Avant-garde
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- For the Spanish indie rock band, see Avantgarde (band). For the 80s progressive metal band, see Avant Garde (band).
Avant-garde /ɑvɑ̃gɑrd/ in French means front guard, advance guard, or vanguard. People often use the term in French and English to refer to people or works that are experimental or novel, particularly with respect to art, culture, and politics.
According to its champions, the avant-garde pushes the boundaries of what is accepted as the norm within definitions of art/culture/reality.
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[edit] Concept
The vanguard, a small troop of highly skilled soldiers, explores the terrain ahead of a large advancing army and plots a course for the army to follow. This concept is applied to the work done by small bands of intellectuals and artists as they open pathways through new cultural or political terrain for society to follow. Due to implied meanings stemming from the military terminology, some people feel the avant-garde implies elitism, especially when used to describe cultural movements.
The origin of the application of this French term to art can be fixed at May 17, 1863, the opening of the Salon des Refusés in Paris, organised by painters whose work was rejected for the annual Paris Salon of officially sanctioned academic art. Salons des Refusés were held in 1874, 1875,
The term may also refer to the promotion of radical social reforms, the aims of its various movements presented in public declarations called manifestos. Over time, avant-garde became associated with movements concerned with art for art's sake, focusing primarily on expanding the frontiers of aesthetic experience, rather than with wider social reform.
For instance, whereas Marcel Duchamp's urinal may have been avant-garde at the time, if someone created it again today it would not be avant-garde because it has already been done. Avant-garde is therefore temporal and relates to the process of art's unfolding in time. Duchamp's work retains its distinction as avant-garde even today, because it marks a historical point in the advancement of the conception of art, relative to the period in which it surfaced. Similarly, "avant-garde" can be applied to the forerunners of any new movements.
[edit] Examples
Avant-garde in music may refer to an extreme form of musical improvisation in which little or no regard is given by soloists to any underlying chord structure or rhythm, such as Free Jazz. However, it may refer to any form of experimental music, even those working within many of the traditional structures.
By some assessments, avant-garde art includes street art, for example graffiti and any other movement which pushes forward the accepted boundaries.
[edit] Relevance
Proponents of the avant-garde argue it is relevant to art because without these movements art itself would stagnate and become dormant and merely craft, repeating the same style over and over. The term is most commonly applied to the visual arts, fashion, film, and literature, but also to intellectual and new approaches to music, cuisine, politics or culture.
[edit] Avant-garde art movements
- Abstract expressionism
- Angry Penguins (Pioneering Australian Modernists)
- Bauhaus
- Celebritarianism
- COBRA
- Constructivism
- Cubism
- Dada
- Dogme 95
- Expressionism
- Futurism
- Fluxus
- Impressionism
- Incoherents
- Lettrisme
- Mail art
- Neoism
- No Wave
- Primitivism
- Free Jazz
- Pop art
- Situationist
- Social realism
- Spart
- Surrealism
- Symbolism
[edit] Anti-Avantgarde
[edit] Other examples of avant-garde
- Experimental film
- Experimental literature
- Experimental music
- Avantgarde metal
- Experimental theatre
- Zeitgeist
- Demoscene
[edit] Avant-garde artists
- Akasegawa Genpei (Japanese artist and novelist)
- Alexander Rodchenko (Russian artist)
- Anthony William Herndon (American artist)
- Antonin Artaud (French playwright)
- Christopher M. Skebo (American composer)
- Diamanda Galas (American Musician, composer and performance artist)
- Edgard Varèse (French composer, later naturalized American citizen)
- Einstürzende Neubauten (German industrial band)
- El Lissitzky (Russian artist)
- Georgia O'Keeffe (American artist)
- Graham Bowers (British artist and composer)
- Harold Budd (American composer)
- Herb Lubalin (creator of the avant garde typeface)
- Iannis Xenakis (Greek composer and architect)
- International Society for Creative Guitar and String Music (Avant arts and music collective)
- Jean Rouch Ethnographic filmmaker
- Jeffrey Daniels (American Poet)
- John Abraham 1937-1987 (Indian Movie Director)
- John Cage (American composer)
- Karlheinz Stockhausen (German composer)
- Kazimir Malevich (Russian artist)
- Kayo Dot (American avant-rock band)
- Laurie Anderson (American composer)
- Lee shi-min (Chinese artist)
- Lydia Lunch (American singer, poet, writer and actress)
- Man Ray (US/France photographer and filmmaker)
- Mamoru Oshii (Japanese filmmaker)
- Marc Chagall (Russian artist)
- Marcel Duchamp (French artist)
- Nicolás Rosselló (Chilean artist)
- Olga Rozanova (Russian artist)
- Pavel Filonov (Russian artist)
- The Pea Tear Briggs Experience (American band)
- Roger Kemp (Pioneer Australian abstractionist)
- Sergei Tretyakov (Russian artist)
- Samuel Beckett (Irish Playwright)
- Srečko Kosovel (Slovene poet)
- Stan Brakhage (American filmmaker)
- Vladimir Tatlin (Russian artist)
- Wassily Kandinsky (Russian artist)
- William Carlos Williams (American poet)
- Yoko Ono (Japanese artist
- John Zorn (American musician and composer)
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- cinema avant garde (English) (French) (Spanish) (German)
- Iranian Avant Garde Media Iranian Underground Art Community
- Avant-garde Hotelsca:Literatura avantguardista
da:Avantgarde de:Avantgarde es:Vanguardias fr:Avant-garde gl:Vangarda io:Avantgarde it:Avanguardia he:אוונגרד nl:Avant-garde ja:アバンギャルド no:Avant-garde pt:Vanguarda ru:Авангард (искусство) sr:Авангарда (уметност) fi:Avantgarde sv:Avantgarde tr:Avangart uk:Авангардизм

