sezession


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Related to sezession: secession, Kunsthistorisches Museum
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Synonyms for sezession

an Austrian school of art and architecture parallel to the French art nouveau in the 1890s

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
Even critics who refused to engage with Minne's challenging sculptural language, such as Hevesi, who characterized the kneeling youths as "pathetic figures [...] who suckled the milk of seven scanty cows and who are composed of nothing but hollow bones and [suffer from] amyotrophia" ("Aus der Sezession" 293), could not deny their raw emotional and spiritual power.
He also helped found Neue Sezession, a German art group, and gained recognition for his decorative and colorful paintings that mimicked the artistic styles of Van Gogh, Matisse and the Fauves.
(11) Felixmuller encouraged Lohse-Wachtler to produce work in the style of the newly-formed Dresdener Neuen Sezession Gruppe 1919 (New Dresden Secession Group 1919), which he developed to discuss and promote both socialist ideals and artistic experimentation.
Defendio a los jovenes artistas de la Sezession, y se acerco a sus postulados ea obras como las estaciones de metro de Viena.
He soon branched out into art publishing, at first with his cousin Bruno (from 1898 to 1901), mainly reproducing works by the Berlin 'Sezession' and its leader Liebermann, and from his own exhibitions.
When architects think about Austria it will be Vienna in the days of Wagner, the Sezession and Loos that spring to mind, that remnant imperial city torn between waltzes and Volk, schlag and spies, and latterly home to the magical expressionism of Hollein (hugely underestimated), the psychodiagrams of Himmelblau (now part of the academic establishment there) or the cool neo-functionalism of Hermann Czech.