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         Cubism:     more books (100)
  1. Cubism by Schmeller, 1980
  2. Cubism & La Section D'Or (Works on Paper 1907-1922)
  3. Interpretation of Cubism by Mark Roskill, 1985-02
  4. Inheriting Cubism: The Impact of Cubism on American Art, 1909-1936 by John; Epstein, Stacey (introduction) Cauman, 2001
  5. Cubism and Its Enemies: Modern Movements and Reaction in French Art, 1916-1928 by Christopher Green, 1987-09
  6. Cubism-Futurism by Kozloff, 1975-01
  7. Cubism/Futurism by Max Kosloff, 1973
  8. Cubism in Architecture and the Applied Arts by Ivan Margolius, 1979-11-29
  9. From cubism to surrealism in French literature by Georges Édouard Lemaître, 1941
  10. Essay on Cubism and Vision by John Joline, 1997
  11. Painters of the Section d'or;: The alternatives to cubism by Richard V West, 1967
  12. Cubism by Schmeller, 1980-06
  13. Cubism.: An article from: Arts & Activities by Guy Hubbard, 2001-10-01
  14. History of modern painting from Picasso to surrealism; cubism, futurism, The blue rider, metaphysical painting, dada, abstract art, purism, the realist ... surrealism (Painting, colour, history) by Maurice Raynal, 1950

81. Perspective, Viewpoint And Cubism
Return to Menu. Perspective, Viewpoint and cubism. cubism was a revolutionary new form of painting developed by Picasso and Georges
http://www.tate.org.uk/imap/pages/still/keyterms2.htm

Welcome
Introduction Get Started Comments ... Return to Menu Perspective, Viewpoint and Cubism Painters had always faced a paradox. They were attempting to represent the living, three-dimensional world on the motionless, two-dimensional surface of a canvas. It was impossible to replicate the space and depth around them. However, from the Renaissance onwards, European artists had a convincing way of faking it. This was called perspective. The trick was to exploit the fact that things appear smaller the further away they are from the eye. This effect could be imitated in a painting by carefully managing the size and position of things in relation to each other. Put simply, those objects the artist wanted to portray as further away would be painted smaller than those closer to him. When a painting can give a sense of what is near and what is far, it also gives us a sense of space. But near or far from where? Just as we need to hold down one end of a tape measure to be sure of an accurate measurement, so the painter needed a fixed point to which everything else related. Since the artist was attempting to recreate the experience of looking, that fixed point was his own eye. This is sometimes called a viewpoint.

82. Cubism
By 1913 Diego Rivera was fascinated by the early cubist movement, led by celebrated Spaniard Pablo Picasso, and started experimenting with cubism himself.
http://www.fbuch.com/cubism.htm

Diego
Rivera ca. 1910 Diego Rivera : Master Cubist By 1913 Diego Rivera was fascinated by the early cubist movement, led by celebrated Spaniard Pablo Picasso, and started experimenting with cubism himself. By 1914 Diego was viewed as one of the more interesting members of the Cubist movement, one of the avant garde . Diego was a great admirer of Pablo Picasso, and they became close friends... Diego confides that in Paris, when they were by themselves, they would have the best of times saying things about other painters they would never tell anybody else!!! Portrait of Jacques Lipschitz, 1914 The sculptor Jacques Lipschitz, The Man in the Sweather, was a close friend of Diego, and with him in Mallorca and Barcelona at the beginning of WWI. Notice the Mexican color paterns by the shoulders. Paisaje de Mallorca, 1914 Portrait of Two Women, 1914 Sailor at Breakfast, 1914 The Cafe Terrace, 1915 The Cafe Terrace (1915), shows a delightful Parisian cafe table, filled with goodies such as a sundae and possibly a box of fine cigars! The balance and textures are outstanding! Still Life with Gray Bowl, 1915

83. Cubism - Art Style
cubism was the first abstract art style which began in the early 1900s when artists such as Georges Braque (French) and Pablo Picasso (Spanish) began
http://www.theartgallery.com.au/KidsArt/learn/cubism/
How do I . . .? choose . . . draw a face What is . . .? Choose... a still-life a portrait Cubism Impressionism pigment Realism Who was . . .? Choose... Paul Cezanne Edgar Degas Pierre-Auguste Renoir Raphael Edouard Manet Hey Kids! Submit your art for display in The Worldwide Kids' Art Gallery Art for Children visit The Worldwide Art Directory to find great links to art related sites for kids.
Luis Filella
wonderful whimsical illustrations for children
Surf the Net with Kids
great site for kids and their families with online activities and information as well as great links to other kids' sites.
Crayola Website
online fun with this childhood favourite.
ThePuzzleFactory.com
online games and puzzles to keep kids amused for hours.
Kids Art for Peace Sake
promoting peace and empowering our children to be peacemakers.
Dates:
Key Artists:
Pablo Picasso, Georges Braque
Influences: Cubism was the first 'abstract' art style which began in the early 1900s when artists such as Georges Braque (French) and Pablo Picasso (Spanish) began painting in such a way that was far removed from traditional art styles. The Cubists tried to create a new way of seeing things in art. Many of their subjects, be they people or landscapes, were represented as combinations of basic geometric shapes - sometimes showing multiple viewpoints of a particular image. This approach was related more to the way we see images in our 'minds-eye' rather than in real life, that is if we close our eyes and try to see an image, perhaps of a friend or a family member, it is often hard to visualise the 'whole' image - we usually see parts or fractured pieces. Cubist pictures are therefore often described as looking like pieces of fractured glass.

84. CSISS Classics - Pablo Picasso: Cubism - A Revolution Of Spatial Presentation In
Although inspired by the later work of Cezanne, the era of cubism (1907 1920 s) was first begun by Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque.
http://www.csiss.org/classics/content/40
Pablo Picasso: Cubism - A Revolution of Spatial Presentation in Artistic Expression (with parallels in cartography)
By Scott Crosier
Back to Classics Background
-Pablo Picasso
Cubism, the artistic expression that forefathered all abstract art, was simply a method of portraying multiple dimensions onto a two dimensional canvas. This is not unlike the task of the map maker in representing the earth in two dimensions. However, as we interact with something, we rarely interact using only one perspective. For example, as we appreciate nature, we walk around. We might see a tree off in the distance, and as we approach it, our perspective of the tree changes. We might even walk past the tree, and look back on it from a completely different view or see an areal view of the location and appreciate it from a different perspective. How, then, can an artist depict this changing interaction with the subject, while working on a flat piece of canvas? This question is what spurred several artistic innovators to the pioneer form of all abstract art called Cubism. Innovation The Cubists (including Picasso, Braque, Jean Metzinger, Gris, Duchamp, and Léger) were attempting to depict their subject matter not as the eye, but as the mind saw the subject. For example, the woman in the lower right corner of the painting has her back towards the artist. However, we know, and it is depicted in the painting, that she has a face. Also, as the veil or curtain drapes around the bodies, we see a boundry between the women and the drape, while in other places (the leg of the woman to the left) the boundry is not so clear, suggesting the flow of the veil in and around the bodies. The two women in the middle of the painting also have the profile of their noses painted on what appears to be the front of their face. This too, depicts Picasso's attempt to portray the front and the side of the face in the same image.

85. The House For Cubism: The Raoul La Roche Collection - Museum Of Fine Arts, Basel
The House for cubism The Raoul La Roche Collection Museum of Fine Arts, Basel Raoul La Roche belongs to the most important patrons of the Öffentliche
http://www.absolutearts.com/artsnews/1999/07/17/25639.html
account access login: password: artist port. gallery port. submit your arts news media kit about us services ... art history Indepth Arts News: "The House for Cubism: The Raoul La Roche Collection"
1999-07-17 until 1999-11-29
Museum of Fine Arts, Basel

Basel, , CH Switzerland
Related Links: Ohio Art League 93rd Annual Spring Juried Exhibition: Ohio's Premiere Contemporary Artists - Springfield Museum of Art
Jaume Amigó: Paintings and sculptures
- Michael Dunev Art Projects
Ranjani Shettar: The Indian Spring
- Talwar Gallery
Jem Southam: Rivermouths
- hug - Gallery for International Photography
Down to Earth: Work from the IMMA Collection
- Wexford Art Centre Call for Artists: Communicate - Talk to Each Other - TakingITGlobal Gallery Living Room and The Toilet: Deconstructing Reality by Decontextualizing Daily-lifeSpaces - Coldcreation Chris Twomey: OMNI SERIES, Art and Genetics in a Digital Age - A Gathering of the Tribes Gallery Post Contemporary Painting: A Large-scale Group Exhibition Challenges the Relevance, Importance and Function of the Process of Painting within Contemporary Art Practice

86. CMA Exhibition Feature : Primitivism And Cubism
Primitivism and cubism. From 1908 to 1914, Picasso worked closely with Georges Braque (1882–1963) in the invention and development of cubism.
http://www.clevelandart.org/exhibcef/picassoas/html/1477098.html
Special Exhibitions
Picasso: The Artist's Studio
Picasso: The Artist's Studio

Who Was Picasso?

The Architect's Table, early 1912
Oil on canvas mounted on oval panel
The Museum of Modern Art, New York. The William S. Paley Collection, 1971
[Cat. no. 11]
Primitivism and Cubism In 1907 Picasso shocked fellow artists with his painting as a landmark in the history of art, the first Cubist (or proto-Cubist) painting, and perhaps the most important painting of the 20th century.
and collage.
During the early stages of Cubism, Picasso and Braque rarely contributed to large public exhibitions. By 1909 Picasso enjoyed sufficient support from private collectors and dealers that he no longer needed to participate in large public salons. Consequently, his early Cubist paintings were known mostly to a small group of connoisseurs and fellow artists, many of whom adopted the style and brought it to public attention. Other artists developed Cubist principles of spatial construction in new directions. Cubism provided the foundation for an astonishing variety of avant-garde styles, including Futurism, Orphism, Constructivism, and Neo-Plasticism. Its influence appears ubiquitously in 20th-century art and design, from the International Style in architecture to Abstract Expressionism and other art movements. Many critics regard the invention of Cubism by Picasso and Braque as the most important event in the history of modern art. Self-Portrait with Palette Oil on canvas Philadelphia Museum of Art. A. E. Gallatin Collection

87. Cubism
cubism. We wrote a program (cubism) that attempts to allow the user to generate these surfaces and to analyze them by computing Euler characteristics.
http://www.mathlab.cornell.edu/~wdunbar/
Cubism
Brian Lukoff Kyle Bradley Asher Walkover
with help from Roland Roeder Bill Dunbar , and John Hubbard
In the Summer of 2002 at the Cornell University math REU, we studied surfaces related to Henon maps. We wrote a program (Cubism) that attempts to allow the user to generate these surfaces and to analyze them by computing Euler characteristics. This program, along with the summary paper and movies generated by this program, is available for download here.

88. Cubism Cartoons
cubism cartoons from the CartoonStock directory the world s largest on-line collection of cartoons. . cubism Cartoons. You are
http://www.cartoonstock.com/directory/c/cubism.asp
Cubism Cartoons
You are looking at the "cubism" cartoon page from the CartoonStock directory. Follow the links at the bottom of this page to search on other topics or to purchase reproduction rights for any of these images or merchandise incorporating the cartoons.
This page only includes cartoons from our archive, for more cartoons on news related topics, click here
Cubism cartoon 1 - catalog reference ada0041
"Those visits to the Tate will be the death of Roger."
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Cubism cartoon 2 - catalog reference ang0169
Cubist painter crushed by cube from wall
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89. Cubism Art Prints And Posters With Great Framing Options
cubism Art Prints. JungleWalk.com Your home for Animal Sounds, Pictures, and Videos. cubism Art Prints You will love these cubism Art Prints.
http://www.junglewalk.com/posters/Cubism-art-prints.asp
Cubism Art Prints
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Animal Sounds, Pictures, and Videos

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You will love these Cubism Art Prints. These are great prints at very affordable prices! Click on the print of your choice to view a larger image and buy it from AllPosters.com. Click on the link below to view a larger selection of Cubism art prints.
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Antique Posters ... Impressionist Art Artists Arthur Hughes Art Prints Bouguereau Art Prints Carl Valente Art Prints Cezanne Art Prints ... Home Page 1 Violin and Guitar, 1913 24 in. x 32 in. Poster Aficionado 23 in. x 29 in. Poster Nude Descending a Staircase, No. 2, 1912 22 in. x 35 in. Poster Piano 28 in. x 39 in. Poster Violin and Guitar, 1913 16 in. x 20 in. Poster Nude Descending a Staircase, No. 2, 1912 23 in. x 29 in. Poster Vogel-Wolke 32 in. x 22 in. Poster Guitar on Table 19 in. x 30 in. Poster Violin and Guitar, 1913 24 in. x 36 in.

90. Art Periods In France: CUBISM
Art Periods cubism. cubism expressionism. Picasso and Braque found the precedents and initial concepts for cubism in two art sources.
http://www.discoverfrance.net/France/Art/cubism.shtml
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91. Cusbism And Abstraction
cubism and Abstraction. Developments in the art world after the turn of the twentieth century were closely mirrored in design. In
http://tirocchi.stg.brown.edu/exhibition/fashion/cub.html
Cubism and Abstraction Developments in the art world after the turn of the twentieth century were closely mirrored in design. In 1905, Matisse and other artists introduced brilliantly unrealistic colors into their paintings, prompting critics to call them "wild beasts" (fauves in French). Textile designers, many of whom were painters themselves, did not lag far behind. Cubism and abstraction, as developed by Picasso, Braque, and many others in the following decades, could be instantly recognized in the textile and fashion worlds. Textile patterns, often created by modernist artists like Raoul Dufy and Paul Iribe, soon appeared with abstract florals; geometric patterns that played with the eye through unexpected juxtapositions; and in the 1920s, exuberant designs that presented views from many angles at once. Dazzling colors were joined by layers of patterning created by the use of metallic threads, sequins, and beads: "collages" that decorated the short "chemise" dresses of "flapper" days and nights.

92. Cubism - Encyclopedia Article About Cubism. Free Access, No Registration Needed.
encyclopedia article about cubism. cubism in Free online English dictionary, thesaurus and encyclopedia. cubism. Word Word.
http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/Cubism
Dictionaries: General Computing Medical Legal Encyclopedia
Cubism
Word: Word Starts with Ends with Definition Cubism was an avant-garde Avant garde (sometimes avant-garde; literally, vanguard ) is a French phrase, one of a number of French phrases used by English speakers. It is used to refer to persons or actions that are novel or experimental, particularly with respect to the arts. See for example: dadaism, cubism, futurism, lettrisme, paradoxism, neoism, mail art, constructivism, etc. The avant garde was originally concerned with art for the sake of social progress: seeing the artist as the vanguard of a social reform movement. Over time however the term has also come to be associated with movements concerned with "art for art's sake", concerned directly with aesthetic experience rather than social reform, the direct opposite of its original intentions.
Click the link for more information. art movement that revolutionised European painting and sculpture in the early 20th century (19th century - 20th century - 21st century - more centuries) Decades: 1900s 1910s 1920s 1930s 1940s 1950s 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s As a means of recording the passage of time, the

93. Braque 1
French painter, who, with Pablo Picasso, originated cubism and the cubist style, to become one of the major figures of 20thcentury art.
http://www.mcs.csuhayward.edu/~malek/Braque.html
Georges Braque (1882 - 1963) French painter, who, with Pablo Picasso, originated cubism and the cubist style, to become one of the major figures of 20th-century art.
Braque was born May 13, 1882, in Argenteuil-sur-Seine, near Paris; he grew up there and in the port city of Le Havre. In 1899, following in his father's occupation, he apprenticed himself as a house painter. By 1902, however, he had settled in Paris to pursue the study of painting as a fine art; he was deeply impressed by the bold style of works exhibited in 1905 by the Fauves (French for the wild beasts). The Fauves included Henri Matisse and Andre Derain, who painted with brilliant colors and a loose structure of forms to capture the most intense emotional response. Braque adopted Fauvism from 1906 to 1907.
By 1908, however, Braque had shifted his attention to the paintings of Paul Cezanne, who was reputed to have restored order and discipline to the extremes of artistic expression. Braque's interest in Cézanne's strangely distorted forms and unconventional perspective led him to paint in the manner that came to be called cubist. In his works of 1908 to 1913 Braque conducted an intense study of the effects of light and perspective and the technical means that painters use to represent these effects. He seemed to question most standard artistic conventions. In his village scenes, for example, Braque frequently reduced an architectural structure to a geometric form approximating a cube—or, more precisely, a rectangular prism—yet rendered its shading so that its volume seemed to be contradicted—that is, it looked both flat and three-dimensional. In this way Braque called attention to the very nature of visual illusion and artistic representation.

94. Images Of Feeling Currents And Artistic Movements-Cubism
cubism. cubism consisted of a desire to deny the work of their art predecessors in a way that would disvalue their meanings and intentions.
http://digilander.libero.it/webpainter/indice/sezioni/cubism.html
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Artist Category Genre
Cubist artists Pablo Picasso
Georges Braque
Cubism
The Cubist art movement will forever loom over the era of modern art. The movement lasted approximately eighteen years, and existed around the time of Fauvism and Expressionism. Cubism consisted of a desire to deny the work of their art predecessors in a way that would dis-value their meanings and intentions. The movement’s most significant members: Pablo Picasso, Georges Braque , and Juan Gris each developed certain styles that worked to achieve their purpose. The Cubist art period represented a new and dramatic change in art history. Since the time of the Renaissance, no other art period had been so well known by the lay-people as Cubism. And possibly, no other movement has enjoyed their success and influence since. Cubism began in 1907. The Cubists owed much of their quick success to over 50 years of art challenges. They had obtained much of their inspiration from the Post-Impressionism.

95. Mark Phillips' Pages: Blog
sketchbook for fiction emphasizing formal experimentation. Blogging as cubism explains. Several of these pieces have appeared
http://www.markphillips.com/blog/
Elizabeth Catlett, Sharecropper I should stop calling this a "blog". The term is confusing people. Where traditional " web logs " are like a halfway form between personal diaries and traditional journalism, this writing is more like a daily sketchbook for fiction emphasizing formal experimentation. " Blogging as Cubism " explains. Several of these pieces have appeared in Comrades Physik Garden The SoMa Literary Review Big Bridge ... 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. Here's some more experimental fiction , often based on the blog techniques. I write another, really different kind of blog as part of my work with the Trouble Tickets , project. Thanks for checking it out, too. What do you think of this writing? Many thanks for sharing your opinion in the

96. ART, SCIENCE AND THE MIND CUBISM AS A FORM OF COMPLEXITY
ART, SCIENCE AND THE MIND cubism AS A FORM OF COMPLEXITY. ABSTRACT cubism was a significant paradigm shift in painting just after the turn of the century.
http://www.people.vcu.edu/~mikuleck/art.htm
ART, SCIENCE AND THE MIND: CUBISM AS A FORM OF COMPLEXITY
Donald C. Mikulecky
Fig. 1: The Modeling Relation COMPLEXITY IN ART, LITERATURE, AND SCIENCE The role of the observer The woods are lovely, dark, and deep, But I have promises to keep, And miles to go before I sleep, And miles to go before I sleep. This example came up in a recent symposium on the machine metaphor in science and the nature of complexity [Henry, 1995]. Henry emphasizes the formal identity in syntax and rules of grammar in the last two lines. He stresses that they are not equivalent semantically and are highly context dependent. A related example would be in the writings of Gertrude Stein who uses a similar device in writing about Picasso [Burns, 1970]: One whom some were certainly following was one who was completely charming. One whom some were certainly following was one who was completely charming. One whom some were following was one who was completely charming. One whom some were following was one who was certainly completely charming. Fig. 2: The Bénard System

97. Techniques For Interactive Video Cubism
Techniques for Interactive Video cubism. Sidney Fels. Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering Video cubism. Video cubism has three main
http://www.acm.org/sigs/sigmm/MM2000/ep/fels-poster/
Techniques for Interactive Video Cubism
Sidney Fels Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering
University of British Columbia
Vancouver, BC, Canada Eric Lee Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering
University of British Columbia
Vancouver, BC, Canada Kenji Mase
Seika-cho, Soraku-gun
Kyoto, Japan
mase@mic.atr.co.jp
Abstract
This paper presents an interactive video visualization technique called video cubism. With this technique, video data is considered to be a block of three dimensional data where frames of video data comprise the third dimension. The user can observe and manipulate a cut plane or cut sphere through the video data. An external real-time video source may also be attached to the video cube. The visualization leads to images that are aesthetically interesting as well as being useful for image analysis.
Introduction
We introduce a new technique for visualizing video data. In this novel scheme, video data is considered to be a volume of data. The dimensions of width and height are the usual X and Y axes of a frame of video data. The third dimension is derived from layering frames of video data sequentially in time as shown in the diagram (figure ). Normal video viewing can be considered a cut plane that is parallel to the X-Y plane and advancing from the first frame to the last frame along the T axis as shown in figure

98. Art Paintings On The Web : Cubism Paintings
New sites cubism. TableauxEnLigne, 2004/04/23. Maarten J. Jansen, 2004/04/07. Search For Posters! cubism. ARTISTS. PAINTINGS. SITES. N°. Couet Daniel, 40.
http://www.paintings-directory.com/centre-uk.php?CATEGORIE=3

99. Insider: Cubism Vol. 1
Lovingly titled cubism, this column will be home to topics ranging from the irreverent to the inconsequential, and everything in between. cubism Vol.
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... Articles story Cubism Vol. 1 A shape of things to come. New column this week: Rare. March 27, 2002 - Opinions are like... well, uh, let's just say that everyone has one. This is especially true of us videogame folk. We simply love to offer our opinions on anything and everything related to our beloved pastime. So when offered a soapbox upon which to preach to the masses, who would turn it down? Certainly not me. Lovingly titled "Cubism," this column will be home to topics ranging from the irreverent to the inconsequential, and everything in between.
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100. Insider: Cubism Vol. 69
I haven t just been away from writing cubism in the last couple of weeks. I ve been away from my GameCube. cubism Vol. 69. What we need on GameCube in 04.
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