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  • Essay / Modern art and its relationship with graphic design - 841

    IntroductionIt is often thought that modern art and contemporary art have the same meaning, but this is not true. Modern art refers to a period of artistic creation that spanned from approximately 1890 to 1960. Modernism included movements such as Surrealism, Fauvism, Expressionism, Pop Art Impressionism, Post-Impressionism, Dada , Cubism and many other artistic movements that fit into and around these movements. main movements. (clear) Contemporary art is used to describe recently created works of art. That is to say works created over the last 10 to 20 years. Contemporary artworks use a variety of materials and techniques, but often involve new technologies such as computers and software. (clear)These movements were all influenced by various factors ranging from Asian art to African art. Artists such as Wassily Kandinsky, Henri Matisse, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Edvard Munch, Piet Mondrian, Pablo Picasso, Wassily Kandinsky, etc. would therefore be considered “masters of modernism” because they were the main contributors to these artistic movements. (clear)In this essay, I will write about my research on my findings about the relationship between modern art and graphic design. (clear)Art Movement (Art Deco)Art Deco History dates back to the early 1920s, however the actual term, "Art Deco", was first coined in 1968 in a book titled: Art Deco of the 1920s and 30 by Bevis Hillier. (clear)The mood in the 20s was enthusiastic and the outlook seemed positive. World War I was over and economies were thriving around the world. The turbulent twenties were animated by a playful, extravagant spirit and a sense of sovereignty and optimism. (clear) Jazz music was in fashion, women had won the right to vote, and the flap further absolved women. (clear)Industrial industry......middle of paper......welcoming solemnity. (clear)However, the Art Deco movement took off again in the early 1930s. People from the upper classes still preferred objects by Art Deco artisans and craftsmen. A reduction in luxurious resources was mixed with extravagant resources that satisfied less well-off consumers – citizens could still purchase luxury goods, although at a much more satisfactory price. (clear) By the mid-1930s however, the globe had been badly damaged and trampled by the Depression and Art Deco was an obscene, gleaming reminder of a perspective that never existed. It came to be associated with a lavishness and indulgence that had no place in the grim realism of the time. Furthermore, as the danger of a Second World War grew ever closer, Art Deco was perceived more and more intensely. And with the outbreak of World War II in 1939, Art Deco was over. (clear)