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  1. Precisionism - Wikipedia

    Precisionism was a modernist art movement that emerged in the United States after World War I. Influenced by Cubism, Purism, and Futurism, Precisionist artists reduced subjects to their essential geometric shapes, eliminated detail, and often used planes of light to create a sense of crisp focus and suggest the sleekness and sheen of machine forms.

  2. Precisionism Movement Overview | TheArtStory

    Summary of Precisionism. Images of factories, skyscrapers, bridges, road and rail networks, steel works, and rural scenes featuring grain elevators and depots, were the order of the day for the Precisionists.

  3. Precisionism | Geometric Abstraction, Machine Age & American …

    Precisionism, smooth, sharply defined painting style used by several American artists in representational canvases executed primarily during the 1920s. While Precisionism can be seen as a tendency present in American art since the colonial period, the style of 20th-century Precisionist painters had

  4. Precisionism - The Metropolitan Museum of Art

    Jun 1, 2007 · Precisionism [The Precisionists] consistently reduced their compositions to simple shapes and underlying geometrical structures, with clear outlines, minimal detail, and smooth handling of surfaces. Jessica Murphy

  5. Precisionism - Capturing the Dynamism of the Modern World in Art

    Feb 6, 2024 · As the name suggests, Precisionism emphasized linear precision or the use of precise lines in art. Precisionism sought to refine art through simplicity, and clarity. It was characterized by rigidly unambiguous, yet fragmented geometric forms that intentionally mimicked products produced in the assembly line or through other technological processes.

  6. Precisionism Art Movement – History, Artworks, and Artists

    Precisionism – The Authentic American Modernist Movement. The term Precisionism was coined by art historian Alfred H. Barr in 1927. This art movement had no manifesto and was characterized by an informal association of artists with related sensibilities and …

  7. Art Movements: Precisionism - Artland Magazine

    Precisionism was the first real indigenous modern art movement in the United States and contributed to the rise of American Modernism. Taking its cues from Cubism and Futurism, Precisionism was driven by a desire to bring structure back to art and celebrated the new American landscape of skyscrapers, bridges and factories. The Precisionists ...

  8. Quick intro to Precisionism: America’s first art movement

    Jul 21, 2021 · Precisionism was the first art movement indigenous to the United States. It reached its peak in popularly in the 1920s and ‘30s, and it played an important role in American Modernism. Blending Cubism-like geometric forms with the exactness of photography, artists of the movement aimed to celebrate America during a modern era of industrialization.

  9. Precisionism | Aesthetics Wiki - Fandom

    Precisionism is an art movement that emerged in the United States during the aftermath of World War I, focusing on modernistic values and industrialization, the industrial world and its urban landscapes. It flourished from the decade of the 1920s to the early 1930s.

  10. Precisionism Art Movement: Definition, Characteristics

    Precisionism was inspired by elements from earlier modern art movements, notably the technological aesthetic of Futurism, and the geometric overlapping planes of Cubism, but it remained first and foremost an American movement.