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Nov 17, 2023 25 tweets 12 min read Read on X
Art has lots of "isms".

Here's what they mean: Image
International Gothic (1350-1450)

The late flowering of Medieval art. Little concern for "realism" — hundreds of figures crammed into impossible spaces, abundant details, strange castles, and lots of flowers.

The final days of chivalry in art. May from the Very Rich Hours of the Duke of Berry by the Limbourg Brothers and Jean Colombe (1410s)
Early Renaissance (1425-1490)

Italian painters, inspired by the classical art of Ancient Greece and Rome, were getting to grips with realistic perspective, human form, and natural lighting.

But things were still fairly stylised — a leftover of the Gothic.
Agony in the Garden by Andrea Mantegna (1455)
La Primavera by Sandro Botticelli (1483)
High Renaissance (1490-1530)

The brief consummation of the Italian Renaissance.

Leonardo, Raphael, and Michelangelo — this famous triumvirate dominates an era of naturalistic, idealised, and harmonious art.

Mellow colours, smooth brushwork, and emphasis on the human form. Catherine of Alexandria by Raphael (1507)
Netherlandish Renaissance (1420-1570)

Concurrent with the Italian Renaissance was a similar revolution in Northern European art, particularly in the Netherlands.

They were masters of highly detailed, almost photorealistic oil paintings and of the fantastically bizarre.

The Arnolfini Portrait by Jan van Eyck (1434)
The Garden of Earthly Delights by Hieronymus Bosch (1510)
The Triumph of Death by Pieter Brueghel the Elder (1562)
Mannerism (1530-1600)

A peculiar time for European art which has generated much controversy. It was, perhaps, all about finding a new direction for art after the great heights of the Renaissance.

Experimental, artificial, peculiar — as in Giuseppe Arcimbolo's portraits.
Image
Image
Baroque (1600-1750)

An era so broad it can hardly be described properly.

Though, from the gruesome and shadowy art of Caravaggio to the bombastic and colourful classical paintings of Rubens, the Baroque was, generally, an age of intense drama in art.
The Taking of Christ by Caravaggio (1602)
The Fall of Phaethon by Rubens (1610)
Then again, just as Caravaggio and Rubens are called Baroque despite their immense differences, so too is somebody like the French landscapist Claude Lorrain.

Landscapes like these, idealised and highly classicising, were finally becoming a serious genre. Seaport at Sunset by Claude Lorrain (1639)
Rococo (1730-1780)

A frivolous evolution of the Baroque which was intimately tied up with European high society before the revolutions of the 19th century.

Theatrical and fanciful, best captured by Giovanni Battista Tiepolo in Italy and Fragonard or Watteau in France.
The Swing by Jean-Honoré Fragonard (1767)
The Banquet of Cleopatra by Tiepolo (1744)
Neoclassicism (1780-1815)

An artistic reaction against the frivolities of Rococo; painters and thinkers turned to Ancient Greece and Rome for inspiration.

Austere, bold, statuesque — this was the style of the French Revolutionaries, most of all Jacques-Louis David. The Death of Socrates by Jacques-Louis David (1787)
Romanticism (1790-1850s)

A reaction against the Enlightenment and the Age of Science.

Romanticism was about the power, beauty, and mystery of nature, and the depths of the human soul and of our emotions.

The art of the sublime — whatever, precisely, that was.


The Fall of Babylon by John Martin
The Abbey in the Oakwood by Caspar David Friedrich (1810)
Snow Storm - Steam-Boat off a Harbour's Mouth by JMW Turner (1842)
Shipwreck in Stormy Seas by Joseph Vernet (1773)
Pre-Raphaelitism (1848-1900)

A peculiar British movement which aimed to recapture the truthfulness, love of nature, bright colours, and vigour of Medieval art.

The original Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood disbanded quickly, but they influenced Victorian Art for decades.
The Day Dream by Dante Gabriel Rossetti
The Baleful Head by Edward Burne-Jones (1887)
Academicism (1815-1900)

This was the style of the cultural establishment in 19th century Europe, as taught in the Academies and promoted in exhibitions.

Inspired by the Renaissance, usually idealised, and all about scenes from mythology or history.
The Fallen Angel by Alexandre Cabanel (1847)
Stańczyk by Jan Matejko (1862)
Realism (1840s-1900)

A rebellion against the art of the Academies.

Painters like Jean-Francois Millet and Gustave Courbet went into the world and painted ordinary scenes.

They wanted to depict the unidealised world as it really was: sweat, blood, mud, and tears. Hard Times by Hubert von Hurkomer (1884)
Impressionism (1871-1926)

The movement that changed the world, led by Monet and Manet.

They wanted to find a more realistic way of painting reality than Academicism, which it rebelled against.

Fundamentally, Impressionism is about the effects of light on the world around us. A compilation of paintings by Claude Monet
Pointillism (1884-1925)

A movement founded by one man, Georges Seurat, and continued by his pupil, Paul Signac.

Inspired by new science regarding human eyesight and optics, they made paintings out of thousands of tiny, individual dots of colour. A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte by Georges Seurat (1884)
Symbolism (1857-1914)

A strange late 19th century European art movement which saw artists retreat inwards.

This is still "realistic" art, but it is filled with obscure imagery and mysterious scenes, often dark and fantastical.

Think of Moreau, Malczewski, Böcklin, and Klimt.

Jupiter and Semele by Gustav Moreau (1895)
The Isle of the Dead by Arnold Böcklin (1883)
Wasserschlangen II by Gustav Klimt (1904)
Cubism (1907-1920s)

As the name suggests, this movement — founded by Picasso — was all about transforming the world as we perceive it into a different reality: one of geometry.

It was partly inspired by the way cameras could capture an object from many different angles. Nude Descending a Staircase, No. 2 by Marcel Duchamp (1912)
Art Deco (1920-1935)

Art Deco is most often associated with architecture and interior design: sharp geometry, dramatic lighting, shiny surfaces, and an atmosphere which still feels futuristic over a century later.

Tamara de Lempicka was probably the ultimate Art Deco painter. Portrait of Madame Alain Bott (1929)
Expressionism (1900-1930s)

Edvard Munch was a precursor in the late 19th century with his famous Scream.

Expressionism was the art of emotion: unnatural and vivid colours, distorted forms and faces, and an almost nightmarish intensity.

The Scream by Edvard Munch (1893)
Sea with Two Smouldering Steamboats by Emil Nolde (1930)
Stormtroopers Advancing under Gas by Otto Dix (1924)
Abstract (1900-1960s)

Within the broad school of Abstract Art there is everything from the sharp geometry of Kasimir Malevich's Suprematism to the abstract shapes of Piet Mondrian or Hilma af Klint and the wilderness of Jackson Pollock.

Art had changed decisively.

Suprematist Composition by Kasimir Malevich (1916)
Composition by Piet Mondriaan (1942)
One: Number 31, 1950 by Jackson Pollock (1950)
Pop Art (1950s-1970s)

Roy Lichtenstein, who alongside Andy Warhol was the definitive Pop Art artist, said that he realised galleries would accept anything as art — even urinals — apart from advertisements and the popular art of, say, comic books.

Thus Pop Art was born.
Image
Image
This is an oversimplified and non-comprehensive list.

Each of these movements have many subdivisions of their own, and most of them are only from western art anyway.

There is a world of art out there, almost too voluminous and varied to be quantified.
But, then again, all these "isms" aren't even that important. No movement ever painted a picture — only a person can do that.

Understanding art — if that's even possible! — isn't about being able to tell the difference between Mannerism and Baroque.
And so, even if thinking about movements can be helpful, it can also be distracting.

We mustn't confuse recognising when and who painted something for understanding it or appreciating it fully.

In fact, you're probably best off knowing nothing about "movements" at all...

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