Brutalist architecture is an architectural style that emerged during the 1950s in the United Kingdom, among the reconstruction projects of the post-war...
70 KB (7,096 words) - 12:29, 15 April 2025
Modern architecture, also called modernist architecture, or the modern movement, was an architectural movement and style that was prominent in the 20th...
118 KB (14,791 words) - 22:01, 11 April 2025
Art Deco (redirect from Art Deco architecture)
Art Deco was influenced by the bright colors of Fauvism and the Ballets Russes, and the exoticized styles of art from China, Japan, India, Persia, ancient...
172 KB (19,366 words) - 10:27, 5 April 2025
Minimalism (redirect from Minimalist architecture)
describe a trend in design and architecture, wherein the subject is reduced to its necessary elements. Minimalist architectural designers focus on effectively...
65 KB (6,357 words) - 14:50, 13 April 2025
Baroque (redirect from Baroque Art and Architecture)
bə-ROK, US: /bəˈroʊk/ bə-ROHK, French: [baʁɔk]) is a Western style of architecture, music, dance, painting, sculpture, poetry, and other arts that flourished...
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Bauhaus (redirect from Bauhaus architecture)
modernist architecture, and architectural education. The Bauhaus movement had a profound influence on subsequent developments in art, architecture, graphic...
57 KB (6,850 words) - 02:41, 17 April 2025
arrondissement Cathédrale orthodoxe russe de la Sainte-Trinité by Jean-Michel Wilmotte (2013–16) A notable new style of French architecture, called Supermodernism...
149 KB (21,107 words) - 12:30, 12 April 2025
Expressionist architecture was an architectural movement in Europe during the first decades of the 20th century in parallel with the expressionist visual...
51 KB (5,907 words) - 16:34, 21 October 2024
Early Christian art and architecture (or Paleochristian art) is the art produced by Christians, or under Christian patronage, from the earliest period...
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art include their architecture, crafts (especially jewellery), and their script. The only remaining examples of Visigothic architecture from the 6th century...
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century. While the term is typically used in English to refer primarily to architecture and monumental sculpture, this article will briefly cover all the arts...
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Art Nouveau (redirect from Art Nouveau architecture)
Jugendstil and Sezessionstil in German, is an international style of art, architecture, and applied art, especially the decorative arts. It was often inspired...
252 KB (27,293 words) - 09:12, 8 April 2025
Cubism (redirect from Cubist architecture)
and sparked artistic innovations in music, ballet, literature, and architecture. Cubist subjects are analyzed, broken up, and reassembled in an abstract...
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Arts and Crafts movement (redirect from Arts and Crafts architecture)
anticipated by Augustus Pugin (1812–1852), a leader in the Gothic Revival in architecture. For example, he advocated truth to material, structure, and function...
81 KB (10,154 words) - 18:30, 9 April 2025
Mannerism (redirect from Mannerist architecture)
Mannerist architecture has also been used to describe a trend in the 1960s and 1970s that involved breaking the norms of modernist architecture while at...
74 KB (8,679 words) - 15:53, 11 April 2025
Stripped Classicism (redirect from Stripped Classical architecture)
Classicism" or "Grecian Moderne") is primarily a 20th-century classicist architectural style stripped of most or all ornamentation, frequently employed by...
28 KB (1,813 words) - 21:39, 20 March 2025
Historicism (art) (redirect from Historicism (architecture))
artisans. This is especially common in architecture, where there are many different styles of Revival architecture, which dominated large buildings in the...
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Geographic coordinates 43°42′14″N 7°15′14″E / 43.70389°N 7.25389°E / 43.70389; 7.25389 Architecture Type Church Groundbreaking 1903 Completed 1912...
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the basilica of Saint-Martin that became a hallmark of Frankish church architecture was the sarcophagus or reliquary of the saint raised to be visible and...
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Ruse, Bulgaria (redirect from Russe, Bulgaria)
Ruse (also transliterated as Rousse, Russe; Bulgarian: Русе [ˈrusɛ]) is the fifth-largest city in Bulgaria. Ruse is in the northeastern part of the country...
61 KB (4,605 words) - 03:17, 15 April 2025
Trompe-l'œil (redirect from Fictive architecture)
objects or spaces as real. Forced perspective is a related illusion in architecture. The phrase, which can also be spelled without the hyphen and ligature...
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Neoclassicism (redirect from Neoclassical Art and Architecture)
movement in the decorative and visual arts, literature, theatre, music, and architecture that drew inspiration from the art and culture of classical antiquity...
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Ruse Central railway station (redirect from Russe Central Station)
the Danube Bridge. Trolleybuses in Ruse Media related to Rousse Central Train Station at Wikimedia Commons Portals: Trains Architecture Bulgaria v t e...
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The architecture of Fez, Morocco, reflects the wider trends of Moroccan architecture dating from the city's foundation in the late 8th century and up to...
91 KB (10,572 words) - 03:55, 6 April 2025
Bronislava Nijinska (category Ballets Russes choreographers)
dancers. Her own career began in Saint Petersburg. Soon she joined Ballets Russes which ventured to success in Paris. She met war-time difficulties in Petrograd...
210 KB (28,962 words) - 00:31, 27 February 2025
Peindre l'âme Russe, Claude Pommereau (editor), Beaux Arts Editions, Paris, October 2021, p. 15 (in French) Ilya Repin- Peindre l'âme Russe, Claude Pommereau...
60 KB (7,277 words) - 11:26, 12 April 2025
Rococo (redirect from Rococo (architecture))
as Late Baroque, is an exceptionally ornamental and dramatic style of architecture, art and decoration which combines asymmetry, scrolling curves, gilding...
65 KB (7,229 words) - 22:14, 5 April 2025
Mudéjar art (redirect from Saracenic architecture)
16th centuries. It was applied to Romanesque, Gothic and Renaissance architectural styles as constructive, ornamental and decorative motifs derived from...
30 KB (3,357 words) - 23:34, 10 March 2025
During this period, disciplines such as painting, goldsmithing and architecture with marked Caliphate influences were cultivated in a context of medieval...
17 KB (1,824 words) - 07:47, 2 April 2025
Suprematism (redirect from Suprematist architecture)
Suprematism and Architectural Projects of Lazar Khidekel. Architectural Design 59, # 7–8, 1989 Mark Khidekel. Suprematism in Architecture. L’Arca, Italy...
22 KB (2,729 words) - 14:09, 15 April 2025