Cubism was an early 20th century avant-garde art movement that revolutionized painting and sculpture. Pioneered by Georges Braque and Pablo Picasso, Cubism involved analyzing subjects from multiple viewpoints and reassembling them in an abstracted form rather than a single perspective. Cubism had two phases - analytical cubism focused on geometric constructions, while synthetic cubism incorporated collage materials. Cubism influenced related movements in music, literature and was applied to sculpture and architecture through simplified geometric shapes and fragmentation of form.
5. CUBISM
• An early-20th-century avant-garde art
movement that revolutionized
European painting and sculpture, and
inspired related movements
in music, literature and architecture.
7. CUBISM
•It was the first style of abstract art
which evolved at the beginning of
the 20th century in response to a
world that was changing with
unprecedented speed.
8. CUBISM
•It was pioneered by Georges
Braque and Pablo Picasso, joined
by Jean Metzinger, Albert Gleizes,
Robert Delaunay, Henri Le
Fauconnier, Fernand
Léger and Juan Gris.
9. PABLO PICASSO
• Spanish painter, sculptor,
printmaker, ceramist,
stage direction, poet, etc.
• Co-founder of the Cubism
Period
• Invention of constructed
sculpture
10. CUBISM
• In Cubist artwork, objects are analyzed,
broken up and reassembled 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.
13. CUBISM
•The first organized group exhibition
by Cubists took place at the Salon
des Indépendants in Paris during
the spring of 1911 in a room called
'Salle 41'
14. CUBISM
•Two Phases of Cubism
•Analytical Cubism (up to 1912)
•Synthetic Cubism (1912 – onwards)
15. ANALYTICAL CUBISM
• The artist analyzed the subject from
many different viewpoints and
reconstructed it within a geometric
framework, the overall effect of which
was to create an image that evoked a
sense of the subject.
18. SYNTHETIC CUBISM
•It moved away from the unified
monochrome surfaces of Analytic
Cubism to a more direct, colorful
and decorative style.
19. SYNTHETIC CUBISM
•Although synthetic cubist images
appear more abstract in their use of
simplified forms, the other elements
of their composition are applied
quite traditionally.
21. CUBIST SCULPTURE
•Cubist sculpture developed in
parallel with Cubist painting,
beginning in Paris around 1909 with
its proto-Cubist phase, and evolving
through the early 1920s.
22. CUBIST SCULPTURE
• Cubist sculpture essentially is the dynamic
rendering of three-dimensional objects in the
language of non-Euclidean geometry by
shifting viewpoints of volume or mass in terms
of spherical, flat and hyperbolic surfaces.
25. CUBIST ARCHITECTURE
• Architectural interest in Cubism centered
on the dissolution and reconstitution of
three-dimensional form, using simple
geometric shapes, juxtaposed without
the illusions of classical perspective.
26. CUBIST ARCHITECTURE
• There is only one country in the world
where Cubism was really applied to
architecture –
namely Bohemia (today Czech Republic)
and especially its capital, Prague.
27. CUBIST ARCHITECTURE
• Czech architects were the first and only
ones in the world to ever design original
Cubist buildings.
• Flourished between 1910-1914
28. CUBIST ARCHITECTURE
• In their theoretical rules, the Cubist architects
expressed the requirement of dynamism,
which would surmount the matter and calm
contained in it, through a creative idea, so that
the result would evoke feelings of dynamism
and expressive plasticity in the viewer.