One of the most stylistically pioneering of the early modernists, Max
Weber was a key figure in introducing avant-garde art to America.
He worked in the mediums of oil, watercolor, printmaking and sculpture,
and his subjects sometimes reflected the spiritualism of his
religion. His styles included Fauvism, Cubism, Dynamism,
Expresssionism, and Futurism and reflected the broad spectrum of
revolutionary art activity in Paris at the turn of the 19th into the
20th centuries. < (showing 500 of 8007 characters). |
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Max Weber is also mentioned in these AskART essays: Fauves/Fauvism San Francisco Panama-Pacific Exhibition 1915 Modernism
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