Concrete Art Movement  

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-[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/{{PAGENAMEE}}] [May 2007]+'''Il Movimento Arte Concreta''' ([[MAC]]) was an [[Italian avant-garde]] [[art movement]] founded in 1948 in Milan on the occasion of an exhibition in the Salto library. Early promoters included [[Gianni Monnet]], [[Bruno Munari]], [[Atanasio Soldati]] and [[Gillo Dorfles]].
 + 
 +Connected artists are include Piero Dorazio, [[Lucio Fontana]], Garau, Mino Guerrini, Mazzon, Perilli, [[Ettore Sottsass]], Nigro, Reggiani, Veronesi, Radice, Colla, Prampolini, Barisani, De Fusco, Tatafiore and Veronesi.
 + 
 +The group appropriates the ideas of [[Theo van Doesburg]] and [[Max Bill]].
 + 
 +Concrete art is [[abstract art|non figurative]].
 + 
 +The movement was dissolved in 1958.
 + 
 +== Related ==
 + 
 +# [[Bruno Munari]]
 +# [[Gillo Dorfles]]
 +# [[Enrico Crispolti]]
 + 
 +== See also ==
 +*[[Concrete art]]
 +*[[Italian avant-garde]]
 +{{GFDL}}

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Il Movimento Arte Concreta (MAC) was an Italian avant-garde art movement founded in 1948 in Milan on the occasion of an exhibition in the Salto library. Early promoters included Gianni Monnet, Bruno Munari, Atanasio Soldati and Gillo Dorfles.

Connected artists are include Piero Dorazio, Lucio Fontana, Garau, Mino Guerrini, Mazzon, Perilli, Ettore Sottsass, Nigro, Reggiani, Veronesi, Radice, Colla, Prampolini, Barisani, De Fusco, Tatafiore and Veronesi.

The group appropriates the ideas of Theo van Doesburg and Max Bill.

Concrete art is non figurative.

The movement was dissolved in 1958.

Related

  1. Bruno Munari
  2. Gillo Dorfles
  3. Enrico Crispolti

See also




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Concrete Art Movement" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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