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The decade of the 1980s in Western cinema saw the return of studio-driven pictures, coming from the filmmaker-driven New Hollywood era of the 1970s. [1] The period was when the "high concept" picture was established by producer Don Simpson, [2] where films were expected to be easily marketable and understandable.
1900s • 1910s • 1920s • 1930s • 1940s • 1950s • 1960s • 1970s • 1980s • 1990s • 2000s • 2010s • 2020s Pages in category "Lists of 1980s films by genre" The following 13 pages are in this category, out of 13 total.
No wave cinema was an underground filmmaking movement that flourished on the Lower East Side of New York City [4] from about 1976 to 1985. Associated with (and partially sponsored by) the artists’ group Collaborative Projects, [5] no wave cinema was a stripped-down style of guerrilla filmmaking that emphasized dark edgy mood and unrehearsed immediacy above many other artistic concerns ...
Metarealism – 1970 – 1980, Soviet Union; Sots Art – 1972 – 1990s, Soviet Union/Russia; Installation art – 1970s – Mail art – 1970s – Maximalism – 1970s – Neo-expressionism – late 1970s – Neoism – 1979; Figuration Libre – early 1980s; Street art – early 1980s; Young British Artists – 1988 – Digital art – 1990 ...
During the 1950s and the 1960s, intellectual filmmakers and story writers became frustrated with musical films. To counter this, they created a genre of films which depicted reality from an artful perspective. Most films made during this period were funded by state governments to promote an authentic art genre from the Indian film fraternity.
Art film directors make up for these constraints by creating a different type of film, one that typically uses lesser-known film actors or even amateur actors, and modest sets to make films that focus much more on developing ideas, exploring new narrative techniques, and attempting new film-making conventions.
The style now called retro art is a genre of pop art which was developed from the 1940s to 1960s, in response to a need for bold, eye-catching graphics that were easy to reproduce on simple presses available at the time in major centres. Retro advertising art has experienced a resurgence in popularity since its style is distinctive from modern ...
The return to the traditional art forms of sculpture and painting in the late 1970s and early 1980s seen in the work of Neo-expressionist artists such as Georg Baselitz and Julian Schnabel has been described as a postmodern tendency, [70] and one of the first coherent movements to emerge in the postmodern era. [71]