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Movements and Styles in Post-War Modern Art. This section provides information about important art movements, styles, tendencies, groups, and schools that flourished after World War II in Modern and early Contemporary Art. Post-war Modern Art: 42 of 169 Total Movements. Select Another Criteria.
- 1945-1970 – Post-War Art
- 1960s-70s – Minimalism and Conceptual Art
- 1970-Present – Contemporary Art
The post-war art period is classed as the period following World War II, before the emergence of contemporary art. It’s less a defined movement and more a set period of time when a range of styles came to the fore. Considering the global effect of the war, that meant that artists around the world were creating under a shared influence. “The post-wa...
If Pop Art and post-war art was a reflection of lived reality then Minimalism and conceptual art was the exact opposite. “I believe that both movements were a counter-reaction towards figurative work that is generally accepted in the art world. Both movements were developing together in the 60s and 70s, although you could see that Minimalism was in...
Arguably the most innovative and enduring movement is contemporary art. Its definition is a forward-moving one and related to the art of the present, and as time goes on, our sense of what contemporary art is changes. This is the art most of us are most likely familiar with. Whether that’s the polka-dotted pumpkins of Yayoi Kusamaor the skeletal mi...
Apr 15, 2020 · The Modern Art movement emerged to challenge the establishment’s definition of art. Post-WWII, the descendants of the founding movements became the establishment. The Contemporary movement emerged to challenge the new establishment.
Artists in postwar Germany dealt with the legacy of Nazism and the Holocaust in different ways. Some sought solace in spirituality, others chose to directly picture the ruins of German culture.
During World War II, the relations between art and war can be articulated around two main issues. First, art (and, more generally, culture) found itself at the centre of an ideological war. Second, during World War II, many artists found themselves in the most difficult conditions (in an occupied country, in internment camps, in death camps ...
In the years following the Second World War Europe was exhausted and slow to recover. Historians often speak about a shift in the art world's center of gravity from Paris to New York as the abstract expressionists claimed the spotlight.
The end of World War II was a pivotal moment in world history and by extension the history of art. Many European artists had come to America during the 1930s to escape fascist regimes, and years of warfare had left much of Europe in ruins.