Home > Terms > Kazakh (KK) > минимализм
минимализм
Minimalism or Minimal art is an extreme form of abstract art that developed in the USA in the second half of the 1960s. It can be seen as extending the abstract idea that art should have its own reality and not be an imitation of some other thing. It picked up too on the Constructivist idea that art should be made of modern, industrial materials. Minimal artists typically made works in very simple geometric shapes based on the square and the rectangle. Many Minimal works explore the properties of their materials. Minimal art was mostly three-dimensional but the painter Frank Stella was an important Minimalist. The other principal artists were Andre, Flavin, Judd, Lewitt, Morris, and Serra. There are strong links between Minimal and Conceptual art. Aesthetically, Minimal art offers a highly purified form of beauty. It can also be seen as representing such qualities as truth (because it does not pretend to be anything other than what it is), order, simplicity, harmony.
- Categoria gramatical: noun
- Sinónimo(s):
- Blossary:
- Actividade/ Sector: Art history
- Category: General art history
- Company: Tate
- Produto:
- Acrónimos-abreviatura:
Outras línguas:
O que quer dizer?
Terms in the News
Featured Terms
Зэ Бэнд Пэрри
The Band Perry is a country music group, made up of three siblings: Kimberly Perry (guitarist, pianist), Reid Perry (bass guitarist), and Neil Perry ...
Contribuidor
Featured blossaries
Browers Terms By Category
- Mapping science(4042)
- Soil science(1654)
- Physical oceanography(1561)
- Geology(1407)
- Seismology(488)
- Remote sensing(446)
Earth science(10026) Terms
- Fiction(910)
- General literature(746)
- Poetry(598)
- Chilldren's literature(212)
- Bestsellers(135)
- Novels(127)
Literatura(3109) Terms
- Film titles(41)
- Film studies(26)
- Filmmaking(17)
- Film types(13)
Cinema(97) Terms
- Marketing communications(549)
- Online advertising(216)
- Billboard advertising(152)
- Television advertising(72)
- Radio advertising(57)
- New media advertising(40)