History of Art
History of Art
5 million-3,000 BCE)
Prehistoric art comes from three epochs of prehistory: Paleolithic, Mesolithic and Neolithic. The earliest recorded
art is the Bhimbetka petroglyphs (a set of 10 cupules and an engraving or groove) found in a quartzite rock shelter
known as Auditorium cave at Bhimbetka in central India, dating from at least 290,000 BCE. However, it may turn
out to be much older (c.700,000 BCE). This primitive rock art was followed, no later than 250,000 BCE, by simple
figurines (eg. Venus of Berekhat Ram [Golan Heights] and Venus of Tan-Tan [Morocco]), and from 80,000 BCE by
the Blombos cave stone engravings, and the cupules at the Dordogne rock shelter at La Ferrassie. Prehistoric culture
and creativity is closely associated with brain-size and efficiency which impacts directly on "higher" functions such
as language, creative expression and ultimately aesthetics. Thus with the advent of "modern" homo sapiens painters
and sculptors (50,000 BCE onwards) such as Cro-Magnon Man and Grimaldi Man, we see a huge outburst of
magnificent late Paleolthic sculpture and painting in France and the Iberian peninsular. This comprises a range of
miniature obese venus figurines (eg. the Venuses of Willendorf, Kostenky, Monpazier, Dolni
Vestonice, Moravany, Brassempouy, Gagarino, to name but a few), as well as mammoth ivory carvings found in the
caves of Vogelherd and Hohle Fels in the Swabian Jura. However, the greatest art of prehistory is the cave
painting at Chauvet, Lascaux and Altamira.
These murals were painted in caves reserved as a sort of prehistoric art gallery, where artists began to paint animals
and hunting scenes, as well as a variety of abstract or symbolic drawings. In France, they include the
monochrome Chauvet Cave pictures of animals and abstract drawings, the hand stencil art at Cosquer Cave, and
the polychrome charcoal and ochre images at Pech-Merle, and Lascaux. In Spain, they include polychrome images
of bison and deer at Altamira Cave in Spain. Outside Europe, major examples of rock art include: Ubirr
Aboriginal artworks (from 30,000 BCE), the animal figure paintings in charcoal and ochre at the Apollo 11
Cave (from 25,500 BCE) in Namibia, the Bradshaw paintings (from 17,000 BCE) in Western Australia, and the
hand stencil images at the Cuevas de las Manos (Cave of the Hands) (from 9500 BCE) in Argentina, among many
others.
Against a background of a new climate, improved living conditions and consequent behaviour patterns, Mesolithic
art gives more space to human figures, shows keener observation, and greater narrative in its paintings. Also,
because of the warmer weather, it moves from caves to outdoor sites in numerous locations across Europe, Asia,
Africa, Australasia and the Americas. Mesolithic artworks include the bushman rock paintings in the Waterberg
area of South Africa, the paintings in the Rock Shelters of Bhimbetka in India, and Australian Aboriginal
art from Arnhem Land. It also features more 3-D art, including bas-reliefs and free standing sculpture. Examples of
the latter include the anthropomorphic figurines uncovered in Nevali Cori and Göbekli Tepe near Urfa in eastern
Asia Minor, and the statues of Lepenski Vir (eg. The Fish God) in Serbia. Other examples of Mesolithic portable art
include bracelets, painted pebbles and decorative drawings on functional objects, as well as ancient pottery of the
Japanese Jomon culture. One of the greatest works of Mesolithic art is the sculpture "Thinker From Cernavoda"
from Romania.
The more "settled" and populous Neolithic era saw a growth in crafts like pottery and weaving. This originated in
Mesolithic times from about 9,000 BCE in the villages of southern Asia, after which it flourished along the Yellow
and Yangtze river valleys in China (c.7,500 BCE) - see Neolithic Art in China - then in the fertile crescent of the
Tigris and Euphrates river valleys in the Middle East (c.7,000) - the 'cradle of civilization' - before spreading to
India (c.5,000), Europe (c.4,000), China (3,500) and the Americas (c.2,500). Although most art remained functional
in nature, there was a greater focus on ornamentation and decoration. For example, calligraphy - one of the great
examples of Chinese art - first appears during this period. See: Chinese Art Timeline for details. Neolithic art also
features free standing sculpture, bronze statuettes (notably by the Indus Valley Civilization), primitive jewellery and
decorative designs on a variety of artifacts. The most spectacular form of late Neolithic art was architecture:
featuring large-stone structures known as megaliths, ranging from the Egyptian pyramids, to the passage tombs of
Northern Europe - such as Newgrange and Knowth in Ireland - and the assemblages of large upright stones
(menhirs) such as those at the Stonehenge Stone Circle and Avebury Circle in England. (For more, please
see: megalithic art.) However, the major medium of Neolithic art was ceramic pottery, the finest examples of which
were produced around the region of Mesopotamia (see Mesopotamian art) and the eastern Mediterranean. For more
chronology, see: Pottery Timeline. Towards the close of this era, hieroglyphic writing systems appear in Sumer,
heralding the end of prehistory.
The most famous examples of Bronze Age art appeared in the 'cradle of civilization' around the Mediterranean in the
Near East, during the rise of Mesopotamia (present-day Iraq), Greece, Crete (Minoan civilization) and Egypt. The
emergence of cities, the use of written languages and the development of more sophisticated tools led the creation of
a far wider range of monumental and portable artworks.
Egypt, arguably the greatest civilization in the history of ancient art, was the first culture to adopt a recognizable
style of art. Egyptian painters depicted the head, legs and feet of their human subjects in profile, while portraying the
eye, shoulders, arms and torso from the front. Other artistic conventions laid down how Gods, Pharaohs and
ordinary people should be depicted, regulating such elements as size, colour and figurative position. A series of
wonderful Egyptian encaustic wax paintings, known as the Fayum portraits, offer a fascinating glimpse of
Hellenistic culture in Ancient Egypt. In addition, the unique style of Egyptian architecture featured a range of
massive stone burial chambers, called Pyramids. Egyptian expertise in stone had a huge impact on later Greek
architecture. Famous Egyptian pyramids include: The Step Pyramid of Djoser (c.2630 BCE), and The Great
Pyramid at Giza (c.2550 BCE), also called the Pyramid of Khufu or 'Pyramid of Cheops'.
In Mesopotamia and Ancient Persia, Sumerians were developing their own unique building - an alternative form of
stepped pyramid called a ziggurat. These were not burial chambers but man-made mountains designed to bring
rulers and people closer to their Gods who according to legend lived high up in mountains to the east. Ziggurats
were built from clay bricks, typically decorated with coloured glazes. See Sumerian Art (c.4500-2270 BCE).
For most of Antiquity, the art of ancient Persia was closely intertwined with that of its neighbours, especially
Mesopotamia (present-day Iraq), and influenced - and was influenced by - Greek art. Early Persian works of
portable art feature the intricate ceramics from Susa and Persepolis (c.3000 BCE), but the two important periods of
Persian art were the Achaemenid Era (c.550-330 BCE) - exemplified by the monumental palaces at Persepolis and
Susa, decorated with sculpture, stone reliefs, and the famous "Frieze of Archers" (Louvre, Paris) created out of
enameled brick - and the Sassanid Era (226-650 CE) - noted for its highly decorative stone mosaics, gold and silver
dishes, frescoes and illuminated manuscripts as well as crafts like carpet-making and silk-weaving. But, the
greatest relics of Sassanian art are the rock sculptures carved out of steep limestone cliffs at Taq-i-Bustan, Shahpur,
Naqsh-e Rostam and Naqsh-e Rajab.
Minoan Art (c.2100-1425 BCE)
The first important strand of Aegean art, created on Crete by the Minoans, was rooted in its palace architecture at
Knossos, Phaestus, Akrotiri, Kato Zakros and Mallia, which were constructed using a combination of stone, mud-
brick and plaster, and decorated with colourful murals and fresco pictures, portraying mythological animal symbols
(eg. the bull) as well as a range of mythological narratives. Minoan art also features stone carvings (notably seal
stones), and precious metalwork. The Minoan Protopalatial period (c.1700 BCE), which ended in a major
earthquake, was followed by an even more ornate Neopalatial period (c.1700-1425 BCE), which witnessed the
highpoint of the culture before being terminated by a second set of earthquakes in 1425. Minoan craftsmen are also
noted for their ceramics and vase-painting, which featured a host of marine and maritime motifs. This focus on
nature and events - instead of rulers and deities - is also evident in Minoan palace murals and sculptures.
Named after the metal which made it prosperous, the Bronze Age period witnessed a host of
wonderful metalwork made from many different materials. This form of metallugy is exemplified by two
extraordinary masterpieces: The "Ram in the Thicket" (c.2500 BCE, British Museum, London) a small Iraqi
sculpture made from gold-leaf, copper, lapis lazuli, and red limestone; and The "Maikop Gold Bull" (c.2500 BCE,
Hermitage, St Petersburg) a miniature gold sculpture of the Maikop Culpture, North Caucasus, Russia. See
also: Assyrian art (c.1500-612 BCE) and Hittite art (c.1600-1180 BCE). The period also saw the emergence
of Chinese bronzeworks (from c.1750 BCE), in the form of bronze plaques and sculptures often decorated with
Jade, from the Yellow River Basin of Henan Province, Central China.
For Bronze Age civilizations in the Americas, see: Pre-Columbian art, which covers the art and crafts of
Mesoamerican and South American cultures.
Art of Classical Antiquity witnessed a huge growth during this period, especially in Greece and around the eastern
Mediterranean. It coincided with the rise of Hellenic (Greek-influenced) culture.
Although Mycenae was an independent Greek city in the Greek Peloponnese, the term "Mycenean" culture is
sometimes used to describe early Greek art as a whole during the late Bronze Age. Initially very much under the
influence of Minoan culture, Mycenean art gradually achieved its own balance between the lively naturalism of
Crete and the more formal artistic idiom of the mainland, as exemplified in its numerous tempera frescoes,
sculpture, pottery, carved gemstones, jewellery, glass, ornaments and precious metalwork. Also, in contrast to the
Minoan "maritime trading" culture, Myceneans were warriors, so their art was designed primarily to glorify their
secular rulers. It included a number of tholos tombs filled with gold work, ornamental weapons and precious
jewellery.
Ancient Greek art is traditionally divided into the following periods: (1) the Dark Ages (c.1100-900 BCE). (2) The
Geometric Period (c.900-700 BCE). (3) The Oriental-Style Period (c.700-625 BCE). (4) The Archaic Period (c.625-
500 BCE). (5) The Classical Period (c.500-323 BCE). (6) The Hellenistic Period (c.323-100 BCE). Unfortunately,
nearly all Greek painting and a huge proportion of Greek sculpture has been lost, leaving us with a collection of
ruins or Roman copies. Greek architecture, too, is largely known to us through its ruins. Despite this tiny legacy,
Greek artists remain highly revered, which demonstrates how truly advanced they were.
Like all craftsmen of the Mediterranean area, the ancient Greeks borrowed a number of important artistic techniques
from their neighbours and trading partners. Even so, by the death of the Macedonian Emperor Alexander the Great
in 323 BCE, Greek art was regarded in general as the finest ever made. Even the Romans - despite their awesome
engineering and military skills - never quite overcame their sense of inferiority in the face of Greek craftsmanship,
and (fortunately for us) copied Greek artworks assiduously. Seventeen centuries later, Greek architecture, sculptural
reliefs, statues, and pottery would be rediscovered during the Italian Renaissance, and made the cornerstone of
Western art for over 400 years.
Dark Ages
After the fall of the Mycenean civilization (12th century BCE) Greece entered a period of decline, known as the
Dark Ages - because we know so little about it. Sculpture, painting and monumental architecture almost ceased.
Geometric Period
Then, from around 900 BCE, these arts (created mainly for aristocratic families who had achieved power during the
Dark Ages) reappeared during the Geometric period, named after the decorative designs of its pottery.
Oriental Period
The succeeding Orientalizing period was characterized by the influence of Near Eastern designwork, notably
curvilinear, zoomorphic and floral patterns.
Archaic Period
The Archaic period was a time of gradual experimentation; the most prized sculptural form was
the kouros (pl.kouroi), or standing male nude. This was followed by the Classical period, which represents the
apogee of Greek art.
Classical Period
Greek architecture blossomed, based on a system of 'Classical Orders' (Doric, Ionic and Corinthian) or rules for
building design, based on proportions of and between the individual parts. The Parthenon on the Acropolis complex
in Athens is the supreme example of classical Greek architecture: other famous examples include: the Temple of
Zeus at Olympia, the Temple of Hephaistos, the Temple of Athena Nike, the Theatre at Delphi, and the Tholos
Temple of Athena Pronaia. In the plastic arts, great classical Greek sculptors like Polykleitos, Myron,
and Phidias demonstrated a mastery of realism which would remain unsurpassed until the Italian Renaissance. But
painting remained the most-respected art form - notably panel-paintings executed in tempera or encaustic paint -
with renowned Greek painters like Zeuxis, Apelles, and Parrhasius added new techniques of highlighting, shading
and colouring.
Hellenism
The beginning of the final Hellenistic phase coincided with the death of Alexander and the incorporation of the
Persian Empire into the Greek world. Stylewise, classical realism was superceded by greater solemnity and
heroicism (exemplified by the massive statue "The Colossus of Rhodes", the same size as the Statue of Liberty) as
well as a growing expressionism. The period is characterized by the spread of Greek culture (Hellenization)
throughout the civilized world, including techniques of sculpture and mosaic art. Famous Hellenistic sculptures
include: the celebrated "Venus de Milo", "Dying Gaul" by Epigonus; the Pergamon Altar of Zeus (c.166-156 BCE);
"Winged Victory of Samothrace"; and "Laocoon and His Sons" by Hagesandrus, Polydorus and Athenodorus.
Greek Pottery
Greek pottery developed much earlier than other art forms: by 3000 BCE the Peloponnese was already the leading
pottery centre. Later, following the take-over of the Greek mainland by Indo-European tribes around 2100 BCE, a
new form of pottery was introduced, known as Minyan Ware. It was the first Greek type to be made on a potter's
wheel. Despite this, it was Minoan pottery on Crete - with its new dark-on-light style - that predominated during the
2nd Millennium BCE. Thereafter, however, Greek potters regained the initiative, introducing a series of dazzling
innovations including: beautifully proportioned Geometric Style pottery (900-725), as well as Oriental (725-
600), Black-Figure (600-480) and Red-Figure (530-480) styles. Famous Greek ceramicists include Exekias,
Kleitias, Ergotimos, Nearchos, Lydos, the Amasis Painter, Andokides, Euthymides, and Sophilos (all Black-Figure),
plus Douris, Brygos and Onesimos (Red-Figure).
In Etruria, Italy, the older Villanovan Culture gave way to Etruscan Civilization around 700 BCE. This reached its
peak during the sixth century BCE as their city-states gained control of central Italy. Like the Egyptians but unlike
the Greeks, Etruscans believed in an after-life, thus tomb or funerary art was a characteristic feature of Etruscan
culture. Etruscan artists were also renowned for their figurative sculpture, in stone, terracotta and bronze. Above
all Etruscan art is famous for its "joi de vivre", exemplified by its lively fresco mural painting, especially in the
villas of the rich. In addition, the skill of Etruscan goldsmiths was highly prized throughout Italy and beyond.
Etruscan culture, itself strongly influenced by Greek styles, had a marked impact on other cultures, notably the
Hallstatt and La Tene styles of Celtic art. Etruscan culture declined from 396 BCE onwards, as its city states were
absorbed into the Roman Empire.
For more about the history of painting, sculpture, architecture and crafts from Etruria, see: Etruscan art.
From about 600 BCE, migrating pagan tribes from the Russian Steppes, known as Celts, established themselves
astride the Upper Danube in central Europe. Celtic culture, based on exceptional trading skills and an early mastery
of iron, facilitated their gradual expansion throughout Europe, and led to two styles of Celtic art whose artifacts are
known to us through several key archeological sites in Switzerland and Austria. The two styles are Hallstatt (600-
450) and La Tene (450-100). Both were exemplified by beautiful metalwork and complex linear designwork.
Although by the early 1st Millennium CE most pagan Celtic artists had been fully absorbed into the Roman Empire,
their traditions of spiral, zoomorphic, knotwork and interlace designs later resurfaced and flourished (600-1100 CE)
in many forms of Hiberno-Saxon art (see below) such as illuminated Gospel manuscripts, religious metalwork, and
High Cross Sculpture. Famous examples of Celtic metalwork art include the Gundestrup Cauldron, the Petrie Crown
and the Broighter gold torc.
Architecture
Unlike their intellectual Greek neighbours, the Romans were primarily practical people with a natural affinity for
engineering, military matters, and Empire building. Roman architecture was designed to awe, entertain and cater for
a growing population both in Italy and throughout their Empire. Thus Roman architectural achievements are
exemplified by new drainage systems, aqueducts, bridges, public baths, sports facilities and amphitheatres (eg. the
Colosseum 72-80 CE), characterized by major advances in materials (eg. the invention of concrete) and in the
construction of arches and roof domes. The latter not only allowed the roofing of larger buildings, but also gave the
exterior far greater grandeur and majesty. All this revolutionized the Greek-dominated field of architecture, at least
in form and size, if not in creativity, and provided endless opportunity for embellishment in the way of scultural
reliefs, statues, fresco murals, and mosaics. The most famous examples of Roman architecture include: the massive
Colosseum, the Arch of Titus, and Trajan's Column.
Painting, Sculpture
If Roman architecture was uniquely grandiose, its paintings and sculptures continued to imitate the Greek style,
except that its main purpose was the glorification of Rome's power and majesty. Early Roman art (c.200-27 BCE)
was detailed, unidealized and realistic, while later Imperial styles (c.27 BCE - 200 CE) were more heroic. Mediocre
painting flourished in the form of interior-design standard fresco murals, while higher quality panel painting was
executed in tempera or in encaustic pigments. Roman sculpture too, varied in quality: as well as tens of thousands of
average quality portrait busts of Emperors and other dignitaries, Roman sculptors also produced some marvellous
historical relief sculptures, such as the spiral bas relief sculpture on Trajan's Column, celebrating the Emperor's
victory in the Dacian war.
For more about the history of painting, sculpture, architecture and crafts of ancient Rome, see: Roman art.
Although the history of art is commonly seen as being mainly concerned with civilizations that derived from
European and Chinese cultures, a significant amount of arts and crafts appeared from the earliest times around the
periphery of the known world. For more about the history and artifacts of these cultures, see: Oceanic art (from the
South Pacific and Australasia), African art (from all parts of the continent) and Tribal art (from Africa, the Pacific
Islands, Indonesia, Burma, Australasia, North America, and Alaska).
With the death in 395 CE, of the Emperor Theodosius, the Roman empire was divided into two halves: a Western
half based initially in Rome, until it was sacked in the 5th century CE, then Ravenna; and an eastern half located in
the more secure city of Constantinople. At the same time, Christianity was made the exclusive official religion of
the empire. These two political developments had a huge impact on the history of Western art. First, relocation to
Constantinople helped to prolong Greco-Roman civilization and culture; second, the growth of Christianity led to an
entirely new category of Christian art which provided architects, painters, sculptors and other craftsmen with what
became the dominant theme in the visual arts for the next 1,200 years. As well as prototype forms of early Christian
art, much of which came from the catacombs, it also led directly to the emergence of Byzantine art. See
also: Christian Art, Byzantine Period.
Byzantine art was almost entirely religious art, and centred around its Christian architecture. Masterpieces include
the awesome Hagia Sophia (532-37) in Istanbul; the Church of St Sophia in Sofia, Bulgaria (527-65); and the
Church of Hagia Sophia in Thessaloniki. Byzantine art also influenced the Ravenna mosaics in the Basilicas of
Sant'Apollinare Nuovo, San Vitale, and Sant' Apollinare in Classe. Secular examples include: the Great Palace of
Constantinople, and Basilica Cistern. As well as new architectural techniques such as the use of pendentives to
spread the weight of the ceiling dome, thus permitting larger interiors, new decorative methods were introduced like
mosaics made from glass, rather than stone. But the Eastern Orthodox brand of Christianity (unlike its counterpart in
Rome), did not allow 3-D artworks like statues or high reliefs, believing they glorified the human aspect of the flesh
rather than the divine nature of the spirit. Thus Byzantine art (eg. painting, mosaic works) developed a particular
style of meaningful imagery (iconography) designed to present complex theology in a very simple way. For
example, colours were used to express different ideas: gold represented Heaven; blue, the colour of human life, and
so on.
After 600 CE, Byzantine architecture progressed through several periods - such as, the Middle Period (c.600-1100)
and the Comnenian and Paleologan periods (c.1100-1450) - gradually becoming more and more influenced by
eastern traditions of construction and decoration. In Western Europe, Byzantine architecture was superceded by
Romanesque and Gothic styles, while in the Near East it continued to have a significant influence on early Islamic
architecture, as illustrated by the Umayyad Great Mosque of Damascus and the Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem.
Byzantine Painting
In the absence of sculpture, Byzantine artists specialized in 2-D painting, becoming masters of panel-painting,
including miniatures - notably icons - and manuscript illumination. Their works had a huge influence on artists
throughout western and central Europe, as well as the Islamic countries of the Middle East.
Located on the remote periphery of Western Europe, Ireland remained free of interference from either Rome or the
barbarians that followed. As a result, Irish Celtic art was neither displaced by Greek or Roman idioms, nor buried in
the pagan Dark Ages. Furthermore, the Church was able to establish a relatively secure network of Irish
monasteries, which rapidly became important centres of religious learning and scholarship, and gradually spread to
the islands off Britain and to parts of Northern England. This monastic network soon became a major patron of the
arts, attracting numerous scribes and painters into its scriptoriums to create a series of increasingly
ornate illuminated gospel manuscripts: examples include: the Cathach of Colmcille (c.560), the Book of Dimma
(c.625), the Durham Gospels (c.650), the Book of Durrow (c.670), and the supreme Book of Kells (also called the
Book of Columba), considered to be the apogee of Western calligraphy. These gospel illuminations employed a
range of historiated letters, rhombuses, crosses, trumpet ornaments, pictures of birds and animals, occasionally
taking up whole pages (carpet pages) of geometric or interlace patterns. The creative success of these decorated
manuscripts was greatly enhanced by the availability of Celtic designs from jewellery and metalwork - produced for
the Irish secular elite - and by increased cultural contacts with Anglo-Saxon craftsmen in England.
Another early Christian art form developed in Ireland was religious metalwork, exemplified by such masterpieces as
the Tara Brooch, the Ardagh Chalice, the Derrynaflan Chalice, and the Moylough Belt Shrine, as well as
processional crosses like the 8th/9th century Tully Lough Cross and the great 12th century Cross of Cong,
commissioned by Turlough O'Connor. Finally, from the late eighth century, the Church began commissioning a
number of large religious crosses decorated both with scenes from the bible and abstract interlace, knotwork and
other Celtic-style patterns. Examples include Muiredach's Cross at Monasterboice, County Louth, and the Ahenny
High Cross in Tipperary. These scripture high crosses flourished between 900 and 1100, although construction
continued as late as the 15th century.
Unfortunately, with the advent of the Vikings (c.800-1000), the unique Irish contribution to Western Civilization in
general and Christianity in particular, began to fade, despite some contribution from Viking art. Thereafter, Roman
culture - driven by the Church of Rome - began to reassert itself across Europe.
In contrast to Christianity which permits figurative representation of Prophets, Saints and the Holy family, Islam
forbids all forms of human iconography. Thus Islamic art focused instead on the development of complex geometric
patterns, illuminated texts and calligraphy.
In East Asia, the visual arts of India and Tibet incorporated the use of highly coloured figures (due to their wide
range of pigments) and strong outlines. Painting in India was extremely diverse, as were materials (textiles being
more durable often replaced paper) and size (Indian miniatures were a specialty). Chinese art specialized in
ceremonial bronze sculpture, calligraphic and brush painting and jade carving, as well as lacquerware and Chinese
pottery. In Japan, Buddhist temple art, Zen Ink-Painting, Yamato-e and Ukiyo-e woodblock prints were four of the
main types of Japanese art.
On the continent, the revival of medieval Christian art began with Charlemagne I, King of the Franks, who was
crowned Holy Roman Emperor, by Pope Leo III in 800. Charlemagne's court scriptoriums at Aachen produced a
number of magnificent illuminated Christian texts, such as: the Godscalc Evangelistary, the Lorsch Gospels and the
Gospels of St Medard of Soissons. Ironically, his major architectural work - the Palatine Chapel in Aachen (c.800)
- was influenced not by St Peter's or other churches in Rome, but by the Byzantine-style Basilica of San Vitale in
Ravenna. The Carolingian empire rapidly dissolved but Carolingian Art marked an important first step in the spread
of Medieval art and the revitalization of Continental culture. Furthermore, many of the Romanesque and Gothic
churches were built on the foundations of Carolingian architecture. Charlemagne's early Romanesque architectural
achievements were continued by the Holy Roman Emperors Otto I-III, in a style known as Ottonian Art, which
morphed into the fully fledged "Romanesque." (In England and Ireland, the Romanesque style is usually called
Norman architecture.)
The spread of Romanesque art in the 11th century coincided with the reassertiveness of Roman Christianity, and the
latter's influence on secular authorities led to the Christian re-conquest of Spain (c.1031) as well as the Crusade to
free the Holy Land from the grip of Islam. The success of the Crusaders and their acquisition of Holy Relics
triggered a wave of new cathedrals across Europe. In addition to its influence over international politics, Rome
exercised growing power via its network of Bishops and its links with Monastic orders such as the Benedictines, the
Cistercians, Carthusians and Augustinian Canons. From these monasteries, its officials exercised growing
administrative power over the local population, notably the power to collect tax revenues which it devoted to
religious works, particularly the building of cathedrals (encompassing sculpture and metalwork, as well as
architecture), illuminated gospel manuscripts, and cultural scholarship - a process exemplified by the powerful
Benedictine monastery at Cluny in Burgundy.
Although based on Greek and Roman Antiquity, Romanesque architecture displayed neither the creativity of the
Greeks, nor the engineering skill of the Romans. They employed thick walls, round arches, piers, columns, groin
vaults, narrow slit-windows, large towers and decorative arcading. The basic load of the building was carried not its
arches or columns but by its massive walls. And its roofs, vaults and buttresses were relatively primitive in
comparison with later styles. Above all, interiors were dim and comparatively hemmed in with heavy stone walls.
Even so, Romanesque architecture did reintroduce two important forms of fine art: sculpture (which had been in
abeyance since the fall of Rome), and stained glass, albeit on a minor scale.
Largely financed by monastic orders and local bishops, Gothic architecture exploited a number of technical
advances in pointed arches and other design factors, in order to awe, inspire and educate the masses. Thus, out went
the massively thick walls, small windows and dim interiors, in came soaring ceilings ("reaching to heaven"), thin
walls and stained glass windows. This transformed the interior of many cathedrals into inspirational sanctuaries,
where illiterate congregations could see the story of the bible illustrated in the beautiful stained glass art of its huge
windows. Indeed, the Gothic cathedral was seen by architects as representing the universe in miniature. Almost
every feature was designed to convey a theological message: namely, the awesome glory of God, and the ordered
nature of his universe. Religious Gothic art - that is, architecture, relief sculpture and statuary - is best exemplified
by the cathedrals of Northern France, notably Notre Dame de Paris; Reims and Chartres, as well as Cologne
Cathedral, St Stephen's Cathedral Vienna and, in England, Westminster Abbey and York Minster.
History of Renaissance Art (c.1300-1620)
Strongly influenced by International Gothic, the European revival of fine art between roughly 1300 and 1600,
popularly known as "the Renaissance", was a unique and (in many respects) inexplicable phenomenon, not least
because of (1) the Black Death plague (1346), which wiped out one third of the European population; (2) the 100
Years War between England and France (1339-1439) and (3) the Reformation (c.1520) - none of which was
conducive to the development of the visual arts. Fortunately, certain factors in the Renaissance heartland of Florence
and Rome - notably the energy and huge wealth of the Florentine Medici family, and the Papal ambitions of Pope
Sixtus IV (1471-84), Pope Julius II (1503-13), Pope Leo X (1513-21) and Pope Paul III (1534-45) - succeeded in
overcoming all natural obstacles, even if the Church was almost bankrupted in the process.
Renaissance art was founded on classicism - an appreciation of the arts of Classical Antiquity, a belief in the nobility
of Man, as well as artistic advances in both linear perspective and realism. It evolved in three main Italian cities:
first Florence, then Rome, and lastly Venice. Renaissance chronology is usually listed as follows:
• Proto-Renaissance (c.1300-1400)
This introductory period was largely instigated by the revolutionary painting style of Giotto (1270-1337), whose
fresco cycle in the Capella Scrovegni (Arena Chapel) in Padua introduced a new realism into painting which
challenged many of the iconographic conventions then in use.
Renaissance architecture employed precepts derived from ancient Greece and Rome, but kept many modern features
of Byzantine and Gothic invention, such as domes and towers. Important architects included: Donato
Bramante (1444-1514) the greatest exponent of High Renaisance architecture; Baldassare Peruzzi (1481-1536), an
important architect and interior designer; Michele Sanmicheli (1484-1559), the leading pupil of Bramante; Jacopo
Sansovino (1486-1570), the most celebrated Venetian architect; Giulio Romano (1499-1546), the chief practitioner
of Italian Late Renaissance-style building design; Andrea Palladio (1508-1580), an influential theorist; and of course
Michelangelo himself, who helped to design the dome for St Peter's Basilica in Rome.
Among the greatest sculptors of the Northern Renaissance were: the German limewood sculptor Tilman
Riemenschneider (1460-1531), noted for his reliefs and freestanding wood sculpture; and the wood-carver Veit
Stoss (1450-1533) noted for his delicate altarpieces.
For more, see: Netherlandish Renaissance Art (1430-1580); German Renaissance Art (1430-1580) and Flemish
painting.
• Mannerism (1530-1600)
This style grew up partly as a reaction against the idealistic forms of the High Renaissance and partly as a reflection
of troubled times - Martin Luther had begun the Reformation, while Rome itself had just been sacked by
mercenaries. Mannerist artists introduced a new expressiveness into their works, as exemplified by the marvellous
sculpture Rape of the Sabine Women by Giambologna, and Michelangelo's Last Judgement fresco in the Sistine
Chapel. Other important exponents of Mannerism include El Greco (c.1541-1614) and Caravaggio (1571-1610),
whose dramatic use of light and shadow influenced a generation of Caravaggisti.
It was during this period that the Catholic Counter-Reformation got going in an attempt to attract the masses away
from Protestantism. Renewed patronage of the visual arts and architecture was a key feature of this propaganda
campaign, and led to a grander, more theatrical style in both areas. This new style, known as Baroque art was
effectively the highpoint of dramatic Mannerism.
Baroque architecture took full advantage of the theatrical potential of the urban landscape, exemplified by Saint
Peter's Square (1656-67) in Rome, in front of the domed St Peter's Basilica. Its architect, Gianlorenzo Bernini (1598-
1680) employed a widening series of colonnades in the approach to the cathedral, conveying the impression to
visitors that they are being embraced by the arms of the Catholic Church. The entire approach is constructed on a
gigantic scale, to induce feelings of awe.
In painting, the greatest exponent of Catholic Counter-Reformation art was Peter Paul Rubens (1577-1640) - "the
Prince of painters and the painter of Princes". Other leading Catholic artists included Diego Velazquez (1599-
1660), Francisco Zurbaran (1598-1664) and Nicolas Poussin (1594-1665).
In Protestant Northern Europe, the Baroque era was marked by the flowering of Dutch Realist genre painting, a style
uniquely suited to the new bourgeois patrons of small-scale interiors, genre-paintings, portraits, landscapes and still
lifes. Several schools of 17th century Dutch painting sprang up including those of Haarlem, Delft, Utrecht, and
Leiden. Leading members included the two immortals Rembrandt (1606-1669) and Jan Vermeer (1632-1675), as
well as Frans Snyders (1579-1657), Frans Hals (1581-1666), Adriaen Brouwer (1605-38), Jan Davidsz de Heem
(1606-84), Adriaen van Ostade (1610-85), David Teniers the Younger (1610-90), Gerard Terborch (1617-81), Jan
Steen (1626-79), Pieter de Hooch (1629-83), and the landscape painters Aelbert Cuyp (1620-91), Jacob van
Ruisdael (1628-82) and Meyndert Hobbema (1638-1709), among others.
This new style of decorative art, known as Rococo, impacted most on interior-design, although architecture,
painting and sculpture were also affected. Essentially a reaction against the seriousness of the Baroque, Rococo was
a light-hearted, almost whimsical style which grew up in the French court at the Palace of Versailles before
spreading across Europe. Rococo designers employed the full gamut of plasterwork, murals, tapestries, furniture,
mirrors, porcelain, silks and other embellishments to give the householder a complete aesthetic experience. In
painting, the Rococo style was championed by the French artists Watteau (1684-1721), Fragonard (1732-1806),
and Boucher (1703-70). But the greatest works were produced by the Venetian Giambattista Tiepolo (1696-1770)
whose fantastic wall and ceiling fresco paintings took Rococo to new heights. See in particular the renaissance
of French Decorative Art (1640-1792), created by French Designers especially in the form of French Furniture, at
Versailles and other Royal Chateaux, in the style of Louis Quatorze (XIV), Louis Quinze (XV) and Louis
Seize (XVI). As it was, Rococo symbolized the decadent indolence and degeneracy of the French aristocracy.
Because of this, it was swept away by the French Revolution which ushered in the new sterner Neoclassicism, more
in keeping with the Age of Enlightenment and Reason.
In architecture, Neoclassicism derived from the more restrained "classical" forms of Baroque practised in England
by Sir Christopher Wren (1632-1723), who designed St Paul's Cathedral. Yet another return to the Classical
Orders of Greco-Roman Antiquity, the style was characterized by monumental structures, supported by columns of
pillars, and topped with classical Renaissance domes. Employing innovations like layered cupolas, it lent added
grandeur to palaces, churches, and other public structures. Famous Neoclassical buildings include:
the Pantheon (Paris) designed by Jacques Germain Soufflot (1756-97), the Arc de Triomphe (Paris) designed by
Jean Chalgrin, the Brandenburg Gate (Berlin) designed by Carl Gotthard Langhans (1732-1808), and the United
States Capitol Building, designed by English-born Benjamin Henry Latrobe (1764-1820), and later by Stephen
Hallet and Charles Bulfinch. See also the era of American Colonial Art (c.1670-1800).
Neoclassicist painters also looked to Classical Antiquity for inspiration, and emphasized the virtues of heroicism,
duty and gravitas. Leading exponents included the French political artist Jacques-Louis David (1748-1825), the
German portrait and history painter Anton Raphael Mengs (1728-79), and the French master of the Academic
art style, Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres (1780-1867). Neoclassical sculptors included: Antonio Canova (1757-
1822),
Bertel Thorvaldsen (1770-1844), and Jean-Antoine Houdon (1741-1828).
For more about the history of painting, sculpture and architecture during this period, see: Neoclassical art.
In contrast to the universal values espoused by Neo-Classicism, Romantic artists expressed a more personal
response to life, relying more on their senses and emotions rather than reason and intellect. This idealism, like
Neoclassism, was encouraged by the French Revolution, thus some artists were affected by both styles. Nature was
an important subject for Romantics, and the style is exemplified, by the English School of Landscape Painting, the
plein air painting of John Constable (1776-1837), Corot (1796-1875) along with members of the French Barbizon
School and the American Hudson River School of landscape painting, as well as the more expressionistic JMW
Turner (1775-1851). Arguably, however, the greatest Romantic landscape painter is arguably Caspar David
Friedrich (1774-1840). Narrative or history painting was another important genre in Romanticism: leading
exponents include: Francisco Goya (1746-1828) Henry Fuseli (1741-1825), James Barry (1741-1806), Theodore
Gericault (1791-1824) and Eugene Delacroix (1798-63), as well as later exponents of Orientalist painting, and
moody Pre-Raphaelites and Symbolists.
For more information about the history of Romantic painting and sculpture, see: Romanticism in art.
As the 19th century progessed, growing awareness of the rights of man plus the social impact of the Industrial
Revolution caused some artists to move away from idealistic or romantic subjects in favour of more mundane
subjects, depicted in a more true-life, style of naturalism. This new focus (to some extent anticipated by William
Hogarth in the 18th century, see English Figurative Painting) was exemplified by the Realism style which emerged
in France during the 1840s, before spreading across Europe. This new style attracted painters from all the genres -
notably Gustave Courbet (1819-77) (genre-painting), Jean Francois Millet (1814-75) (landscape, rural life),
Honore Daumier (1808-79) (urban life) and Ilya Repin (1844-1930) (landscape and portraits).
Impressionism (c.1870-80)
French Impressionism, championed above all by Claude Monet (1840-1926), was a spontaneous colour-sensitive style of
pleinairism whose origins derived from Jean-Baptiste Camille Corot and the techniques of the Barbizon school - whose quest was to
depict the momentary effects of natural light. It encompassed rural landscapes [Alfred Sisley (1839-1899)], cityscapes [Camille
Pissarro (1830-1903)], genre scenes [Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841-1919), Edgar Degas (1834-1917), Paul Cezanne (1839-1906),
and Berthe Morisot (1841-95)] and both figurative paintings and portraits [Edouard Manet (1832-83), John Singer Sargent (1856-
1925)]. Other artists associated with Impressionism include, James McNeil Whistler (1834-1903) and Walter Sickert (1860-1942).
Impressionists sought to faithfully reproduce fleeting moments outdoors. Thus if an object appeared dark purple - due perhaps to failing or
reflected light - then the artist painted it purple. Naturalist "Academic-Style" colour schemes, being devised in theory or at least in the
studio, did not allow for this. As a result Impressionism offered a whole new pictorial language - one that paved the way for more
revolutionary art movements like Cubism - and is often regarded by historians and critics as the first modern school of painting.
In any event, the style had a massive impact on Parisian and world art, and was the gateway to a series of colour-related movements,
including Post-Impressionism, Neo-Impressionism, Pointillism, Divisionism, Fauvism, Intimism, the American Luminism or Tonalism, as
well as American Impressionism, the Newlyn School and Camden Town Group, the French Les Nabis and the general Expressionist
movement.
Essentially an umbrella term encompassing a number of developments and reactions to Impressionism, Post-Impressionism involved
artists who employed Impressionist-type colour schemes, but were dissatisfied with the limitations imposed by merely reproducing
nature. Neo-Impressionism with its technique of Pointillism was pioneered by Georges Seurat and Paul Signac (1863-1935), while
major Post-Impressionists include Paul Gauguin, Vincent Van Gogh and Paul Cezanne. Inspired by Gauguin's synthetism and
Bernard's cloisonnism, the Post-Impressionist group Les Nabis promoted a wider form of decorative art; another style, known
as Intimisme, concerned itself with genre scenes of domestic, intimate interiors. Exemplified by the work of Pierre Bonnard (1867-1947)
and Edouard Vuillard (1868-1940), it parallels other tranquil interiors such as those by James McNeil Whistler, and the Dutch Realist-
influenced Peter Vilhelm Ilsted (1861-1933). Another very important movement - anti-impressionist rather than post-impressionist -
was Symbolism (flourished 1885-1900), which went on to influence Fauvism, Expressionism and Surrealism. Note also that many post-
Impressionist artists adopted the forms and aesthetics of classicism, as a response to the passive naturalism of Impressionist art. This led
to a widespread Classical Revival in modern art, known as the 'return to order', between 1900 and 1930.
For more about art politics in France, see: the Paris Salon.
Colourism: Fauvism (1900 onwards)
The term "Fauves" (wild beasts) was first used by the art critic Louis Vauxcelles at the 1905 Salon d'Automne exhibition in Paris when
describing the vividly coloured paintings of Henri Matisse (1869-1954), Andre Derain (1880-1954), and Maurice de Vlaminck (1876-
1958). Other Fauvists included the later Cubist Georges Braque (1882-1963), Raoul Dufy (1877-1953), Albert Marquet (1875-1947) and
Georges Rouault (1871-1958). Most followers of Fauvism moved on to Expressionism or other movements associated with the Ecole de
Paris.
Sculptural traditions, although never independent from those of painting, are concerned primarily with space and volume, while issues of
scale and function also act as distinguishing factors. Thus on the whole, sculpture was slower to reflect the new trends of modern art
during the 19th century, leaving sculptors like Auguste Rodin (1840-1917) free to pursue a monumentalism derived essentially from
Neoclassicism if not Renaissance ideology. The public dimension of sculpture also lent itself to the celebration of Victorian values and
historical figures, which were likewise executed in the grand manner of earlier times. Thus it wasn't until the emergence of artists
like Constantin Brancusi (1876-1957) and Umberto Boccioni (1882-1916) that sculpture really began to change, at the turn of the
century.
Expressionism is a general style of painting that aims to express a personal interpretation of a scene or object, rather than depict its true-
life features, it is often characterized by energetic brushwork, impastoed paint, intense colours and bold lines. Early Expressionists
included, Vincent Van Gogh (1853-90), Edvard Munch (1863-1944) and Wassily Kandinsky (1866-1944). A number of German
Expressionist schools sprang up during the first three decades of the 20th century. These included: Die Brucke (1905-11), a group based in
Dresden in 1905, which mixed elements of traditional German art with Post-Impressionist and Fauvist styles, exemplified in works by
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, Karl Schmidt-Rottluff, Erik Heckel, and Emil Nolde; Der Blaue Reiter (1911-14), a loose association of artists
based in Munich, including Wassily Kandinsky, Franz Marc, August Macke, and Paul Klee; Die Neue Sachlichkeit (1920s) a post-war
satirical-realist group whose members included Otto Dix, George Grosz, Christian Schad and to a lesser extent Max Beckmann.
Expressionism duly spread worldwide, spawning numerous derivations in both figurative painting (eg. Francis Bacon) and abstract art (eg.
Mark Rothko). See also: History of Expressionist Painting (c.1880-1930).
Decorative Arts: Art Nouveau (1890-1910) and Art Deco (1920s-30s)
Art Nouveau (promoted as Jugendstil by the Munich Secession (1892) and Berlin
Secession (1898), as Sezessionstil in the Vienna Secession (1897), and as Stile Liberty in Italy,
and Modernista in Spain) derived from William Morris and the Arts and Crafts Movement in
Britain, and was also influenced by both the Celtic Revival arts movement and Japanonisme. It's
popularity stemmed from the 1900 Exposition Universelle in Paris, from where it spread across
Europe and the United States. It was noted for its intricate flowing patterns of sinuous asymetrical
lines, based on plant-forms (dating back to the Celtic Hallstatt and La Tene cultures), as well as
female silhouettes and forms. Art Nouveau had a major influence on poster art, design and
illustration, interior design, metalwork, glassware, jewellery, as well as painting and sculpture.
Leading exponents included: Alphonse Mucha (1860-1939), Aubrey Beardsley (1872-98),
Eugene Grasset (1845-1917) and Albert Guillaume (1873-1942). See also: History of Poster Art.
Derived from the two German words "bau" for building and "haus" for house, the Bauhaus school
of art and design was founded in 1919 by the architect Walter Gropius. Enormously influential in
both architecture and design - and their teaching methods - its instructors included such artists as
Josef Albers, Lyonel Feininger, Paul Klee, Wassily Kandinsky, Oskar Schlemmer, Laszlo Moholy-
Nagy, Anni Albers and Johannes Itten. Its mission was to bring art into contact with everyday life,
thus the design of everyday objects was given the same importance as fine art. Important Bauhaus
precepts included the virtue of simple, clean design, massproduction and the practical advantages
of a well-designed home and workplace. The Bauhaus was eventually closed by the Nazis in 1933,
whereupon several of its teachers emigrated to America: Laszlo Moholy-Nagy settled in Chicago
where he founded the New Bauhaus in 1937, while Albers went to Black Mountain College in
North Carolina.
The design style known as Art Deco was showcased in 1925 at the International Exhibition of
Modern Decorative and Industrial Arts in Paris and became a highly popular style of decorative art,
design and architecture during the inter-war years (much employed by cinema and hotel
architects). Its influence was also seen in the design of furniture, textile fabrics, pottery, jewellery,
and glass. A reaction against Art Nouveau, the new idiom of Art Deco eliminated the latter's
flowing curvilinear forms and replaced them with Cubist and Precisionist-inspired geometric
shapes. Famous examples of Art Deco architecture include the Empire State Building and
the New York Chrysler Building. Art Deco was also influenced by the simple architectural
designs of The Bauhaus.
Cubism (c.1908-12)
Invented by Pablo Picasso (1881-1973) and Georges Braque (1882-1963) and considered to be
"the" revolutionary movement of modern art, Cubism was a more intellectual style of painting that
explored the full potential of the two-dimensional picture plane by offering different views of the
same object, typically arranged in a series of overlapping fragments: rather like a photographer
might take several photos of an object from different angles, before cutting them up with scissors
and rearranging them in haphazard fashion on a flat surface. This "analytical Cubism" (which
originated with Picasso's "Les Demoiselles d'Avignon") quickly gave way to "synthetic Cubism",
when artists began to include "found objects" in their canvases, such as collages made from
newspaper cuttings. Cubist painters included: Juan Gris (1887-1927), Fernand Leger (1881-1955),
Robert Delaunay (1885-1941), Albert Gleizes (1881-1953), Roger de La Fresnaye (1885-1925),
Jean Metzinger (1883-1956), and Francis Picabia (1879-1953), the avant-garde artist Marcel
Duchamp (1887-1968), and the sculptors Jacques Lipchitz (1891-1973), and Alexander
Archipenko (1887-1964). (See also Russian art.) Short-lived but highly influential, Cubism
instigated a whole new style of abstract art and had a significant impact the development of later
styles such as: Orphism (1910-13), Collage (1912 onwards), Purism (1920s), Precisionism (1920s,
1930s), Futurism (1909-1914), Rayonism (c.1912-14), Suprematism (1913-
1918), Constructivism (c.1919-32), Vorticism (c.1914-15) the De Stijl (1917-31) design movement
and the austere geometrical style of concrete art known as Neo-Plasticism.
Largely rooted in the anti-art traditions of the Dada movement (1916-24), as well as the
psychoanalytical ideas of Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung, Surrealism was the most influential art
style of the inter-war years. According to its chief theorist, Andre Breton, it sought to combine the
unconscious with the conscious, in order to create a new "super-reality" - a "surrealisme". The
movement spanned a huge range of styles, from abstraction to true-life realism, typically
punctuated with "unreal" imagery. Important Surrealists included Salvador Dali (1904-89), Max
Ernst (1891-1976), Rene Magritte (1898-1967), Andre Masson (1896-1987), Yves Tanguy (1900-
55), Joan Miro (1893-1983), Giorgio de Chirico (1888-1978), Jean Arp (1886-1966), and Man Ray
(1890-1976). The movement had a major impact across Europe during the 1930s, was the major
precursor to Conceptualism, and continues to find adherents in fine art, literature and
cinematography.
American painting during the period 1900-45 was realist in style and became increasingly focused
on strictly American imagery. This was the result of the reaction against the Armory Show (1913)
and European hypermodernism, as well as a response to changing social conditions across the
country. Later it became a patriotic response to the Great Depression of the 1930s. See also the
huge advances in Skyscraper architecture of the early 20th century. For more, see: American
architecture (1600-present). Specific painting movements included the Ashcan School (c.1900-
1915); Precisionism (1920s) which celebrated the new American industrial landscape; the more
socially aware urban style of Social Realism (1930s); American Scene Painting (c.1925-45) which
embraced the work of Edward Hopper and Charles Burchfield, as well as
midwestern Regionalism (1930s) championed by Grant Wood, Thomas Hart Benton and John
Steuart Curry.
Note: Echoes of American Regionalism can be seen in the government approved style of Socialist
Realism (c.1920-80), which flourished in Russia, China and other totalitarian states during the
early (and later) 20th century.
The first international modern art movement to come out of America (it is sometimes referred to as
The New York School - see also American art), it was a predominantly abstract style of painting
which followed an expressionist colour-driven direction, rather than a Cubist idiom, although it
also includes a number of other styles, making it more of a general movement. Four variants stand
out in Abstract Expressionism: first, the "automatic" style of "action painting" invented by Jackson
Pollock (1912-56) and his wife Lee Krasner (1908–1984). Second, the monumental planes of
colour created by Mark Rothko (1903-70), Barnett Newman (1905-70) and Clyfford Still (1904-
80) - a style known as Colour Field Painting. Third, the gestural figurative works by Willem De
Kooning (1904–1997). Four, the geometric "Homage to the Square" geometric abstracts of Josef
Albers (1888-1976).
Highly influential, Abstract Expressionist painting continued to influence later artists for over two
decades. It was introduced to Paris during the 1950s by Jean-Paul Riopelle (1923-2002), assisted
by Michel Tapie's book, Un Art Autre (1952). At the same time, a number of new sub-movements
emerged in America, such as Hard-edge painting, exemplified by Frank Stella. In the late
1950s/early 1960s, a purely abstract form of Colour Field painting appeared in works by Helen
Frankenthaler and others, while in 1964, the famous art critic Clement Greenberg helped to
introduce a further stylistic development known as "Post-Painterly Abstraction". Abstract
Expressionism went on to influence a variety of different schools, including Op Art, Fluxus, Pop
Art, Minimalism, Neo-Expressionism, and others.
From the early works of Brancusi, 20th century sculpture broadened immeasurably to encompass
new forms, styles and materials. Major innovations included the "sculptured walls" of Louise
Nevelson (1899-1988), the existential forms of Giacometti (1901-66), the biomorphic
abstraction of both Barbara Hepworth (1903-75) and Henry Moore (1898-1986), and the spiders of
Louise Bourgeois (1911-2010). Other creative angles were pursued by Salvador Dali (1904-89) in
his surrealist "Mae West Lips Sofa" and "Lobster Telephone" - by Meret Oppenheim (1913-85) in
her "Furry Breakfast", by FE McWilliam (1909-1992) in his "Eyes, Nose and Cheek", by Sol
LeWitt (b.1928) in his skeletal box-like constructions, and by Pop-artists like Claes Oldenburg
(b.1929) and Jasper Johns (b.1930), as well as by the Italians Jonathan De Pas (1932-91), Donato
D'Urbino (b.1935) and Paolo Lomazzi (b.1936) in their unique "Joe Sofa".
For more about the history of painting, sculpture, architecture and crafts during this period,
see: Modern Art Movements.
The word "Postmodernist" is often used to describe contemporary art since about 1970. In simple
terms, postmodernist art emphasizes style over substance (eg. not 'what' but 'how'; not 'art for art's sake', but 'style
for stye's sake'), and stresses the importance of how the artist comunicates with his/her audience. This is exemplified
by movements such as Conceptual art, where the idea being communicated is seen as more important than the
artwork itself, which merely acts as the vehicle for the message. In addition, in order to increase the "impact" of
visual art on spectators, postmodernists have turned to new art forms such as Assemblage, Installation, Video,
Performance, Happenings and Graffiti - all of which are associated in some way or other with Conceptualism- and
this idea of impact continues to inspire.
Postmodernist Painting
Painters since the 1970s have experimented with numerous styles across the spectrum from pure abstraction to
figuration. These include: Minimalism, a purist form of abstraction which did little to promote painting as an
attractive medium; Neo-Expressionism, which encompassed groups like the "Ugly Realists", the "Neue Wilden",
"Figuration Libre", "Transavanguardia", the "New Image Painters" and the so-called "Bad Painters", signalled a
return to depicting recognizable objects, like the human body (albeit often in a quasi-abstract style), using rough
brushwork, vivid colours and colour harmonies; and the wholly figurative styles adopted by groups such as "New
Subjectivity" and the "London School". At the other extreme from Minimalism is the ultra-representational art form
of photorealism (superrealism, hyperrealism). Conspicuous among this rather bewildering range of activity are
figure painters like Francis Bacon, the great Lucien Freud (b.1922), the innovative Fernando Botero (b.1932), the
precise David Hockney (b.1937), the photorealists Chuck Close (b.1940) and Richard Estes (b.1936), and the
contemporary Jenny Saville (b.1970). See also: Contemporary British Painting (1960-2000).
Postmodernist Sculpture
Sculpture since 1970 has appeared in a variety of guises, including: the large scale metal works of Mark Di
Suvero (b.1933), the minimalist sculptures of Walter de Maria (b.1935), the monumental public forms of Richard
Serra (b.1939), the hyper-realist nudes of John De Andrea (b.1941), the environmental structures of Anthony
Gormley (b.1950), the site-specific figures of Rowan Gillespie (b.1953), the stainless steel works of Anish
Kapoor (b.1954), the high-impact Neo-Pop works of Jeff Koons (b.1955), and the extraordinary 21st century works
by Sudobh Gupta (b.1964) and Damian Ortega (b.1967). In addition, arresting public sculpture includes the
"Chicago Picasso" - a series of metal figures produced for the Chicago Civic Centre and the architectural " Spire of
Dublin" (the 'spike'), created by Ian Ritchie (b.1947), among many others.
Postmodernist Avant-garde
The pluralistic "anything goes" view of contemporary art (which critics might characterize as exemplifying the fable
of the "Emperor's New Clothes"), is aptly illustrated in the works of Damien Hirst, a leading member of the Young
British Artists school. Renowned for "The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living", a dead
Tiger shark pickled in formaldehyde, and lately for his diamond encrusted skull "For the Love of God", Hirst has
managed to stimulate audiences and horrify critics around the world. And while he is unlikely ever to inherit the
mantle of Michelangelo, his achievement of sales worth $100 million in a single Sotheby's auction (2008) is
positively eye-popping.
On a more sobering note, in March 2009 the prestigious Georges Pompidou Centre of Contemporary Art in Paris
staged an exhibition entitled "The Specialisation of Sensibility in the Raw Material State into Stabilised Pictorial
Sensibility". This avant-garde event consisted of 9 completely empty rooms - in effect, a reincarnation of John
Cage's completely silent piece of "musical" conceptual art entitled "4.33". If one of the great contemporary art
venues like the Pompidou Centre regards nine completely empty spaces as a worthy art event, we are all in deep
trouble.
For more about the history of postmodernist painting, sculpture, and avant-garde art forms, see: Contemporary Art
Movements.
One might say that 19th century architecture aimed to beautify the new wave of civic structures, like railway
stations, museums, government buildings and other public utilities. It did this by taking ideas from Neo-Classicism,
Neo-Gothic, French Second Empire and exoticism, as well as the new forms and materials of so-called " industrial
architecture", as exemplified in factories along with occasional landmark structures like the Eiffel Tower (1887-
89). In comparison, 20th century architecture has been characterized by vertical development (skyscrapers), flagship
buildings, and post-war reconstruction. More than any other era, its design has been dominated by the invention of
new materials and building methods. It began with the exploitation of late 19th century innovations developed by
the Chicago School of architecture, such as the structural steel frame, in a style known as Early Modernism. In
America, architects started incorporating Art Nouveau and Art Deco design styles into their work, while in Germany
and Russia totalitarian architecture pursued a separate agenda during the 1930s. Famous architects of the first part of
the century included: Louis Sullivan (1856-1924), Frank Lloyd Wright (1867-1959), Victor Horta (1861-
1947), Antoni Gaudi (1852-1926), Peter Behrens (1868-1940), Walter Gropius (1883-1969) and Le
Corbusier (1887-1965). After 1945, architects turned away from functionalism and began creating new forms
facilitated by reinforced concrete, steel and glass. Thus Late Modernism gave way to Brutalism, Corporate
Modernism and High Tech architecture, culminating in structures like the Georges Pompidou Centre in Paris,
and the iconic Sydney Opera House - one of the first buildings to use industrial strength Araldite to glue together
the precast structural elements. Since 1970, postmodernist architecture has taken several different approaches. Some
designers have stripped buildings of all ornamentation to create a Minimalist style; others have used ideas
of Deconstructivism to move away from traditional rectilinear shapes; while yet others have employed digital
modeling software to create totally new organic shapes in a process called Blobitecture. Famous post-war architects
include: Miers van der Rohe (1886-1969), Louis Kahn (1901-74), Jorn Utzon; Eero Saarinen (1910-61), Kenzo
Tange (1913-2005), IM Pei (b.1917), Norman Foster (b.1935), Richard Rogers, James Stirling (1926-92), Aldo
Rossi (1931-97), Frank O. Gehry (b.1929), Rem Koolhaas (b.1944), and Daniel Libeskind (b.1946). Famous
architectural groups or firms, include: Skidmore, Owings & Merrill (est 1936); Venturi & Scott-Brown (est 1925);
the New York Five - Peter Eisenman, Michael Graves, Charles Gwathmey, John Hejduk, Richard Meier; and
Herzog & de Meuron (est 1950).