Modernism(begins 1850)
The term Modernism applied retrospectively
to the wide range of experimental and avant-garde trends in the arts that
emerged from the middle of the 19th century, as artists rebelled against
traditional Historicism, and later through 20th century as the necessity of an
individual rejecting previous tradition, and by creating individual, original
techniques.
Rather than a lockstep organization, it is better to see
Modernism as taking a series of responses to the situation, and the attempt to
wrestle universal principles from the collision between the two. The Modernism
was not merely defined by its avant garde but also by a reforming trend within
previous artistic norms.
The second half of the 19th century has been
called the Positivist age. In the visual arts this modernistic or positivistic
spirit is most obvious in the widespread rejection of Romantic subjectivism and
imagination in favor of the faith in the positive consequences of the close
observation and the accurate and apparently objective description of the
ordinary, observable world. The term Realism was the
label used around 1850 by the artists and critics who pioneered the
development.
In the modern opposition to this current historicism were a
series of ideas, among which some were even direct extensions of the Romanticism
itself- the Pre-Raphaelite
Brotherhood for example. But Impressionism-
painting school originating in France, had particular impact on Modernism. It
was initially focused on work done, not in studios, but in the "plain air". They
argued that human beings do not see objects, but instead, they saw light itself.
The school became increasingly influential and the work of Eduard Manet attracted
tremendous attention.
In the turn of century crucial ideas were: the
importance of the machine as being part of beauty, the importance of subjective
experience, the necessity for system to replace the concept of "objective
reality". These concepts were often in competition with each other, and were
subject of direct conflict.
In the first 15 years of the 20th century, the
landmarks of Modernism include artists such as Gustav Klimt, Matisse, Mondrian, the abstract
paintings of Wassily
Kandinsky, culminating with the founding of the Blue Rider
group in Munich, the Surrealism,
the rise of Cubism with the
work of Picasso and
Georges Braque.
Modernism's cutting edges, to this point had been the exploration of subjective
experience and the clarification and simplification of structure.
The rise
of cinema and "moving pictures" in the first decade of the 20th century gave the
modern movement an artform which was uniquely its own. The use of photography,
which had rendered much of the representational function of visual art obsolete,
also strongly affected Modernism.
In period 1910-1930's there were two
trends of Modernism, to some extent, at cross purposes - Subjectivity and
Criticism. Many early modernists were seeking increasing sophistication, and
hence for greater difficulty in understanding a work, and others a greater
transparency, and hence easier understanding.
On the eve of World War I
the break out of the Russian Revolution introduced the increasing number of
works which either radically simplified or rejected previous practice.
Underlying strand of that thinking can be called the shift from idealistic to
critical. This tendency mirrors that art is to communicate
clearly.
Subjectivity, on the other hand, led to an increasing exploration
of primitivism, with Paul Gauguin's
paintings. Arts from Africa became increasingly prominent in the public
consciousness, because of their geometrical nature, their perceived reaching for
original or basic drives, and their phantasmagoric quality, such as is seen by
ceremonial masks.
Thus in the immediate post-war years, the tendency to
form "movements" and develop systems became increasingly entrenched in the
modern movement. Examples include Dadaism, the "International style" of Bauhaus and Socialist
Realism. By 1930, Modernism had entered popular culture with "The Jazz Age"
and the increasing urbanization of populations. Such ideas rapidly became
labeled "modern" or "hyper-modern.
The pressures of communication,
transportation and more rapid scientific development began placing a premium on
search for simplification of diction in the work of various art forms. One
example was the movement towards clarity, and the embracing of new technology,
found in Futurism.
After
World War II, Modernism began to merge with consumer culture, especially during
the 1960s. In Britain, a youth sub-culture even called itself "modernists".
Modernist design also began to enter the mainstream of popular culture. The
merging of consumer and modernist culture led to a radical transformation of the
meaning of "modernism" itself. Firstly, it implied that a movement based on the
rejection of tradition had become a tradition of its own. Secondly, it
demonstrated that the distinction between elite modernist and mass consumerist
culture had lost its precision. Many have interpreted this transformation as the
beginning of the phase that became known as Postmodernism.
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