French School Early 20th century
Parisian street view under rain
oil on panel
h:23 w: 35 cm.
Private collection
School of Paris refers
to the French and émigré artists who worked in Paris in the first half of the
20th century. The School of Paris
was not a single art movement or institution, but refers to the importance of
Paris as a center of Western art in the early decades of the 20th century.
Between 1900 and 1940 the city drew artists from all over the world and became
a centre for artistic activity. School of Paris was used to describe this loose
community, particularly of non-French artists, centered in the cafes, salons
and shared workspaces and galleries of Montparnasse.
Before World War I the name was also applied to artists
involved in the many collaborations and overlapping new art movements, between
post-Impressionists and pointillism and Orphism, Fauvism and Cubism. In that
period the artistic ferment took place in Montmartre and the well-established
art scene there. But Picasso moved away, the war scattered almost everyone, by
the 1920s Montparnasse become a center of the avant-garde. After World War II
the name was applied to another different group of abstract artists. More on School of
Paris
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