1929 International Exhibition of Modern Art
GPTKB entity
Statements (57)
Predicate | Object |
---|---|
gptkbp:instance_of |
gptkb:art_exhibition
|
gptkbp:bfsLayer |
5
|
gptkbp:bfsParent |
gptkb:1929_International_Exposition
|
gptkbp:art_style |
Surrealism.
Cubism. Futurism. Dada. Abstract art. |
gptkbp:attendance |
over 100,000 visitors
|
gptkbp:collaborated_with |
various European artists.
|
gptkbp:controversy |
Duchamp's Fountain was rejected by the exhibition committee.
|
gptkbp:curator |
gptkb:Alfred_H._Barr_Jr.
|
gptkbp:duration |
several months
|
gptkbp:exhibition |
international exhibition
published. Museum of Modern Art. American modernist works. works from the European avant-garde. |
gptkbp:historical_context |
Great Depression era.
cultural exchange between Europe and America. development of new artistic techniques. post-World War I art movements. rise of modernism. |
https://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#label |
1929 International Exhibition of Modern Art
|
gptkbp:impact |
promoted modernism in America
|
gptkbp:influenced |
American art scene
art criticism. museum practices. art education in the U. S. art collecting. future art movements. public perception of modern art. |
gptkbp:is_featured_in |
The Red Studio by Henri Matisse
Les Demoiselles d' Avignon by Pablo Picasso Man at the Crossroads by Diego Rivera The Fountain by Marcel Duchamp Composition with Yellow, Blue, and Red by Piet Mondrian |
gptkbp:legacy |
paved the way for future modern art exhibitions.
|
gptkbp:location |
gptkb:Borough
|
gptkbp:notable_artists |
gptkb:Georgia_O'_Keeffe
gptkb:Henri_Matisse gptkb:Marcel_Duchamp gptkb:Pablo_Picasso gptkb:Fernand_Léger |
gptkbp:notable_work |
Broadway Boogie Woogie by Piet Mondrian.
Composition VIII by Wassily Kandinsky. The City Rises by Umberto Boccioni. The Kiss by Gustav Klimt. The Lovers by René Magritte. The Persistence of Memory by Salvador Dalí. The Scream by Edvard Munch. The Two Fridas by Frida Kahlo. |
gptkbp:organizer |
gptkb:Museum_of_Modern_Art
|
gptkbp:significance |
first major exhibition of modern art in the U. S.
|
gptkbp:sponsor |
various art patrons.
|
gptkbp:theme |
modern art
|
gptkbp:year |
gptkb:1929
|