Buying Paintings: Minimalism
Though I could enjoy speaking on the topic of art for sometime, I found myself without a way to truly understand
the differing values in the ways of thought that permeate this grouping of human experience, and found myself
looking to sources over the Internet to further my knowledge to utilize the information gathered to purchase
paintings. I have always been interested in the passions evoked by the series of artists and movements that
proliferate what we have come to know as the history of art. Reflecting on this notion of life's passing
interaction whether Romanticist, Surrealist, or Minimalist in nature.
Speaking on Minimalism now, the ideas that made this movement unique relied heavily upon the work being stripped
down to the barest fundamental aspects, and laying bare those integral parts of self-expression. Many pieces of
work other than visual art has been affected by these ideals of minimalism, and acted outside of this particular
aesthetic appeal, creating new ways to interpret literature and even lifestyles. As far as painting goes, however,
the minimalist paintings will typically use limited color schemes and simple geometric designs. Minimalist
sculpture is focused on the materials used.
Some of the phases commonly agreed on about this movement are each notable for how they have progressed the
overall conception of minimalism as a movement. A distillation in forms was the first phase, with contributors
claiming in order to create a universal language of art that masses were meant to understand easily, and seemed
poised to support the rapid industrialization for particular settings of the time. Searching for a purity of form,
and paving the way for the abstractions to come later on, allowing for the second more notable phase to reach its'
crescendo afterwards.
Much of the formats for commercial artwork we see today have had a great deal of background in this movement of
visual art, allowing us to understand on a fundamental level what the message is that the work is trying to convey,
and a large amount of the signs and signals we find today relies heavily upon these ideals to translate a universal
meaning to the general populace. We can easily see the progression of minimalism in these examples of the world
over, and it almost as ingrained into our society now as much as we care to see.
A minimalist painting will typically use a very limited amount of colors and have a very simplistic geometric
design. Minimalism in sculpture, on the other hand, is much more concerned with the materials used. Many people
believe that minimalism in generally is about geometric shapes, but this interpretation depends widely on the
branch of art as well as the interpreter.
But the simplest way to describe minimalism is that the less that is in the painting or work of art, the better
it is. Minimalism is all about drawing attention to the few objects and colors of the composition. In this way
minimalism shows us that less is better, for the eye is not drawn away by this of that filler or extra objects.
Minimalism is about starting with nothing and then carefully applying the few objects and colors that will
define the piece as a whole. Minimalism is still one of the major parts of contemporary art, but it is used I
conjunction with other styles and flairs from other art movements to form new types of minimalism.
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