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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 - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Encyclopedia article provides a short overview of the movement and a list of wellknown cubists.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cubism
Cubism
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation search Georges Braque Woman with a guitar, Cubism was a 20th century art movement , pioneered by Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque , that revolutionized European painting and sculpture , and inspired related movements in music and literature . The first branch of cubism, known as Analytic Cubism, was both radical and influential as a short but highly significant art movement between 1908 and 1911 in France . In its second phase, Synthetic Cubism, the movement spread and remained vital until around 1919, when the Surrealist movement gained popularity. In cubist artworks, objects are broken up, analyzed, and re-assembled in an abstracted form—instead of depicting objects from one viewpoint, the artist depicts the subject from a multitude of viewpoints to represent the subject in a greater context. Often the surfaces intersect at seemingly random angles, removing a coherent sense of depth. The background and object planes interpenetrate one another to create the shallow ambiguous space, one of cubism's distinct characteristics.
Contents
edit Conception and origins
Pablo Picasso Le guitariste

2. ArtLex On Cubism
cubism and cubists, defined, with images of examples from art history, great quotations, and links to other resources.
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, 1859-1891), 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

3. Cubism | Thematic Essay | Timeline Of Art History | The Metropolitan Museum Of A
cubism was one of the most influential visual art styles of the early twentieth century. It was created by Pablo Picasso (Spanish, 1881–1973) and Georges
http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/cube/hd_cube.htm
Related Timeline Content Timelines France, 1900 A.D.-present Iberian Peninsula, 1900 A.D.-present Mexico and Central America, 1900 A.D.-present Thematic Essays Abstract Expressionism African Influences in Modern Art Alfred Stieglitz (1864-1946) and American Photography Alfred Stieglitz (1864-1946) and His Circle Art and Nationalism in Twentieth-Century Turkey Design, 1900-25 Design, 1925-50 Early Documentary Photography Egyptian Modern Art Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961) and Art Fauvism Geometric Abstraction Georges Seurat (1859-1891) and Neo-Impressionism Group f/64 Henri Cartier-Bresson (1908-2004) Henri Matisse (1869-1945) List of Rulers: Europe Marcel Duchamp (1887-1968) Modern Art in India Modern Art in West and East Pakistan Modern Art in West Asia: From Colonial to Post-colonial Period The New Vision of Photography Nineteenth-Century American Drawings Pablo Picasso (1881-1973) Paul Klee (1879-1940) Paul Strand (1890-1976) Photography and Surrealism Photography at the Bauhaus Pictorialism in America Post-Impressionism Precisionism The Salon and The Royal Academy School of Paris Surrealism West Asia: Ancient Legends, Modern Idioms

4. Cubism
cubism List of artists and index to where their art can be viewed at art museums worldwide.
http://www.artcyclopedia.com/history/cubism.html
Artists by Movement:
Cubism
Europe, 1908-1920
Cubism was developed between about 1908 and 1912 in a collaboration between Georges Braque and Pablo Picasso . Their main influences are said to have been 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 underlying Cubism is that the essence of an object 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, Precisionism Futurism , Purism, 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/German Painter
Art Prints Jacques Villon French Painter
Art Prints Raymond Duchamp-Villon French Sculptor Kasimir Malevich Ukrainian Painter
Art Prints Maria Blanchard Spanish Painter
Art Prints Patrick Henry Bruce American Painter Albert Gleizes French Painter Art Prints Natalia Goncharova Russian Painter Art Prints Fernand Leger French Painter Art Prints Mikhail Larionov Russian Painter Art Prints Henri Le Fauconnier French Painter Pablo Picasso Spanish Painter/Sculptor Art Prints Georges Braque French Painter Art Prints Louis Marcoussis Polish/French Painter Jean Metzinger French Painter Gino Severini Italian Painter Art Prints Robert Delaunay French Painter

5. CUBISM
The Cubist art movement began in Paris around 1907. Led by Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque, the Cubists broke from centuries of tradition in their painting
http://www.artmovements.co.uk/cubism.htm
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document.write(getTableBegin('Http://www.artistportfolio.net/images/bar16_gg.gif','Art Movements','valign=top height=200')) CUBISM KEY DATES: 1908-1914 The Cubist art movement began in Paris around 1907. Led by Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque, the Cubists broke from centuries of tradition in their painting by rejecting the single viewpoint. Instead they used an analytical system in which three-dimensional subjects were fragmented and redefined from several different points of view simultaneously. The movement was conceived as 'a new way of representing the world', and assimilated outside influences, such as African art, as well as new theories on the nature of reality, such as Einstein's Theory of Relativity.
Cubism is often divided into two phases - the Analytic phase (1907-12), and the Synthetic phase (1913 through the 1920s). The initial phase attempted to show objects as the mind, not the eye, perceives them. The Synthetic phase featured works that were composed of fewer and simpler forms, in brighter colours. Other major exponents of Cubism included Robert Delaunay, Francis Picabia, Jean Metzinger, Marcel Duchamp and Fernand Léger.

6. Cubism
cubism is a more modern art movement in which forms are abstracted by using an analytical approach to the object and painting the basic geometric solid of
http://abstractart.20m.com/cubism.htm
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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 ... Georges Braque's "Candlesticks and Playing Cards" Cubism is a more modern art movement in which forms are abstracted by using an analytical approach to the object and painting the basic geometric solid of the subject. Cubism is a backlash to the impressionist period in which there is more of an emphasis of light and color. Cubism itself follows Paul Cezanne statement that "Everything in nature takes its form from the sphere, the cone, and the cylinder." in which these 3 shapes are used to depict the object of the painting. Another way that the cubist expressed their painting was by showing different views of an object put together in a way that you can not actually see in real life. The Cubism period stated in Paris in 1908, reached its peak in 1914, and continued into the 20's. The leaders in the cubist era were Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque . Other painters from this period include Fernand Leger, Francis Picabia, and Roger De La Fresnaye.

7. Eyeconart: Cubism
Provides samples and descriptions of paintings by one of the developers of the art style.
http://www.eyeconart.net/history/cubism.htm
home paintings about/news blog ... art history directory Cubism The development of cubism can be attributed to two men, George Braque and Pablo Picasso. They worked side by side in the same studio during their cubist period, and their work was almost indistinguishable. For now, I will consider the development of the much more famous (and prolific) artist, Picasso.
Pablo Picasso
(Spanish, 1881-1973) Self Portrait 1899-1900 Self Portrait, cubist period See Early Works By Picasso
Blue Period: La Vie Old Guitarrist Woman with Crow
Rose Period:
Circus Acrobats and Ape Girl with Fan
His blue period only lasted a few years, and was quickly supplanted with brighter colors when the artist's life circumstances improved. Collectors started to buy his works, so he was less financially worried. Also, he is believed to have fallen in love at this time. Historians call this his Rose period because of the pinks and reds that started to appear in his works at this time. For some reason, the lives of carnival people was one of the subjects that was common in these paintings. Early Cubist Period:
Les Demoiselles de Avignon, 1907

8. Mark Harden's Artchive: "Cubism"
The Cubist Epoch, Douglas Cooper s classic study of cubism provides an excellent overview of the movement. One of the few books to address Cubist influences
http://www.artchive.com/artchive/cubism.html

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9. Tate Glossary Cubism
cubism was a new way of representing reality in art invented by Picasso and Braque from19078. A third core Cubist was Juan Gris.
http://www.tate.org.uk/collections/glossary/definition.jsp?entryId=80

10. WebMuseum: Picasso And 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
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

11. Cubism --  Britannica Online Encyclopedia
Britannica online encyclopedia article on cubism highly influential visual arts style of the 20th century that was created principally by the artists Pablo
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9028108/Cubism
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12. CUBISM
cubism (a name suggested by Henri Matisse in 1909) is a nonobjective approach to painting developed originally in France by Pablo Picasso and Georges
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.] Home

13. Guggenheim Collection - Movement - Cubism
Guggenheim Museum collection of cubism works. Provides information about the artwork and artists.
http://www.guggenheimcollection.org/site/movement_works_Cubism_0.html
Cubism Georges Braque and Pablo Picasso originated the style known as Cubism, one of the most internationally influential innovations of 20th-century art.
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Georges Braque, Piano and Mandola, winter 1909-1910
Georges Braque, Violin and Palette, September 1, 1909
Pablo Picasso, Carafe, Jug and Fruit Bowl, Horta de Ebro, Summer 1909
Marc Chagall, Rain,
Marc Chagall, The Soldier Drinks,
Robert Delaunay, Eiffel Tower,
click on images for details

14. Czech Cubism Image Tour
Czech architects distilled from cubism in painting a distinct style in architecture. It was revolutionary in appearance both because of the new shapes
http://lava.ds.arch.tue.nl/gallery/praha/tcubism.html
Czech Cubism Image Tour
Czech Cubism Image Tour
Czech architects distilled from Cubism in painting a distinct style in architecture. It was revolutionary in appearance both because of the new shapes facades could take, being different from contemporary and historical styles and because of the use of (reinforced) concrete structures. In this sense Cubism was richer in content than Modernism since it considered the facade as a plane of expression that could hold more than plain white stucco. However, the plans of the buildings usually were less radical than those developed by Modernism. Also, one may wonder whether properties of Cubism in painting such as transparency, the suggestion of three- and four dimensions, and ambiguity hold when they are applied in architecture.

15. JD Smith: Cubism
cubism, The CUbe Builder for IRS Spectra Maps, is a tool for constructing spectral cubes, maps, and arbitrary aperture 1D spectral extractions from sets of
http://turtle.as.arizona.edu/jdsmith/cubism.php
CUBISM
CUBISM, The CU be B uilder for I RS S pectra M aps, is a tool for constructing spectral cubes, maps, and arbitrary aperture 1D spectral extractions from sets of mapping mode spectra taken with Spitzer's IRS spectrograph. Developed by the SINGS team to fulfill, in part, its Legacy proposal commitments, CUBISM has been released and is available from the SSC . It is optimized for non-sparse maps of extended objects, e.g. the nearby galaxy sample of SINGS, but can be used with data from any spectral mapping AOR.
Reference
The algorithm and design of CUBISM are documented in the following paper: Spectral Mapping Reconstruction of Extended Sources , J.D.T. Smith et al., 2007, PASP 119, 1133. Please reference this paper for all scientific uses of CUBISM.
Design
CUBISM is divided into three main components:
  • CubeProject : For organizing and interrogating input BCD's, setting up cube build parameters, and building the cube.
  • CubeView : An all-purpose viewer for examining individual BCD's, editing the aperture over which cubes are built, navigating through spectral cubes plane-by-plane, extracting spectra from cubes over any spatial aperture, along with many traditional viewer features.
  • CubeSpec : The viewer for extracted 1D spectra, permitting peak and continuum regions to be defined and line or feature maps to be created (with or without continuum fitting).

16. SIMILE | Timeline | Examples | Cubism
cubism. Demonstrating the use of JSON data, thanks to Juan Manuel Caicedo. Sources. http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monet
http://simile.mit.edu/timeline/examples/cubism/cubism.html
Cubism
Demonstrating the use of JSON data , thanks to Juan Manuel Caicedo. Sources:

17. Sanford & A Lifetime Of Color: Study Art
cubism developed in France between 1907 and the early 1920 s. The name cubism comes from an insult by another artist, Henri Matisse.
http://www.alifetimeofcolor.com/study/g_cubism.html
Glossary Term: Cubism
Cubism developed in France between 1907 and the early 1920's. The name "Cubism" comes from an insult by another artist, Henri Matisse. He called a painting by Georges Braque: "petits cubes", or little cubes. Since the Renaissance , many artists believed perception and space were best shown with linear perspective, a mathematical system used to imitate nature. Artists using these ideas show a fixed point of view. Cubist artists, on the other hand, show more than one view at a time. A Cubist painting may show the front of a face and the side of a face at the same time. You can see this in Picasso's Girl with Dark Hair on the right. Modern studies of perception have shown that people do not view things from one fixed, all-encompassing place, but from an infinite number of glances which are then connected in the viewer's mind into one picture. Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque were two Cubist artists who showed how space can be cut-up, distorted and transformed into different planes and views. Cubist painters asked themselves: "Is reality in the eye of the spectator, or is it whatever appears on the canvas?"

18. Cubism. Cubists
cubism. Cubist artists. A web directory. cubism cubism in Art . Cubist Painters and Sculptors . A Web Directory. Google. Web, www.zeroland.co.nz
http://www.zeroland.co.nz/cubism_art.html
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Les Demoiselles d'Avignon,

1907 Art Print

Picasso, Pablo

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... Gallery Collection, glossary and examples.
Cubist artists Braque, Georges. Braque at the Guggenheim Collection Georges Braque, Metropolitan Museum of Modern Art. Candlestick and Playing Cards on a Table
Georges Braque. Kunstmuseum Basel, Switzerland
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19. Cubism - MSN Encarta
cubism, movement in modern art, especially in painting, invented by Spanish artist Pablo Picasso and French artist Georges Braque in 1907 and 1908 .
http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761551811/cubism.html
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  • Cubism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Cubism was a 20th century art movement , pioneered by Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque , that revolutionized European painting and sculpture , and inspired related movements in ... Cubism Cubism: List of artists and index to where their art can be viewed at art museums worldwide. Artists by Movement: Cubism Europe, 1908-1920 Cubism was developed between about 1908 ... ArtLex on Cubism Cubism and cubists, defined, with images of examples from art history, great quotations, and links to other resources.
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Print this section Cubism , movement in modern art , especially in painting, invented by Spanish artist

20. Mekentosj.com | Modern Cubism
On June 29th we won the Apple Design Award for our program 4Peaks. With the prize came a beautiful metal cube as trophy that glows when you touch it.
http://mekentosj.com/goodies/cubism/
Learn more >>
Modern Cubism
On June 29th we won the Apple Design Award in the category "Best Student Mac OS X Project" for our program . With the prize came a beautiful metal cube as trophy that glows when you touch it. While showing the cube to everyone, most people asked if we knew what was inside and how it worked. How did the cube notice that it was touched? Opening it up would be a simple solution of course, but we were afraid to break it. Still, curious as scientists can be, we thought of something more elegant to answer the burning questions. We contacted the people of the radiotherapy department in our hospital to see if they perhaps could take an X-ray of the cube, just like people had previously done with a Titanium PowerBook and iPod . Unfortunately they told us that they did not have an X-ray machine, we should contact the radio-diagnostic department for that. Instead however, they did have something else: a cone beam CT scan that would even allow 3D reconstruction!
Patient: Charlie Cube
This particular CT scanner is part of an ultra-modern linear accelerator of which there are only a few worldwide, and which together with the manufacturer has been actively developed in-house. The high-resolution CT image data is used to optimize irradiation protocols of cancer patients for better accuracy and effectivity in order to fully remove the tumor. In February this year, the NKI/AVL was the first hospital in the world to take this kind of machine in clinical use. Although it is very heavily used, luckily for us the people of the radiotherapy department offered to take a CT scan of our cube in between two patient sessions.

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