Gavin Parkinson
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Twentieth-century revolutions in art and science
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Artists have always taken an interest in scientific developments. This was certainly the case for many of the modernist artists working in Europe and the United States of America in the first third of the twentieth century when the theory of relativity and quantum mechanics caused a revolution in the understanding of space, time, and the physical world. This chapter begins with Pablo Picasso, Georges Braque, and Cubism around 1910, when an equal revolution in art occurred to those taking place in science. The chapter looks at both the ways in which artists perceived major scientific discoveries and the manner in which historians have narrated the epistemic relationships between art and science in specific historical periods. After Cubism and just before the First World War, Dadaists such as Marcel Duchamp in Europe and the US saw new possibilities implied by science for the rendering of space and objects that would replace traditional means of depiction by the genres of landscape and still-life. Surrealists such as Salvador Dalí and Roberto Matta, painting in the 1930s, created a new imagery when the significance for knowledge of relativity and quantum mechanics was becoming more fully understood by philosophers in Europe. The chapter concludes with new research on the impact of modern science for abstract artists in the US in the 1940s.

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Art and knowledge after 1900

Interactions between modern art and thought

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