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#umberto boccioni
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Umberto Boccioni - The City Rises (1910)
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fashionlandscapeblog · 6 months
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Umberto Boccioni
Spiral Expansion of Muscles in Action, 1912 or 1913
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nobrashfestivity · 1 year
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Umberto Boccioni, States of the mind, The Farewells, 1911
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thunderstruck9 · 2 months
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Umberto Boccioni (Italian, 1882-1916), Donna in giardino [Woman in the Garden], 1910. Pastel on paper, laid on canvas, 37 x 38 cm.
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classicalcanvas · 7 months
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Paintings made by Umberto Boccioni (1882 - 1916)
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hory9135 · 9 days
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SHADOWHEART
I make a fan art of her with Boccioni’s influence.
I wanted to give dynamism, movement to the sharites who surround her. Everyone moves, including her, but her intentions are not the same as Shar's soldiers.
She has already understood her fate.
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portraituresque · 3 months
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Umberto Boccioni 1908 Self-Portrait oil on canvas 100 x 70 cm Brera Pinacoteca, Italy
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jareckiworld · 10 months
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Umberto Boccioni (1882-1916) — States of Mind II: "Those Who Go" (oil on canvas, 1911)
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pazzesco · 9 months
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Umberto Boccioni | "Elasticità" (Elasticity), 1912.
Click link at bottom of picture to embiggen
In Elasticity, the image of the horse and rider is fractured to capture and represent their dynamism, fuse them with the pylons, and bring the spectator into the center of the canvas.
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Umberto Boccioni | "Dinamismo di un Calciatore" (Dynamism of a Soccer Player), 1913
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Umberto Boccioni | "Composizione spiralica" (Spiral Composition), 1913
Umberto Boccioni (1882–1916) was the leading artist of Italian Futurism. During his short life, he produced some of the movement’s iconic paintings and sculptures, capturing the color and dynamism of modern life in a style he theorized and defended in manifestos, books, and articles.
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Umberto Boccioni | "Self Portrait", 1905
In his sculptures, like his paintings, he wanted to express motion. In his “Founding and Futurist Manifesto” (1909), he declared:
“We affirm that the beauty of the world has been enriched by a new form of beauty: the beauty of speed. A racing car . . . is more beautiful than the Victory of Samothrace.”
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Umberto Boccioni | "Forme uniche di continuità nello spazio", (Unique Forms of Continuity in Space)
Boccioni, like his fellow Futurists, was an ardent interventionist, campaigning for Italy’s entry into World War I on the side of the Allies. When Italy joined the war in 1915, he volunteered to fight. In August 1916, during cavalry exercises with his regiment, Boccioni fell from his horse. He died the next day at the age of thirty-three. Despite his premature death, he remains the best known artist of the Futurist movement.
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funstealer · 2 years
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"Unique Forms of Continuity in Space” (1913) By Umberto Boccioni
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random-brushstrokes · 2 months
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Umberto Boccioni - Nudo di spalle (Controluce), 1909
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fashionlandscapeblog · 6 months
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Umberto Boccioni
Unique Forms of Continuity in Space, 1913
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surrealistaa · 25 days
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Unique forms of continuity in space, 1913, Umberto Boccioni
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carloskaplan · 8 months
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Autorretrato de Umberto Boccioni (1908)
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visual-sandwich · 5 months
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Umberto Boccioni, Ritratto di Giovane (Portrait of a Youth)
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classicalcanvas · 10 months
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Title: The Grand Canal in Venice
Artist: Umberto Boccioni
Date: 1907
Style: Impressionism
Genre: Cityscape
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