EXPRESSIONISM 1905-1925
In the early twentieth century the art movement known as Expressionism emerged and was quickly included in the literature about art. Its mark was intense colour, dashed or even disturbing brushstrokes, plus a haphazard use of space. Expressionist artists used distortion and exaggeration, in order to create an emotional effect on the viewer.
Expressionism influenced the fine arts, the dance, the cinema, literature and the theatre.
Other efforts used to arouse the emotions were distortion, primitivism and fantasy. The formal elements were juxtaposed, thus making the effect even disturbing to the viewer.
Expressionism became one of the main art streams during the early 20th century. Self-expression was adopted by the modern artists, and also in the art movements which followed. The world was to witness the artists feelings, rather than enjoy a clever artistic imitation of the world with was more familiar. Art works were the arti sts' personal interpretation of whatever they painted, rather than a depiction the real thing. They believed this gave their work a truer meaning and a life of its own.
Some schools of thought consider expressionism to have been influenced by the work of artists Paul Czanne and Vincent van Gogh and Fauvism. Expressionism became an international art movement.
[Not for publication: there is only one way to spell Cezanne and van Gogh, as written above. Type the names into any search engine
Margaret Houghton took a degree in Fine Art at the then W.A. Institute of Technology, now Curtin University, and majored in painting. She has held several exhibitions of her work since graduating.
Author:: Margaret Houghton
Keywords:: Expressionism1,art 2, Intense3, Colour4,Distrurbing5,Haphazard6, Space7, Distortion8, Exaggeration9.
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