Cubism


Pablo Picasso, Les Desmoiselles d'Avignon, 1907. (Foundation, 2017). 

Cubists explored open form, piercing figures and objects by letting the space flow through them, blending background into foreground, and showing objects from various angles. Some historians have argued that these innovations represent a response to the changing experience of space, movement, and time in the modern world (Foundation, 2017). The subject matter of nude women was not in itself unusual, but the fact that Picasso painted the women as prostitutes in aggressively sexual postures was novel. Their blatant sexuality was heightened by Picasso's influence from non-Western art that is most evident in the faces of three of the women, which are rendered as mask-like, suggesting that their sexuality is not just aggressive, but also primitive (Foundation, 2017).


Laura Barbosa, Nessie Loves Cherry Limeade, n.d. (Ebsqart, 2017).

This contemporary artwork was done by an artist known as Laura Barbosa, this artist used abandoned perspective and unrealistic modeling of figures just like the original artists of Cubism (Foundation. 2017) 

Sources Consulted


Foundation, T. A. S., 2017. Cubism. [Online]
Available at: http://www.theartstory.org/movement-cubism.htm
[Accessed 10 September]

Ebsqart.com. (2017). Contemporary Cubism Art Gallery | Page 1 of 24. [online] 
Available at: http://www.ebsqart.com/Art-Galleries/Contemporary-Cubism/43/1/ 
[Accessed 10 Sep. 2017].

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