Tableau Composition surréaliste dans le style du cubisme nr. s38525 - acheter au magasin en ligne Uwalls.fr. Toile naturelle. Toutes les tailles. Prix avantageux. Livraison rapide
Oil on canvas; 116 cm x 88.8 cm. Jean Metzinger was born in Nantes where he also spent his entire youth. He enjoyed a thorough education and attended painting classes under Hypolitte Touront, a well-known portrait painter who taught an academic, conventional style of painting. Metzinger, however, was interested in the current changes in painting. He loved the neo-impressionist innovations, the abandonment of shading and mixing colors. When he sent his first oil paintings to Paris the response was so positive that he was soon invited to exhibit three works in a presentation of independent artists at the "Salon des Indépendants". His immediate success brought about the decision to move to Paris where he could benefit from the fertile artistic world. He continued working in a neo-impressionist style, which he developed to mosaic-like color patterns between 1905 and 1908 . These late neo-impressionist paintings with their patches of color placed accurately one next to the other, already point towards his later Cubist works: they reveal an inclination for construction and a clear structure. His style became increasingly geometric and his new artistic interpretations are influenced by Braque, Picasso and Gris. Metzinger's works around 1909 finally document a move towards what was later referred to as analytical Cubism, but was initially rejected completely by the critics. Metzinger documented his theories in his "Comments about Painting" in 1910. He worked together with Albert Gleizes in 1912 with whom he published the theoretical treatise "Du Cubisme" which was soon much discussed. Metzinger was appointed to teach at the Académie de la Palette, later the Académie Arenius. Numerous exhibitions document the painter's national and international success. During the 1920s Metzinger briefly abandoned Cubism. He lived in Bandol in Provence until 1943 and then returned to Paris where he was given a teaching post for three years at the Académie Frochot in 1950.
PAUL CEZANNE
Le Grimaldi Forum propose, jusqu'au 15 septembre, deux expositions consacrées au peintre, "Picasso Côte d'Azur" et "Picasso dans la collection Nahmad".
Frantisek Kupka (1871-1957) a côtoyé de nombreux mouvements artistiques (fauvisme, cubisme, futurisme, orphisme, abstraction…) tout en gardant toujours un style particulier.
Nowadays nobody disputes the pioneering role of František Kupka in abstract painting...
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Olympia, 1863, Manet El apogeo de la prostitución en Francia coincidió con la revolución estética emprendida por el impresionismo hacia...
Frantisek Kupka (1871 -1957) Cosmic Spring 1 1913-14 Oil on Canvas. Seen in the Centre for Modern and Contemporary Art, Veletrzni (Trades Fair) Palace, Prague.
Marc Chagall - Portrait de Vava
La rétrospective du Grand Palais rend hommage au peintre tchèque. D’abord symboliste, puis caricaturiste, il fut un pionnier flamboyant de l’art abstrait.
František Kupka The Musician Follot 1911 (dated on painting 1910)
L'été s'achève. De loin en loin, l'on se souvient de la torpeur d'un après midi d'août, d'heures immobiles dans le soleil brûlant, de parasols multicolores, tapissant les plages désormais livrées au seul vol de quelques oiseaux de mer et d'encore rares...
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THE LOUDEST VOICE
Frantisek Kupka's pastels are exquisite paintings in their own right. They also show his way of working out ideas. Gail Sibley's shares some of them here.
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La voix du silence - Frantisek Kupka 1903