Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Clement Greenberg (/ ˈ ɡ r iː n b ɜːr ɡ /) (January 16, 1909 – May 7, 1994), occasionally writing under the pseudonym K. Hardesh, was an American essayist known mainly as an art critic closely associated with American modern art of the mid-20th century and a formalist aesthetician.

  2. 7 de may. de 1994 · Clement Greenberg introduced a wealth of ideas into discussion of 20 th-century art, elaborating and refining notions such as "kitsch," the "easel picture," and pictorial "flatness," and inventing concepts such as that of the "allover" paint surface and "optical space."

  3. 26 de abr. de 2024 · Clement Greenberg was an American art critic who advocated a formalist aesthetic. He is best known as an early champion of Abstract Expressionism. Greenberg was born to parents of Lithuanian Jewish descent. He attended high school in Brooklyn, and in the mid 1920s he took art classes at the Art.

  4. 27 de jun. de 2020 · Clement Greenberg was the outspoken voice of 20th century American Abstract Art, supporting the Abstract Expressionists and The Colour Field Painters. His ideas now define the iconic Modernist era.

  5. Clement Greenberg (16 de enero de 1909 - 7 de mayo de 1994) 1 fue un influyente crítico de arte estadounidense muy relacionado con el movimiento abstracto en los Estados Unidos 2 . En particular, promovió el movimiento del Expresionismo abstracto y tuvo relaciones muy estrechas con el pintor Jackson Pollock.

  6. 3 de feb. de 2012 · In his 1961 essay on “Modernist Painting,” Clement Greenberg (1909-1994) defined “Modernism” as the period (in art) roughly from the mid-1850s to his present that displayed a self-critical tendency in the arts. Greenberg considered Immanuel Kant the first Modernist.

  7. For Greenberg, a consummately formal, purely material, nonsymbolic work—for example, a painting finessing its flatness in the act of acknowledging it—was an exemplification of positivism, which he saw as the reigning ideology of the modern world.