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The art historian Giovanni Lista groups Futurism into three distinct decades according to characteristics of each: "Plastic Dynamism" of the 1910s, "Mechanical Art" of the 1920s, and "Aeroaesthetics" of the 1930s.
Futurism is an Avant-garde art and social movement that originated in Italy. The key document for the development of Futurism is the Manifesto of Futurism, which was published by Filippo Tommaso Marinetti in 1909.
Futurism, early 20th-century artistic movement centered in Italy that emphasized the dynamism, speed, energy, and power of the machine and the vitality, change, and restlessness of modern life. The most-significant results of the movement were in the visual arts and poetry.
Summary of Futurism. Focusing on progress and modernity, the Futurists sought to sweep away traditional artistic notions and replace them with an energetic celebration of the machine age.
What is Futurism? It was not only an art movement, but a reaction to the traditional arts and antiquated ideals underlying the cultural structures of Italy. The avant-garde ideals of what Futurism stood for started in a manifesto published in 1909, by its founder, Filippo Marinetti.
A European art movement that came about following the First World War and characterized by a return to more traditional approaches to art-making – rejecting the extreme avant-garde tendencies of art in the years leading up to 1918
Cubism and Futurism are the predecessors, or foundations of 20th-century abstract art, but are distinctive and defining art movements; each in its own right. The artists central to the movement sought to turn art on its head by eschewing the notion that art should copy nature.
The Futurism movement was an awakening in the world of art, producing new types of paintings and sculptures that the world had never seen before. This is a list of the most popular Futurism art pieces, so art enthusiasts will likely recognize the names of the famous artists who created these pieces.
Futurism is an avant-garde art and social movement that originated in Italy. The key document for the development of futurism is the Manifesto of Futurism, published by Filippo Tommaso Marinetti in 1909.
Futurist art alternated between semi-abstract or completely abstract, i.e. some representations are deconstructed into geometric forms, influenced by Cubism, that the viewer could barely comprehend them.