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Modern
Art
Out
of the naturalist ethic of Realism grew a major artistic
movement, Impressionism. The Impressionists pioneered the
use of light in painting as they attempted to capture light
as seen from the human eye. Edgar Degas, Edouard Manet,
Claude Monet, Camille Pissarro, and Pierre-Auguste Renoir,
were all involved in the Impressionist movement.
Following
the Impressionists came Fauvism, often considered the first
"modern" genre of art. Just as the Impressionists
revolutionized light, so did the fauvists rethink color,
painting their canvases in bright, wild hues. After the
Fauvists, modern art began to develop in all its forms,
ranging from Expressionism, concerned with evoking emotion
through objective works of art, to Cubism, the art of transposing
a three-dimensional reality onto a flat canvas, to Abstract
art. These new art forms pushed the limits of traditional
notions of "art" and corresponded to the similar
rapid changes that were taking place in human society, technology,
and thought.
Surrealism
is often classified as a form of Modern Art. However, the
Surrealists themselves have objected to the study of surrealism
as an era in art history, claiming that it oversimplifies
the complexity of the movement (which is not an artistic
movement), misrepresents the relationship of surrealism
to aesthetics, and falsely characterizes ongoing surrealism
as a finished, historically encapsulated era.
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