CamelCup Posted November 13, 2011 Report Share Posted November 13, 2011 Hi, I'm on my first year of IB Art HL and my teacher wants me to put in my workbook the significance of different art movements, I am stuck on abstract expressionism. Anybody know its significance? Reply Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Procrastination Posted November 13, 2011 Report Share Posted November 13, 2011 (edited) This is a style of painting that combines abstract form and expressionist emotional value. It started in the mid 1940’s in New York as a result of the Second World War but its influence comes much earlier from Surrealism and Cubism. It is often considered America’s most important contribution to Modernism, with aesthetic values. This was a post-World War II movement out of New York City. The movement is not solely characterized on the fact that all artists associated were abstract or expressionist. Rather, the movement had a number of styles. It can be said that it is an approach that involves complete freedom from all traditional aesthetic and social values and favors spontaneous, free personal expression There are three general approaches that can be distinguished within the movement. The first of which is made famous by Jackson Pollock, one of the most well-known of this movement. His work was large in scale, loud in color, and free-flowing. He is most closely linked with what is known as action painting. No drop of paint is an accident and loose, rapid sweeping brushstrokes make this style reminiscent of the Surrealists. Abstract impressionism is another approach. Unlike action painting, works are less spontaneous. They are more manipulated towards a preconceived notion of an end result. Philip Guston is the most notable of this style. The third approach uses well-defined abstract images or large scales of pure color. Robert Motherwell, Mark Rothko, and James Brooks are among the artists of this style of paint. Finding this type of information is not difficult, you just need to . Basically taken from: Jackson Pollock Unautharized Edited November 13, 2011 by Procrastination Reply Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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