Difference between revisions of "Art history"

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'''Art history''' is the study of art over the ages, from the earliest [[cave paintings]] to the latest [[avant garde]] works of the [[21st Century]]. Art history is usually divided into different [[art movements]] or organized by region, country, century or even decade (ie. American Abstract Expressionists of the 1950s).
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'''Art history''' is the study of art over the ages, from the earliest [[Prehistoric painting|cave paintings]] to the latest [[avant garde]] works of the [[21st Century]]. Art history is usually divided into different [[art movements]] or organized by region, country, century or even decade (ie. American Abstract Expressionists of the 1950s).
  
 
The modern way of studying art history is based upon a linear progression, with one art movement following another or sometimes co-existing at the same time (ie. [[Dada]] and [[Surrealism]] started roughly around the same time and shared similar ideas). This idea of studying art history and explaining it is sometimes called the Greenberg Method, after the [[art critic]] [[Clement Greenberg]].
 
The modern way of studying art history is based upon a linear progression, with one art movement following another or sometimes co-existing at the same time (ie. [[Dada]] and [[Surrealism]] started roughly around the same time and shared similar ideas). This idea of studying art history and explaining it is sometimes called the Greenberg Method, after the [[art critic]] [[Clement Greenberg]].

Revision as of 19:04, March 23, 2013

Art history is the study of art over the ages, from the earliest cave paintings to the latest avant garde works of the 21st Century. Art history is usually divided into different art movements or organized by region, country, century or even decade (ie. American Abstract Expressionists of the 1950s).

The modern way of studying art history is based upon a linear progression, with one art movement following another or sometimes co-existing at the same time (ie. Dada and Surrealism started roughly around the same time and shared similar ideas). This idea of studying art history and explaining it is sometimes called the Greenberg Method, after the art critic Clement Greenberg.

There are literally hundreds of different art movements and art groups. A few of the popular artistic movements (listed in chronological order) are: Neo-Classical, Romanticism, Realism, Impressionism, Post-Impressionism, Fauvism, Cubism, Dada, Surrealism, Abstract Expressionism, Modernism, Postmodernism.

Please note: Avant Garde is not an art movement. It is just a way of describing what is the newest fad in art, the most outrageous and the most uniquely different. Some people have misinterpreted the term to mean cliche, but this is the result of artistic ignorance.


Rivera Mercado de Tlatelolco.jpg

Diego Rivera, Mercado de Tlatelolco.

See also

Vasilly Polenov, The Uspensky Cathedral.

Links