fredtruck
Omono
>>I don't understand the context of post modern-neo-classical/early modern. Can I get a small art lesson first.
Neo-classical usually refers to work done during the reign of Louis XIV. It was rule-driven, the rules coming from Cardinal Richlieu and a small body of scholars. This became the French Academy.
Post Modern: There aren't hard and fast dates. There is, however, an attitude. The attitude is that critical thought is more important than creative work. The emphasis is on treating everything as a text, which is then analyzed to smithereens. Generally, work done in the 70s on is post modern. Originality is out. Appropriation is in.
Early modern usually refers to a small group of artists in Europe--German Expressionism, Munch who did "The Scream," etc. Active from about 1890 to 1910 or so. But again, this isn't a hard and fast term.
Neo-classical usually refers to work done during the reign of Louis XIV. It was rule-driven, the rules coming from Cardinal Richlieu and a small body of scholars. This became the French Academy.
Post Modern: There aren't hard and fast dates. There is, however, an attitude. The attitude is that critical thought is more important than creative work. The emphasis is on treating everything as a text, which is then analyzed to smithereens. Generally, work done in the 70s on is post modern. Originality is out. Appropriation is in.
Early modern usually refers to a small group of artists in Europe--German Expressionism, Munch who did "The Scream," etc. Active from about 1890 to 1910 or so. But again, this isn't a hard and fast term.