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Avant-garde art

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Dada
thumb|upright=1.35|Grand opening of the first Dada exhibition: First International Dada Fair|International Dada Fair, Berlin, 5 June 1920. The central figure hanging from the ceiling is an effigy of a German officer with a pig's head. From left to right: [[Raoul Hausmann, Hannah Höch (sitting), Otto Burchard, Johannes Baader, Wieland Herzfelde, Margarete Herzfelde, Dr. Oz (Otto Schmalhausen), George Grosz and John Heartfield.]]
Futurism
thumb|300px|Gino Severini, 1912, Dynamic Hieroglyphic of the Bal Tabarin, oil on canvas with sequins, 161.6 × 156.2 cm (63.6 × 61.5 in.), [[Museum of Modern Art, New York]] thumb|300px|Italian futurists Luigi Russolo, [[Carlo Carrà, Filippo Tommaso Marinetti, Umberto Boccioni and Gino Severini in front of Le Figaro, Paris, February 9, 1912]]
pop art
art movement
abstract expressionism
American post–World War II art movement
De Stijl
Dutch artistic movement
Fluxus
thumb|Fluxus Manifesto, 1963, by George Maciunas thumb|Poster to Festum Fluxorum Fluxus 1963. Fluxus was an international, interdisciplinary community of artists, composers, designers, and poets during the 1960s and 1970s who, inspired by John Cage, engaged in experimental art performances which emphasized the artistic tradition of chance-based process over the finished product. Fluxus is known for experimental contributions to different artistic media and disciplines and for generating new art forms. These art forms include intermedia, a term coined by Fluxus artist Dick Higgins; conceptual a
art for art's sake
art without any didactic, moral, or utilitarian function
art film
film genre
happening
A happening is a performance, event, or situation art, usually as performance art. The term was first used by Allan Kaprow in 1959 to describe a range of art-related events. <!-- ==Background==
Salon des Refusés
art exhibition in Paris, first held in 1863
experimental film
cinematic works that are experimental form or content
anti-art
thumb|''Artist's Shit'' (Italian: ) is a 1961 artwork by the Italian artist [[Piero Manzoni, which consists of 90 tin cans, each reportedly filled with of faeces. One of his friends, Enrico Baj, said that the cans were meant as "an act of defiant mockery of the art world, artists, and art criticism".]]
Neue Slowenische Kunst
micronation
neo-futurism
Neo-futurism is a late-20th to early-21st-century movement in the arts, design, and architecture.
Jack of Diamonds
Russian/Soviet art group
Ukrainian avant-garde
avant-garde movements in 20th-century Ukraine
Poetism
Poetism () was an artistic program in Czechoslovakia which belongs to the avant-garde; it has never spread abroad. It was invented by members of the avant-garde association Devětsil, mainly Vítězslav Nezval and Karel Teige. It is mainly known in the literature form, but it was also intended as a lifestyle. Its poems were apolitical, optimistic, emotional, and proletaristic, describing ordinary, real things and everyday life, dealing mainly with the present time. It uses no punctuation.
Osamu Satō
Japanese graphic artist and composer
underground film
film that is out of the mainstream either in its style, genre, or financing
Jayne Cortez
American avant-garde jazz poet (1934–2012)
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American avant-garde illustrator and artist (1888-1973)
Cyborg art
Wen-Ying Tsai
American artist (1928–2013)
Otto Nebel
German painter (1892-1973)
Signalism
thumb|right|Symbol of Signalism Signalism (; from ) represents an international neo-avant-garde literary and art movement. It gathered wider support base both in former Yugoslavia and the world in the late 1960s and the beginning of the 1970s.
Reinhoud D'Haese
'''Reinhoud d'Haese (21 October 1928 - 01 July 2007), known mononymously as Reinhoud''', was a Belgian sculptor known for his surrealistic style of sculptures.
auto-destructive art
art movement started in the 1960s
Saint Sebastian
painting by Bohumil Kubišta
Sante Monachesi
Italian painter (1910-1991)
Miroljub Todorović
Serbian poet and artist
Pilgrimage to the Cedars of Lebanon
painting by Tivadar Csontváry Kosztka
Sumatraism
Sumatraism is an avant-garde art movement created by Serbian writer Miloš Crnjanski. Crnjanski had set the principles of Sumatraism during World War I, and proclaimed it in his 1920 text Explanation of Sumatra.
ephemeral architecture
architecture of temporary buildings
Tetsumi Kudo
Japanese painter, sculptor, and performance artist (1935-1990)
Yuki Katsura
painter in Japan (1913-1991)