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Saturday, December 21, 2024
P55.Art – The Art Platform - ID 16697548
Wednesday, December 18, 2024
P55 – The Art Platform - ID 16667022
Tuesday, December 17, 2024
P55 – The Art Platform - ID 16667014
Sunday, December 15, 2024
XX century Abstract Utopias
Friday, November 15, 2024
P55.Art – The Art Platform - ID 16352156
Thursday, June 20, 2024
20th century Cubism
Pablo Picasso (1881 – 1973) is widely recognized as one of the founders of Cubism, along with Georges Braque (1882 – 1963). This artistic movement aimed to deconstruct the image through geometric figures, drawing inspiration from diverse sources, such as African masks and the works of French artist Paul Cézanne. Cubism, which emerged in 1907, represented a new way of visualizing reality, moving away from traditional illusionism and approaching a more geometric and fragmented vision of the world.
The first phase of Cubism, known as Analytical Cubism, developed between 1908 and 1912, characterized by the fragmentation of the object into multiple facets and the almost total absence of color, prioritizing tones of gray, brown and green. This phase is marked by a rigorous analysis of shapes and volumes, where artists deconstructed objects and represented them from different perspectives simultaneously.
Monday, May 27, 2024
20th century North American abstraction
Saturday, May 18, 2024
P55.Art – The Art Platform - ID 14730381
Tuesday, May 07, 2024
20th century Post-war European figuration
During the central years of the
20th century, European art underwent a significant transformation. Although
followers of European informalisms emphasized texture and irregularity, new
figurative languages emerged that configured an image
of contemporary man through new standards of expressive freedom.
Lucian Freud and Henry Moore
For the British, the human being became a central theme.
Lucian Freud, for example, stood out for his intensely realistic and detailed
representations of the human body. His paintings captured the vulnerability and
physicality of the human figure, revealing both the beauty and imperfections of
the body. Henry Moore, on the other hand, explored the human form through his
monumental and abstract sculptures, which often referred to organic and
primordial forms. Moore's works combined the figurative with a plastic language
that brought abstraction closer to matter, resulting in an innovative and
expressive synthesis.
Manuel Pereira da Silva
In Portugal, Manuel Pereira da Silva followed this trend. His
work combined the figurative with a plastic language close to the abstraction
of matter, creating a bridge between human representation and the abstract
exploration of materials. His sculptures captured the essence of the human form
while exploring new possibilities for plastic expression.
Francis Bacon and Alberto Giacometti
Other artists of this period were marked by a feeling of
pessimism and anxiety, caused by the crises of the two world wars. These
artists imposed a new sense of alienation from the body, representing it in
distorted and injured ways. Francis Bacon, for example, is known for his
depictions of inhuman and disturbing figures, who appear trapped in a state of
perpetual suffering. His works reflect a dark and hopeless view of the human
condition.
Alberto Giacometti, in turn, portrayed the human body in a
disintegrated manner, with his evanescent and long figures that seem on the
verge of dissolution. His slender and fragile sculptures capture a deep feeling
of alienation and hopelessness, symbolizing the fragility of human existence in
the face of the crises of the 20th century.
Post-war European figurative art is marked by a search for
new forms of expression that capture the human condition in its fullness.
Artists such as Lucian Freud, Henry Moore, Manuel Pereira da Silva, Francis
Bacon and Alberto Giacometti exemplify the diverse approaches and sensibilities
of this period. While some sought a synthesis between figurative and
abstraction, others explored alienation and human suffering, reflecting the
complexities and uncertainties of the post-war era.