Geometry in the Art.
Cubism was an artistic movement developed between 1907 and 1914, born in France and led by Pablo Ruiz Picasso, Georges Braque and Juan Gris.
Cubism treats the forms of nature by means of geometric figures, representing all parts of an object in the same plane.
One example is '' La Fábrica de Horta del Ebro''.
The selected shapes are the cubes and the parallelepipeds on one side, the cylinders on the other. The first, the most numerous, accumulate their closed volumes, with sharp edges, in two thirds of the fabric, causing an impression of confinement and suffocation. The seconds, with softer shapes, seem far away and spaced, as out of reach.
Cubism treats the forms of nature by means of geometric figures, representing all parts of an object in the same plane.
One example is '' La Fábrica de Horta del Ebro''.
The selected shapes are the cubes and the parallelepipeds on one side, the cylinders on the other. The first, the most numerous, accumulate their closed volumes, with sharp edges, in two thirds of the fabric, causing an impression of confinement and suffocation. The seconds, with softer shapes, seem far away and spaced, as out of reach.
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