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Inter-War Art Movements

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Art Movements of

the Post WWI Years

1919-1939

Essential Question:



How were the emotions and

actions of the aftermath of

WWI expressed in the

following art movements?

modernism

1916 - 1940

Principles of Modernism

The expression of the

Artist’s right to

freedom of choice in

subject and style.



Departure from literal

representation – no

longer needed with

birth of photography.



“Art for Art’s sake”



Reject tradition and

society.

“Modernism” by the Critics

“ For the younger artists of France have

completely thrown overboard the ideals of

perfection and form, of grace and

measure and tranquility, which we are

accustomed to think as their most

valuable possession.”



“…their (Dadaist‟s) manifestos and

tracts – with which it is proposed to

„purge‟ French art of its slavish

subservience to rules.”



from “The Aesthetic Upheaval in France” by Edmund

Wilson Jr., Vanity Fair February 1922

“Modernism” by the Artists

“ Seven years ago, I tried to make a painting

that would live by its own resources…At the

present time I am doing research in art. My

conclusions? I cannot explain my present

researches until I myself have evolved out

of them, that is to say, until I have gone

further in my artistic evolution.”





Francis Picabia, quoted from “Francis Picabia and

his Puzzling Art (an extremely modernized

academician)”, from Vanity Fair November 1915

Art movements as part of

Modernism

Dadaism (1916 – 1924)



Bauhaus (1919 – 1933)



Art Deco (1920 – 1935)



Surrealism [early] (1920 - 1935)

dadaism

1916 - 1924

Tristan Tzara – founder of Dadaism



“ Freedom : Dada Dada Dada, a

roaring of tense colors, and

interlacing of opposites and all

contradictions, grotesques,

inconsistencies: LIFE”





“Dada Manifesto” [1919]

Dadaism

Began in neutral

Switzerland in WWI



Also big in Paris.



Reached its peak

between 1916 – 1924



“Anti – Art”



A movement against

rigidity of society and

art, and the barbarity

of war – the public

didn’t deserve art

after the war.

Tristan Tzara

Born in Romania in 1896.



Lived most of his life in

Paris.



Wrote the first Dada text,

La Premiere Aventure

celeste de Monsieur

Antipyrine in 1916.



Penned the movements

manifestos, Sept

manifestes Dada, in 1924.



Became an active member

of the French Communist

Party in later life.

Characteristics of Dada Art

Nonsensical drawings

Pastel and faded colors

Used collages and layers – to confuse

the “unworthy beholder.”

“The beginnings of surrealism” –

many Dada artists went on to become

members of the Surrealist movement.

Subjects sometimes mundane, called

art as irony. (e.g.– bicycle wheel, flyer.)

Important Artists

of the Dada Movement

Tristan Tzara (1896 – 1953)

Francis Picabia (1879 – 1953)

Kurt Schwitters (1887 – 1948)

Max Ernst (1891 – 1976)

Marcel Duchamp (1887 – 1958)

Francis Picabia

Machine Turn

Quickly

1916-1918

Francis Picabia

Feathers

1921

Francis

Picabia

Chapeau de

Paille

1921

Kurt

Schwitters

The Cherry

Picture

1921

Kurt

Schwitters

Merz 448

(Moscow)

1922

Kurt

Schwitters

Kleine

Dada

Soiree

1922

Marcel Duchamp

Monte Carlo

Bond

1924

Marcel Duchamp

You Me (Tu-M)

1918

Publications of the

Dada movement

Many publications within Dada Movement

Was not only an art movement, but

included poetry and theatre.

First publication - Cabaret Voltaire

Followed by Dada in July 1917 - an art and

literature review organized by Tristan

Tzara.

Other publications included Le courre a

Barbe, Der Dada, De Stijl, Proverbe, &

Freie Straße

Example covers of

Dada Magazine

(1917 & 1920)

Example articles from De Stijl and Dada

bauhaus

1919 - 1933

Walter Gropius:

Founder of Bauhaus



“The School will gradually turn

into a workshop…

Art and Technology - a

new unity.”

Bauhaus

Began in 1919 with

Bauhaus School in

Weimar, Germany.

Lead by Walter

Gropius, Hannes Meyer,

& Ludwig Mies Van Der

Rohe.

Wanted to create new

art to reflect the new

times they were living

in after WWI.

Artist should be trained

to work in the industry.

Walter Gropius

Born in Berlin in 1883



Served as Sgt. Major

in WWI.



In 1919 was employed

as the new master of the

Grand-Ducal Saxon

School of Arts and Crafts

in Weimar – became the

Bauhaus School.



Fled Germany and the

Nazi Party in 1934.



Died in Boston, MA in 1969.

Characteristics of Bauhaus

A lack of recognizable objects – wanted

to find the true meaning of art through

disassembling it.

Clean lines, geometric shapes layered.

In architecture: clean, functional.

Like Dadaism, was a step toward

surrealism for artists such as Wassily

Kandinsky.

Stylistic patterns altered as leaders of the

school changed – earlier Bauhaus is

different to later Bauhaus.

Important members of

the Bauhaus school



Walter Gropius (1883-1969)

Wassily Kandinsky (1866-1944)

Josef Albers (1888-1976)

Herbert Bayer (1900 - 1985)

Bauhaus School in Dessau, Germany

Wassily

Kandinsky

Contrasting

Sounds

1924

Wassily

Kandinsky

On White II

1923

Wassily Kandinsky

Yellow Red Blue

1925

Josef Albers

Figure (Glass,

Colour and

Light)

1921

Herbert Bayer

Profil en Face

1929

Herbert Bayer

Birthday Greetings to Xonti

1930

Like Dada,

Bauhaus also

published

periodicals and

magazines.

Head of printing

and design for

Bauhaus Magazine

was Herbert Bayer.

The Bauhaus

school also

published books

called

Bauhausbücher

art deco

1920 - 1935

Art Deco

Center: Paris.

Gained the title “Art Deco”

from Exposition

Internationale des Arts

Decoratifs et Industriels

Modernes in 1925

A new kind of decorative

and elegant art.

Reached its high point in

the mid ’20s – mid 30’s.

Reaction to the forced

austerity caused by WWI.

Characteristics of Art Deco

Geometric shapes

Although not the flowing swirls of Art

Nouveau, had bolder curves and less

“fussy” designs.

Bold colors, and new ways of shading

pictures.

Idealistic images of the “flaming

youth” of the “roaring twenties”.

Carried a theme through pieces,

especially in interiors and architecture.

Exposition Internationale des arts

Decoratifs et Industriels Modernes

April – November 1925

Held in Paris

To show the world that

France once again led

the way in a new

evolving international

style – “Art Deco”.

Changed the perception

of Bauhaus, Colonial Art

and, predominantly, the

Art Deco style as

legitimate movements.

Important Art Deco Artists



Tamara de Lempicka

(1898 – 1980)



“Erte” - Romain De Tirtoff

(1892 – 1990)



William Van Allen (1883 – 1954)

“Cassandre” - Adolphe

Mouron (1901 – 1968)

Tamara de Lempicka

Sleeping Girl

1935

Tamara de

Lempicka

Portrait of a

Young Girl in a

Green Dress

1929

Tamara de

Lempicka

Self Portrait in

the Green

Bugatti

1925

Erte

Costume Design

for “Les Pierres

Precieuses”

1923

Erte

Design for

Lanternbearer in

“Venise XVII”

1919

Erte

L‟Arc En Ciel

(Cover for

“Harpers

Bazaar”)

1929

Cassandre

Cigarettes

Celtique

1935

Cassandre

L‟Atlantique

1932

Cassandre

L‟Intransigeant

1925

early surrealism

1920 - 1935

Surrealism

Inspired by new psychology of two men:









Sigmund Freud & Carl Gustav Jung

Basic Principles

Freud Jung

Human development Neuroses are caused

is best understood as by conflicts between

changing objects of individuals

sexual desire subconscious and

Wishes are repressed greater world.

and emerge from the Sexual desire does

subconscious in not play as huge a

“accidental” bursts – role.

Freudian slips.

Must make a healthy

Neuroses are caused relationship between

by repressed the conscious and

memories and unconscious –

unconscious shouldn’t be cut off

conflicts. from it, but shouldn’t

ID, Ego and Super be swamped by it.

Ego.

Surrealism

Divided into two groups

based on different

interpretations of Freud and

Jung – the Automatists and

the Veristic Surrealists.



Automatists - suppress

conscious in order to free

the subconscious, inspired

by more “Dadaist” ideals,

shouldn’t be overly

analyzed.



Veristic Surrealists - follow

the images of the

subconscious so they can

be interpreted; art is a way

to freeze ideas of the

subconscious.

Surrealism

Lead by Andre Brenton, a

French doctor who had

served in the trenches

during WWI.



Subject matter was varied:

– some pieces show a

complete dislocation

from any sort of literal

“reality” (for example,

Max Ernst’s works)

-- other pieces show

“normal” situations

with a spark of absurdity

(for example, Rene

Magritte's works.)



Bright colors among sometimes dull

backgrounds.

Max Ernst

Hydrometric

Demonstration

Of How To Kill

By Temperature

1920

Max Ernst

Kupferblech

1919

Max Ernst

The Elephant

Celebs

1921

Max Ernst

The Couple in Lace

1925

Rene Magritte

The Menaced Assassin

1927

Rene Magritte

Voice of Space

1931

Rene Magritte

The False Mirror

1928

Rene Magritte

The Lovers

1928

To summarize Post WWI art, a

quote from its true founder…

Tristan Tzara - leader of Dada

movement



“The beautiful and the true in art do not

exist; what interests me is the intensity

of a personality transposed directly,

clearly into the work…and in what

manner he knows how to gather

sensation, emotion, into a lacework of

words and sentiments.”



“Lecture on Dada” [1922]



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