postmodernism

art
Also known as: Post-Modernism

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Assorted References

  • American culture
    • A map of the states, boundaries, and capital cities of the United States, along with the bodies of water and other counties surrounding the U.S.
      In United States: The visual arts and postmodernism

      …the idea of the “postmodern,” and in no sphere has the argument been as lively as in that of the plastic arts. The idea of the postmodern has been powerful in the United States exactly because the idea of the modern was so powerful; where Europe has struggled with…

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  • choreography by Brown
    • In Trisha Brown

      Reclassified as a postmodern choreographer, she presented such pieces as Glacial Decoy (1979), which featured a backdrop of black-and-white photos by Robert Rauschenberg; Set and Reset (1983), with costumes and film clips by Rauschenberg and a score by Laurie Anderson; and If You Couldn’t See Me (1994), a…

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  • dance
    • Pieter Bruegel the Elder: Peasant Dance
      In dance: Postmodernism

      ” During the 1960s and ’70s a new generation of American choreographers, generally referred to as postmodernist choreographers, took some of Cunningham’s ideas even further. They also believed that ordinary movement could be used in dance, but they rejected the strong element of virtuosity in…

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  • graphic design
    • Egyptian Book of the Dead
      In graphic design: Postmodern graphic design

      By the late 1970s, many international architectural, product, and graphic designers working in the Modernist tradition thought that the movement had become academic and lost its capacity for innovation. Younger designers challenged and rejected the tenets of Modernism and questioned the “form-follows-function”…

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  • industrial design
    • octagonal electric teakettle
      In industrial design: Postmodern design and its aftermath

      In the mid- to late 1970s, architects around the world began to question the validity of minimal Modernist architecture and design as providing the universal solution to all environments. There was a renewed appreciation of history and historic details and…

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  • modern art

architecture

  • Ludwig Mies van der Rohe: Esplanade Apartments and Lake Shore Drive Apartments
    In International Style

    …’80s and became known as postmodernism.

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  • James Paine and Robert Adam: Kedleston Hall
    In Western architecture: Postmodernism

    The 1960s were marked by dissatisfaction with the consequences of the Modernist movement, especially in North America, where its failings were exposed in two influential books, Canadian Jane Jacobs’s The Death and Life of Great American Cities (1961) and American Robert Venturi’s Complexity and…

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  • Graves
  • Johnson
  • ornaments
    • column ornament
      In ornament

      …with the advent of the Post-Modernist architectural movement, that the unadorned functionalism of the International Style was moderated to permit a modest use of ornament, including classical motifs.

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  • Stern
  • Stirling
    • New State Gallery, Stuttgart, Ger., by James Stirling and Michael Wilford, 1977–84
      In Sir James Stirling

      …a rather playful variant of postmodernism, making use of unconventional building axes, complex geometric shapes, and brightly coloured decorative elements. His New State Gallery, or Neue Staatsgalerie (1977–84), in Stuttgart, Germany, a combination of classicism and geometric abstraction, is considered by many to be his finest achievement. Among his other…

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  • Venturi

literatures