.tripod.com/Welcome.html
Get Five DVDs for $.49 each. Join now. Tell me when this page is updated
Cubism, Cubists, and their influences on the other forms of art
An Annotated Bibliography
This is an annotated bibliography of my research on cubism, which especially focuses on analyzing cubism, cubists, and the influences that cubism movement of early 1900's in Europe left in the other forms of art such as architecture. The two famous cubists that I researched on are Pablo Picasso and George Braque. The Internet citations of this bibliography contain links that connect to images of these cubists' works.
Books Blau, Eve, and Nancy J.Troy, eds. Architecture and Cubism Cambridge: The MIT Press. 1997
This book is composed of eleven well written essays that give us a clear idea of how cubism influenced on architecture, and explains the relationship between cubism and architecture in art history.
Cottington, David. Cubism. Cambridg,UK: Cambridge University Press,1998.
This book explains cubism as an art movement and contains many beautiful reproductions of paintings of various cubist artists. A careful analysis on each painting can bring us an understanding of motivation of a painter.
Golding, John. Cubism: A History and an Analysis 1907-1914. Cambridge: The Belknap

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