ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1936, in this classic account of the development of abstract art Alfred Barr analyses the many diverse abstract movements which emerged with bewildering rapidity in the early years of the twentieth century, and which had an impact on every major form of art.

Barr traces the history of nonrepresentational art from its antecedents in late nineteenth-century painting in France – Seurat and Neo-Impressionism, Gauguin and Synthetism, and Cézanne – through abstract tendencies in Dada and Surrealism. He distinguishes two main trends in abstract art: the geometrical, structural current as it developed in Cubism and later in Constructivism and Mondrian, and the intuitional, decorative current running from Matisse and Fauvism through Kandinskt and, later, Surrealism. He shows how individual movements influenced one another, and how many artists experimented with more than one style. Barr also discusses the involvement of a number of abstract movements in architecture and the practical arts – the Bauhaus in Germany, de Stijl in Holland, Purism in France, and Suprematism and Constructivism in Russia.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

chapter |1 pages

Two main traditions of Abstract Art

chapter |25 pages

Analytical Cubism

chapter |10 pages

Futurism

chapter |9 pages

Abstract Expressionism in Germany

chapter |4 pages

Abstract painting in Paris

chapter |26 pages

Synthetic Cubism

chapter |13 pages

Cubist sculpture–Paris, 1909–1920

chapter |4 pages

Brancusi

chapter |10 pages

Abstract painting in Russia

chapter |10 pages

Constructivism

chapter |10 pages

Post-War Germany; The Bauhaus

chapter |4 pages

Purism

chapter |3 pages

Abstract films

chapter |2 pages

Abstract photography

chapter |7 pages

Abstract Dadaism

chapter |18 pages

Abstract tendencies in Surrealist art

chapter |6 pages

The younger generation