(text-colour:white)+(background:(gradient: 0, 0,#ffffff,0.5,#000000,1,#ffffff))[(text-style:"buoy")[Welcome to the Twine Art Story of the ANALYTICAL CUBISM Style] ]
(text-colour:white)+(background:grey)[When] [[Pablo Picasso]] (text-colour:white)+(background:grey)[and Georges Braque met in 1907, a new innovative and revolutionary style was born. Anaytical Cubism (1908 - 1912) represents the early phase of the Cubism movement. The anaytical cubist paintings have a new intellectual visual language that is different from the traditional Renaissance. The images move from realistic to abstract, and they are linear construction and geometric grids with illusionistic details of everyday life. The simplified pallete of colors allows the viewer to see, interpret, and analyse the whole image that is hard and almost impossible to be distinguished. As partners during the Analytical Cubism Period, Picasso and Braque had a productive and creative colaboration that is unique in art history.]
<img src="https://www.incollect.com/sites/uploads/d1450a2ed14552ed8e989d8f6d6cd95f_XL.jpg" style="width:200px">
Works Cited
“Analytical Cubism – Art Term.” Art & Artist, Tate,
<a href="https://www.tate.org.uk/art/art-terms/a/analytical-cubism"> https://www.tate.org.uk/art/art-terms/a/analytical-cubism <a/>
(text-colour:white)+(background:(gradient: 0, 0,#ffffff,0.5,#000000,1,#ffffff))[(text-style:"blink")[''“I paint objects as I think them, not as I see them.” Pablo Picasso'']]
<img src="https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRp2rWX8Sq47Y0WooDMXXKEbmfyysrBQWXhXg&usqp=CAU" style="width:200px">
(text-colour:white)+(background:grey)[Pablo Picasso (1881 -1973) is the most famous and influential Spanish painter of the 20th century. He had a huge impact on art history, and he created more than 20,000 paintings during his life. He is responsible for the Cubist movement that changed the art and inspired the Futurism, Dada, and Constructivism styles. He is also the inventor of constructed sculptures, and coinventor of collage art style. During his life, he created artworks that have never existed before. Some of the most representative analytical cubism paintings of Pablo Picasso is ][[//Portrait of Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler//]].
Work Cited
“Pablo Picasso and his paintings.” Pablo Picasso – Paintings, Quotes, & Biography,
<a href="https://www.pablopicasso.org/"> https://www.pablopicasso.org </a>
(text-colour:white)+(background:(gradient: 0, 0,#ffffff,0.5,#000000,1,#ffffff))[(text-style:"blink")[''“The painter thinks in terms of form and color. The goal is not to be concerned with the reconstitution of an anecdotal fact, but with the constitution of a pictorial fact.” Georges Braque'']]
<img src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/e1/Georges_Braque%2C_1908%2C_photograph_published_in_Gelett_Burgess%2C_The_Wild_Men_of_Paris%2C_Architectural_Record%2C_May_1910.jpg" style="width:160px">
(text-colour:white)+(background:grey)[Georges Braque (1882 – 1963) is one of the most famous French painters of the 20th century. Along with Pablo Picasso, he is the founder of the Analytical Cubism style. Like Picasso, Braque brought imaginative pieces, geometric lines, distinct shapes, and bold colors to represent the dark period of his world. During his life, Braque used Cubism, Impressionism, Fauvism, and collage, but he never deviated too far from Cubism. Braque spent most of his career working with Picasso to develop the new radical art style, which is the Analytical Cubism style.] [[//Mandora// by Georges Braque]] (text-colour:white)+(background:grey)[is one of his most representative analytical cubist paintings.]
Work Cited
“Georges Braque and his paintings” Georges Braque – Paintings, Biography, and Quotes,
<a href="https://www.georgesbraque.org/"> https://www.georgesbraque.org <a/>
<img src="https://www.pablopicasso.org/images/paintings/portrait-of-daniel-henry-kahnweiler.jpg" style="width:200px">
(text-colour:white)+(background:black)[(text-style:"buoy")[''(text-colour:white)+(background:(gradient: 0, 0,#ffffff,0.5,#000000,1,#ffffff))[//Portrait of Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler// by Pablo Picasso]'']] (text-colour:white)+(background:grey)[is a great example of analytical cubism painting. Picasso recombined the forms of the image into planes and shapes to give realistic appearances. Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler (1884 – 1979), German art dealer, art collector, art historian, writer, publisher, and good friend of Picasso and Braque, represented Pablo Picasso and introduced him to Georges Braque. Their collaboration was unique and productive, but the world war separated them in 1914. In 1920, Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler published his book, //The Rise of Cubism//. Another great art dealer of the 20th century is Ambroise Vollard represented in]] [[Portrait of Ambroise Vollard]] (text-colour:white)+(background:grey)[by Pablo Picasso.](text-colour:white)+(background:grey)[]
Work Cited
“Portrait of Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler, 1910 by Pablo Picasso.” Pablo Picasso – Paintings, Quotes, & Biography, <a href="https://www.pablopicasso.org/portrait-of-daniel-henry-kahnweiler.jsp"> https://www.pablopicasso.org/portrait-of-daniel-henry-kahnweiler.jsp <a/>
<img src="https://www.pablopicasso.org/images/paintings/portrait-of-ambroise-vollard.jpg" style="width:200px">
(text-colour:white)+(background:grey)[The most representative Analytical Cubist painting of] (text-style:"buoy")[(text-colour:white)+(background:(gradient: 0, 0,#ffffff,0.5,#000000,1,#ffffff))[''Pablo Picasso'']] (text-colour:white)+(background:grey)[is] (text-style:"buoy")[(text-colour:white)+(background:(gradient: 0, 0,#ffffff,0.5,#000000,1,#ffffff))[''//Portrait of Ambroise Vollar//'']]. (text-colour:white)+(background:grey)[The representation shows the relation between the artist and the subject. Ambroise Vollar appears in the painting as a god. The image represents a series of multilayered and overlapped two-dimensional geometric plans that defines the analytical cubism style. The palette color is monochrome, and the background has dark tones to maintain the viewer’s attention. As his friend]] [[Georges Braque]], (text-colour:white)+(background:grey)[Pablo Picasso creates in his paintings the illusion of a metaphysical space.]
Work Cited
“Portrait of Ambroise Vollard, 1910 by Picasso.” Pablo Picasso – Paintings, Quotes, & Biography,
<a href="https://www.pablopicasso.org/portrait-of-ambroise-vollard.jsp"> https://www.pablopicasso.org/portrait-of-ambroise-vollard.jsp <a/> (text-colour:white)+(background:grey)[For many years, the artworks of the two great artists were hard to distinguish. Some examples of similarities between Picasso and Braque are] [[//The Portuguese// by Georges Braque]] (text-colour:white)+(background:grey)[and] [[//The Accordionist// by Pablo Picasso]]. (text-colour:white)+(background:grey)[In both paintings, the three-dimensional forms of the images become two-dimensional distorted planes to show the transformative world. The monochromatic colors make the images hard to distinguish. Both paintings are not completely abstract, and both allow the viewer to see them from different angles at different moments.
//The Portuguese// by Braque is also similar to] [[//Female Nude// by Pablo Picasso]], (text-colour:white)+(background:grey)[which shows a woman sitting at a table and holding a glass.]
[[//Ma Jolie// by Pablo Picasso]] (text-colour:white)+(background:grey)[is another example of the Analytical Cubism style that shows similarities between the artists artworks due to their close collaboration.] (text-colour:white)+(background:grey)[//Ma Jolie// by Pablo Picasso ](text-colour:white)+(background:grey)[and] (text-colour:white)+(background:grey)[//The Portuguese// by Georges Braque] (text-colour:white)+(background:grey)[are almost similar. Both paintings have pronounced geometric shapes, and the figures are composed of different planes, lines, angles, and shadings. All objects are fragmented and reassembled in different formats. ]
[[Analytical Cubism Exhibition, Curator: Elena Banica]]
Work Cited
Dr. Cramer, Charles and Dr. Grant, Kim. “Georges Braque and Pablo Picasso: Two Cubist Musicians.” Smarthistory, Khan Academy,
<a href="https://www.khanacademy.org/humanities/art-1010/cubism-early-abstraction/cubism/a/georges-braque-and-pablo-picasso-two-cubist-musicians"> https://www.khanacademy.org/humanities/art-1010/cubism-early-abstraction/cubism/a/georges-braque-and-pablo-picasso-two-cubist-musicians <a/>
(text-colour:white)+(background:(gradient: 0, 0,#ffffff,0.5,#000000,1,#ffffff))[''(text-style:"buoy")[//Standing Female Nude// by Picasso]''] (text-colour:white)+(background:grey)[exemplifies the Analytical Cubism style. The female represents geometric lines and semicircles in a three-dimensional form.]
<img src="https://www.everypainterpaintshimself.com/images/made/article_images_new/Standing_Female_Nude_1910_Charcoal_on_paper_MetStieglitz_CollCat27_440_673.jpg" style="width:200px">
[[//The Accordionist// by Pablo Picasso]]
[[//The Portuguese// by Georges Braque]]
[[//Ma Jolie// by Pablo Picasso]]
[[Analytical Cubism Exhibition, Curator: Elena Banica]]
Work Cited
Picasso, Pablo. Standing Female Nude. July 28, 2010. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, flickr,
<a href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/renzodionigi/4843982334"> https://www.flickr.com/photos/renzodionigi/4843982334 <a/>(text-colour:white)+(background:gray)[The composition of] (text-style:"buoy")[(text-colour:white)+(background:(gradient: 0, 0,#ffffff,0.5,#000000,1,#ffffff))[''Pablo Picasso'']] (text-colour:white)+(background:gray)[represents his lover Marcelle Humbert into a series of planes, geometric lines, and shadings.] (text-style:"buoy")[(text-colour:white)+(background:(gradient: 0, 0,#ffffff,0.5,#000000,1,#ffffff))[''//Ma Jolie (My Pretty Girl)//'']] (text-colour:white)+(background:gray)[was also the refrain of a popular song. The painting shows hard to read language and symbolic meanings.]
<img src="https://www.pablopicasso.org/images/paintings/ma-jolie.jpg" style="width:200px">
[[//The Portuguese// by Georges Braque]]
[[//The Accordionist// by Pablo Picasso]]
[[//Female Nude// by Pablo Picasso]]
[[Analytical Cubism Exhibition, Curator: Elena Banica]]
Work Cited
“Ma Jolie, 1911-1912 by Pablo Picasso.” Pablo Picasso – Paintings, Quotes, & Biography,
<a href="https://www.pablopicasso.org/ma-jolie.jsp"> https://www.pablopicasso.org/ma-jolie.jsp <a/>(text-colour:white)+(background:black)[(text-style:"buoy")[(text-colour:white)+(background:(gradient: 0, 0,#ffffff,0.5,#000000,1,#ffffff))[''//The Portuguese// by Georges Braque'']] (text-colour:white)+(background:Black)[(text-colour:white)+(background:grey)[shows color harmonies, and meditative quality. By breaking the image into smaller pieces, Braque transformed the painting into an object of vision.]]]
<img src="https://uploads1.wikiart.org/images/georges-braque/portuguese-1911.jpg!Large.jpg" style="width:200px">
[[//The Accordionist// by Pablo Picasso]]
[[//Female Nude// by Pablo Picasso]]
[[//Ma Jolie// by Pablo Picasso]]
[[Analytical Cubism Exhibition, Curator: Elena Banica]]
Work Cited
DR. Harris, Beth and Dr. Zucker, Steven. “Cold Coffee and Analytical Cubism.” Braque, The Portuguese, Khan Academy,
<a href="https://www.khanacademy.org/humanities/art-1010/cubism-early-abstraction/cubism/a/braque-the-portuguese"> https://www.khanacademy.org/humanities/art-1010/cubism-early-abstraction/cubism/a/braque-the-portuguese <a/>(text-style:"buoy")[(text-colour:white)+(background:(gradient: 0, 0,#ffffff,0.5,#000000,1,#ffffff))[''//The Accordionist// by Pablo Picasso'']] (text-colour:white)+(background:grey)[shows two-dimensional forms, and the color is almost monochromatic. The subject shows volume and shapes, and the language is almost impossible to be distinguished.]
<img src="https://www.pablopicasso.org/images/paintings/accordionist.jpg" style="width:200px">
[[//Female Nude// by Pablo Picasso]]
[[//The Portuguese// by Georges Braque]]
[[//Ma Jolie// by Pablo Picasso]]
[[Analytical Cubism Exhibition, Curator: Elena Banica]]
Work Cited
“Definition of Analytic Cubism by Picasso & Braque (1909-1912).” Cubism: Definition, Artists, Paintings, & More!, August 11, 2016,
<a href="https://cubismsite.com/analytical-cubism/"> https://cubismsite.com/analytical-cubism/ <a/>
<img src="https://artlyssblog.files.wordpress.com/2016/09/t00833_10.jpg?w=908&h=1084" style="width:200px">
(text-style:"buoy")[(text-colour:white)+(background:(gradient: 0, 0,#ffffff,0.5,#000000,1,#ffffff))[''//Mandora// by Georges Braque shows'']] (text-colour:white)+(background:grey)[has an increasingly hard-to-decipher language and explores music as a subject. The musical instrument is easy to recognize, but the subject is hard to decipher. The image shows intrinsic values and rhythm. The dark and light tones show plasticity, formal dissolution, and volumes. Another painting that has music as a subject is] [[//Still Life with Violin and Pitcher// by Georges Braque]].
Work Cited
“Mandora 1909-10, by Georges Braque.” Georges Braque – Paintings, Biography, and Quotes,
<a href="https://www.georgesbraque.org/mandora.jsp"> https://www.georgesbraque.org/mandora.jsp <a/><img src="https://images.weserv.nl/?url=https://www.guggenheim.org/wp-content/uploads/1909/01/54.1412_ph_web-1.jpg&w=870" style="width:150px">
(text-colour:white)+(background:grey)[In] (text-style:"buoy")[(text-colour:white)+(background:(gradient: 0, 0,#ffffff,0.5,#000000,1,#ffffff))[''//Still Life with Violin and Pitcher// by Georges Braque'']], (text-colour:white)+(background:grey)[the artist uses lights and shadows as a visual language of painting to make the forms visible but hard to identify. As //The Portuguese// by Braque//, Portrait of Ambroise Vollard// and //Ma Jolie// by Pablo Picasso, //Still Life with Violin and Pitcher// shows monochromatic tonality, familiar content, ordinary life, and the illusion of the representation of a real world. The works of] [[Picasso and Braque]] (text-colour:white)+(background:grey)[have many similarities due to their close collaboration.]
Work Cited
‘Braque’s [Real] Art In The ‘Still Life With Violin And Pitcher,”’ Artforum,
<a href="https://www.artforum.com/print/197708/braque-s-real-art-in-the-still-life-with-violin-and-pitcher-35969"> https://www.artforum.com/print/197708/braque-s-real-art-in-the-still-life-with-violin-and-pitcher-35969 <a/><img src="https://i.postimg.cc/90sCSnSh/Art-1-D-Final-Project-Elena-Banica-1.jpg" style="width:1200px">