[ENG] Characteristics of Modern Art

Key Characteristics of Modern Art

 

Break with tradition: Modern artists moved away from the faithful imitation of reality to explore new forms of expression.

Formal experimentation: New techniques, materials, and formats were introduced, ranging from collage to total abstraction.

Subjectivity and personal expression: Modern art focused on the self, emphasizing the artist’s perspective as a creator of meaning beyond purely aesthetic concerns.

Conceptual focus: Beyond visual beauty, many modern works sought to convey ideas, emotions, or social critique.

Stylistic diversity: Unlike earlier periods dominated by a few prevailing styles, modern art is characterized by a plurality of visual languages.

 

Major Movements of Modern Art

Impressionism – Representation of light and fleeting moments. Rejection of academic realism.

Expressionism – Emphasis on intense emotions and the subjective distortion of reality.

Cubism – Geometric fragmentation of forms and multiple perspectives. Pioneered by Picasso and Braque.

Futurism – Celebration of speed, technology, and modern dynamism.

Dadaism – Artistic rebellion against logic, bourgeois art, and war. Provocative and anti-establishment art.

Surrealism – Exploration of the unconscious, dreams, and the inner world. Dalí, Magritte, Ernst.

Abstraction – Progressive elimination of figurative representation. Kandinsky, Mondrian, Malevich.

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