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Modern art

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Iraqi art
Bergen school
1915–1925 movement in Dutch painting
Free Secession
Proto-Cubism
thumb|300px|Pablo Picasso, 1909, ''[[Brick Factory at Tortosa (Briqueterie à Tortosa, L'Usine, Factory at Horta de Ebro)'', oil on canvas. 50.7 x 60.2 cm, (Source entry State Museum of New Western Art, Moscow) The State Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg]] Proto-Cubism (also referred to as Protocubism, Early Cubism, and Pre-Cubism or Précubisme) is an intermediary transition phase in the history of art chronologically extending from 1906 to 1910. Evidence suggests that the production of proto-Cubist paintings resulted from a wide-ranging series of experiments, circumstances, influences and con
shock art
form of contemporary art
Mystical Anarchism
Russian Symbolist art movement
American modernism
American philosophical movement
Grupo Montparnasse
organization of Chilean artists
Acéphale
thumb|200px|André Masson's cover for the first issue of Acéphale. (1936). Acéphale () is the name of a public review created by Georges Bataille (which numbered five issues, from 1936 to 1939) and a secret society formed by Bataille and others who had sworn to keep silent. Its name is derived from the Greek ἀκέφαλος (akephalos, literally "headless").
Tea cup ballet
photograph by Olive Cotton
Brazilian modernism
cultural movement in the 20th century
neo-primitivism
REDIRECT Primitivism#Neo-primitivism
Madí
Madí (or MADI; also known as Grupo Madí or Arte Madí) is an international abstract (or concrete) art movement initiated in Buenos Aires in 1946 by the Hungarian-Argentinian artist and poet Gyula Kosice, and the Uruguayans Carmelo Arden Quin and Rhod Rothfuss.
post-surrealism
Post-surrealism is a movement that arose in Southern California in 1934 when Helen Lundeberg and Lorser Feitelson wrote a manifesto explaining their desire to use art to convey the relationship between the perceptual and the conceptual.
Alexis Preller
South African artist (1911-1975)
Late modernism
Term for art and literature produced after 1945
Museums of modern art
Wikimedia list article
queer art
art genre or movement
Scuola Romana
20th-century Italian art movement
Gruppe SPUR
German artistic group
Fronte Nuovo delle Arti
artistic movement
Refus Global
manifesto from 1948
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.
collage film
film assembled entirely from found footage
Formizm
Formizm (English: Formism) was an avant-garde literary and artistic movement active in the Second Polish Republic between 1917 and 1922. It drew inspirations from Cubism, Expressionism and Futurism as well as Polish folk art. Together with Unism, started by Władysław Strzemiński in the early 1920s, Formism was one of the two independently Polish avant-garde movements.
Antipodeans
The Antipodeans were a collective of Australian modern artists, known for their advocacy of figurative art and opposition to abstract expressionism. The group, which included seven painters from Melbourne and art historian Bernard Smith, was active in the late 1950s. Despite staging only a single exhibition in Melbourne in August 1959, the Antipodeans gained international recognition.
Anglo-Japanese style
hybrid artistic style