Oxford Art Online - [By Subscription] . . . . . Art Term Glossaries - Mulitple References . . . . . Glossary - 'Artist's on Art' / Dore Ashton . . . . . Dimensions - (Forms, Contexts, Perspectives) . . . . . Modes
Re-Visions
Ready-Made
Real [See Art of the Real]
Realism - "The term 'Realism' and its cognates are commonly used in their historical sense of verdical depiction or the representation of things precisely as they are seen to be without imaginative idealization or any kind of 'interpretation'. There is ofen implied an emphasis upon detail rather than general impression.
The terms Photographic Realism [or 'Photo-realism'], 'Hyperrealism', 'Superrealism' indicate extreme forms of Realism in this sense, usually with exaggerated attention to detail. Magical Realism carries similar implications.
SInce the 1950s, however, the terms have also been used in a contrasting sense, of art which eschews representation and depiction altogether and avoids all forms of illusionism, including the creation of 'virtual' picture space. In this sense art is called 'Realist' when the materials or objects from which the work is contructed are presented for exacctly what they are and are known to be."[Osborne, Harold, editor. The Oxford C ompanion to Twentieth-Century Art. Oxford University Press. 1988.]
Réalités Nouvelles [See Salon des Réalités Nouvelles]
Rebel Art Centre
Red-figure vase paintings
Refus Global
Régence Stuyle
Regency Style
Regina Five
Regionalism
Reichenau School
Reims School
Relief
Relief Etching
Renaissance
Repoussoir
Representation
Reredos
Retroussage
Rocaille
Rocky Mountain School
Rococo
Roman School
Romanesque
Romantic Classicism
Romanticism
Romantic Tradition
Rubrication
Brotherhood of Ruralists
Copyright
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