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'L'eveil de la Cite' ('The City Awakes'), 1910 by Umberto Boccioni. The City Rises by Umberto Boccioni (1882-1916). Museum of Modern Art, New York. Against the Milanese urban background of smoking chimneys, scaffolding, a streetcar, and a locomotive, enormous draft horses tug at their harnesses, while street workers attempt to direct the animals' explosive strength. Yet the pictorial means of realizing this veneration of titanic energies and industrial activity are, in 1910, as anachronistic as the prominent role given to horse power. Basically, Boccioni still works here within a modified Impressionist technique whose atomizing effect on mass permits the forceful, churning symbols of horse and manpower to slip out of their skins in an Impressionist blur of moving light.. - ©TopFoto

'L'eveil de la Cite' ('The City Awakes'), 1910 by Umberto Boccioni. The City Rises by Umberto Boccioni (1882-1916). Museum of Modern Art, New York. Against the Milanese urban background of smoking chimneys, scaffolding, a streetcar, and a locomotive, enormous draft horses tug at their harnesses, while street workers attempt to direct the animals' explosive strength. Yet the pictorial means of realizing this veneration of titanic energies and industrial activity are, in 1910, as anachronistic as the prominent role given to horse power. Basically, Boccioni still works here within a modified Impressionist technique whose atomizing effect on mass permits the forceful, churning symbols of horse and manpower to slip out of their skins in an Impressionist blur of moving light.. - ©TopFoto.
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'L'eveil de la Cite' ('The City Awakes'), 1910 by Umberto Boccioni. The City Rises by Umberto Boccioni (1882-1916). Museum of Modern Art, New York. Against the Milanese urban background of smoking chimneys, scaffolding, a streetcar, and a locomotive, enormous draft horses tug at their harnesses, while street workers attempt to direct the animals' explosive strength. Yet the pictorial means of realizing this veneration of titanic energies and industrial activity are, in 1910, as anachronistic as the prominent role given to horse power. Basically, Boccioni still works here within a modified Impressionist technique whose atomizing effect on mass permits the forceful, churning symbols of horse and manpower to slip out of their skins in an Impressionist blur of moving light.. - ©TopFoto
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Taille de l'image: 3296 × 2110 px | 19.9 MB
Taille d'impression: 27.9 × 17.9 cm | 1297.6 × 830.7 in (300 dpi)
Mots clés: ARTISTE ARTISTEL ARTSTE INDUSTRIE PEINTURE A L'HUILE