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Avant Garde Timeline

Alexa Cano

Created on November 10, 2023

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Avant Garde Timeline

By Alexa Cano Diaz

1912

1920

1912

1909

1916

1924

1907

1921

Expressionism

Muralismo

Creacionismo

Futurism

Dadaism

Cubism

Estridentismo

Surrealism

1924

Surrealism

This one revolutionise human experience. It balances a rational vision of life with one that asserts the power of the unconscious and dreams by Salvador Dalí and André Bretón

1920

CRESIONISMO

This was a literary movement initiated by Chilean poet Vicente Huidobro around 1912. Creationism is based on the idea of a poem as a truly new thing, created by the author for the sake of itself—that is, not to praise another thing

1921

ENTENDERISMO

This movement was politically engaged and experimental. The artists and writers tried new techniques and utilized uniques linguistic styles. Their work was driven by the ideals of the Mexican Revolution by Manuel Maples Arce

1907

CUBISM

Cubism was a revolutionary new approach to representing reality invented in around 1907–08 by artists Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque in Spain. They brought different views of subjects (usually objects or figures) together in the same picture, resulting in paintings that appear fragmented and abstracted

1912

EXPRESIONISM

Sed ut It is defined as an avant-garde movement characterized by the subjective, distorted and deformed representation of reality. It originates in Germany by F. W. Murnau and Edward Munch.

1916

DADAISMO

This is presented as a total ideology, as a way of living and as an absolute rejection of all tradition, seen in Switzerland by Tristan Tzara.

1909

Futurism

This ona was the depiction of movement, or dynamism. The group developed a number of novel techniques to express speed and motion, including blurring, repetition, and the use of lines of force by Filippo Tomasso Marinetti

1920

MURALISMO

Mexican muralism refers to the art project initially funded by the Mexican government in the immediate wake of the Mexican Revolution to depict visions of Mexico's past, present, and future