Futurist Paintings
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Style: Futurist
Eco landscape
Located in Oslo, NO
One of the paintings is about the future of man and nature. The variety of shapes and colors has a positive effect on the viewer and calls us to simplicity and practicality in everyt...
Category
2010s Futurist Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil, Acrylic
Idyll of life
Located in Oslo, NO
A painting from the series Ecology and Man. The
artist shows the idyll of life in a stunningly beautiful place with
harmony and the infinity of time like a river flowing nearby.
Category
2010s Futurist Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Birth of the city
Located in Oslo, NO
Landscape of the Future. The illusion of the grandeur of human
structures is nothing compared to the forms and creativity of nature
itself.
Shipment in a roll.
Category
2010s Futurist Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Deer hunting
Located in Oslo, NO
The painting was painted under the
impression of the problem of human impact on the environment.
Man makes changes not only in the apperance of the landscape, but
also in the animal...
Category
2010s Futurist Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Meeting
Located in Oslo, NO
Painting from the series Landscape of the future. The artist is looking forward to meeting his family in a peace and prosperity reign.
Category
2010s Futurist Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil, Cardboard
Waiting for summer
Located in Oslo, NO
.Painting from the series Landscape of the future. The harmony of natural forms has a positive effect on the viewer.
Category
2010s Futurist Paintings
Materials
Paper, Watercolor
Ice city
Located in Oslo, NO
.A painting from the series ecology of the future. Northern motifs have their own charm. Homes of the future in unity with nature.
Category
2010s Futurist Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Ghost mountain
Located in Oslo, NO
This work is the result of my observation of the pyrological landscape that i see every day. It changes coiors and state. The bridge and the houses are a permanent component here, cr...
Category
2010s Futurist Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
« Golden mountain
Located in Oslo, NO
Painting from series
Landscape of the future. The Golden mountain is a symbol of the wealth of
nature. Landscape lines create harmony in the perception of the picture.
Canvas on carb...
Category
2010s Futurist Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Acrylic
Wind in the mountains
Located in Oslo, NO
The incredibly beautiful play of light in the mountains creates the atmosphere of a fairy tale. The wind can change everything in an instant, and a person feels helpless in front of...
Category
2010s Futurist Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Isby
Located in Oslo, NO
Painting from the series Man and Nature. Winter can surprise and delight us with its bizarre shapes and condition. People will never cease to be amazed by the grandeur and beauty of ...
Category
2010s Futurist Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil, Acrylic
At the Lock, Oil on canvas 20th Century Landscape Painting, Signed and Dated '66
Located in London, GB
Oil on canvas, signed and dated '66' lower left
Image size: 13 x 35 3/4 inches (33 x 91 cm)
Original frame
Here, the physical forms that make up the water lock and canal boats have ...
Category
1960s Futurist Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Cyberurban en tondo (L1). Architectural futurist landscape inspired in Bauhaus .
Located in Segovia, ES
Ciberurban in "tondo". Architectural colorful landscape inspired in the Bauhaus School.
Acrylic paint, mixed media on panel. 2021
Dimensions in cm.: 132 x 129 x 4 cm.
In inches: 51.9...
Category
2010s Futurist Paintings
Materials
Mixed Media, Acrylic, Wood Panel
1960s Italian Futurist Abstract Oil Painting
By Giovanni Huber
Located in Surfside, FL
This painting has been authenticated by the artist and was sold in St Gallen.
Born in Italy in 1939, attended the textile and arts and crafts school of St. Gallen from 1956 to 1959. ...
Category
1960s Futurist Paintings
Materials
Oil
'The Stray Cat', Berlin School
Located in London, GB
'The Stray Cat', oil on board, by F. DuParc (circa 1960s). A thoroughly modern depiction of a colourful, graceful feline most likely inspired by Italian Futurist, Fortunato Depero (1...
Category
1960s Futurist Paintings
Materials
Oil, Board
In good Company
Located in Wien, AT
Dark Matter / 2021
Während sich viele meiner Arbeit mit Interaktion oder Umsetzung in die reale auseinandersetzen, ist die Werksserie Dark Matter eine in sich geschlossener komplex....
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Futurist Paintings
Materials
Acrylic, Canvas
'Portrait of a Reposing Cat', Berlin School
Located in London, GB
'Portrait of a Reposing Cat', oil on board, by F. DuParc (circa 1960s). A thoroughly modern depiction of a colourful, contented feline most likely inspired by Italian Futurist, Fortunato Depero (1892-1960). Futurism corresponded to Cubism sharing several elements including faceted or segmented shapes. Cubism however, was generally static and more subdued whereas Futurism was bright and dynamic embracing technology, mechanisation, power and energy. In this work, the vibrant colours and serene look on the subject transmit a sense of optimism - life is good...
Category
1960s Futurist Paintings
Materials
Oil, Board
'Portrait of Future Man', German School
Located in London, GB
'Portrait of Future Man', oil on board, Berlin School, (circa 1960s). A thoroughly modern portrait clearly in the style of Italian Futurist, Fortunato Depero (1892-1960). Futurism co...
Category
1960s Futurist Paintings
Materials
Oil, Board
Futuristic Landscape -- Cosmos Flowers and Orb
Located in Soquel, CA
Wonderful futuristic mixed media (watercolor and acrylic) of transparent orb with ghost-like Cosmos flowers in foreground by T. Yokozawa (Japanese/American, 20th Century), circa 2000...
Category
Early 2000s Futurist Paintings
Materials
Paper, Acrylic, Watercolor
'Playful Feline', Berlin School
Located in London, GB
'Playful Feline', oil on board, Berlin School (circa 1960s). A thoroughly modern depiction of a colourful, willowy feline most likely inspired by Italian...
Category
1960s Futurist Paintings
Materials
Oil, Board
Futurist, Novecento Italiano, Mid Century Italian Painting, Figures at the Baths
Located in Cotignac, FR
Mid 20th Century Italian Futurist, Novecento Italiano, work on paper, signed bottom right and with dedication top right (see photos).
The subject is bathers enjoying the delights of a spa and sauna with colourful tiling to the background. The classical figures languorously positioned in repose but the central 'white' figure in stark contrast. The play on colours gives the work a vibrancy. The drawing is possibly a preparatory sketch for a larger work or mural.
A vibrant, exciting and colourful work incorporating the styles of Futurism and the Novecento Italiano movement and with the influences or artists such as Anselmo Bucci, Adami, Jean Helion, Maryan, Achille Funi and Ugo Guidi.
Anselmo Bucci was born in 1887 in Fossombrone in the district of Pesaro. Even though he studied Classics, right from a tender age he showed a talent for drawing and, when his parents moved near to Florence, he was taught by the artist Francesco Salvini.
In 1904 the family settled in Monza and so the boy was able to study for a year at the Accademia di Belle Arti di Brera, but he did not follow up this educational experience and in 1906 he left Italy for Paris where he came into contact with the Parisian avant-garde, met fellow Italian artists such as Severini and Modigliani, and made friends with Picasso, Utrillo and Apollinaire. In 1907 he showed a painting at the Salon, but these Parisian years were most important for his love of engraving techniques – etching and dry point that enabled him to fully develop his themes characterised by movement.
On the outbreak of war in 1915 he returned to Italy and he enlisted in the same battalion as several Futurist artists such as Martinetti, Boccioni, Sant’Elia and Carlo Erba. In 1914 he won the silver medal at the Mostra dell’Incisione (Exhibition of Engravings) at Florence. In 1917 in Paris he published pictures of war scenes entitled “Croquis du Front Italien”. In 1919 he printed twelve lithographs entitled “Finis Austriae” again showing events from the war. At the end of the war he lived between Milan and Paris and he dedicated his time completely to his art with personal exhibitions, exhibiting at all the most important Italian and French shows, in Belgium, Holland and England.
In 1922, he established the group “Movimento del Novecento”, (Novecento Italiano), (20th century Movement) a joint venture with the artists Sironi, Funi, Oppi, Malerba, Dudreville and Marussig. Their aim was to return to figurative art in contrast with the growing extremism of the Avant-gardists. In 1925 he worked on the illustration of the first edition of Kipling’s The Jungle Book producing eight dry point plates.
In the early 30’s he lived in Bucci, Trieste, where he worked on the furnishing of the steamships for the Trieste Navigazione Libera, at the same time he continued to work on many book illustrations.
During the second European war he adapted to being a war artist recording the events of the war as he had done previously. Indeed the engravings depicting battles of the Marines and the Air Force belong to this period. In 1945, following the bombing of his house in Milan, he returned to Monza to his father’s home where he remained until his death.
Futurism was an Italian art movement of the early twentieth century that aimed to capture in art the dynamism and energy of the modern world. Futurism was launched by the Italian poet Filippo Tommaso Marinetti in 1909. On 20 February he published his Manifesto of Futurism on the front page of the Paris newspaper Le Figaro.
Among modernist movements futurism was exceptionally vehement in its denunciation of the past. This was because in Italy the weight of past culture was felt as particularly oppressive. In the Manifesto, Marinetti asserted that ‘we will free Italy from her innumerable museums which cover her like countless cemeteries’. What the futurists proposed instead was an art that celebrated the modern world of industry and technology:
We declare…a new beauty, the beauty of speed. A racing motor car…is more beautiful than the Victory of Samothrace. (A celebrated ancient Greek sculpture in the Louvre museum in Paris.)
Futurist painting used elements of neo-impressionism and cubism to create compositions that expressed the idea of the dynamism, the energy and movement, of modern life.
Chief artists associated with futurism were Giacomo Balla, Umberto Boccioni, Gino Severini.
After the brutality of the first world war, many artists rejected the avant-garde notions of futurism and other pre-war movements, by using more traditional and reassuring approaches, a phenomenon described as the ‘return to order’.
Novecento Italiano was founded by Anselmo Bucci (1887–1955), Leonardo Dudreville (1885–1975), Achille Funi, Gian Emilio Malerba (1880–1926), Pietro Marussig, Ubaldo Oppi, and Mario Sironi. Motivated by a post-war "call to order", they were brought together by Lino Pesaro, a gallery owner interested in modern art, and Margherita Sarfatti, a writer and art critic who worked on Italian dictator Benito Mussolini's newspaper, The People of Italy (Il Popolo d'Italia). Sarfatti was also Mussolini's mistress.
The movement was officially launched in 1923 at an exhibition in Milan, with Mussolini as one of the speakers. The group was represented at the Venice Biennale of 1924 in a gallery of its own, with the exception of Oppi, who exhibited in a separate gallery. Oppi's defection caused him to be ejected from the group, which subsequently split and was reformed. The new Novecento Italiano staged its first group exhibition in Milan in 1926.
Several of the artists were war veterans; Sarfatti had lost a son in the war. The group wished to take on the Italian establishment and create an art associated with the rhetoric of fascism. The artists supported the fascist regime and their work became associated with the state propaganda department, although Mussolini reprimanded Sarfatti for using his name and the name of fascism to promote Novecento.
The name of the movement (which means 1900s) was a deliberate reference to great periods of Italian art in the past, the Quattrocento and Cinquecento (1400s and 1500s). The group rejected European avant garde art and wished to revive the tradition of large format history painting in the classical manner. It lacked a precise artistic programme and included artists of different styles and temperament, for example, Carrà and Marini. It aimed to promote a renewed yet traditional Italian art. Sironi said, “if we look at the painters of the second half of the 19th century, we find that only the revolutionary were great and that the greatest were the most revolutionary”; the artists of Novecento Italiano “would not imitate the world created by God but would be inspired by it”.
Despite official patronage, Novecento art did not always have an easy ride in Fascist Italy. Mussolini was personally uninterested in art and divided official support among various groups so as to keep artists on the side of the regime. Opening the exhibition of Novecento art in 1923 he declared that “it is far from my idea to encourage anything like a state art. Art belongs to the domain of the individual. The state has only one duty: not to undermine art, to provide humane conditions for artists, to encourage them from the artistic and national point of view." The movement was in competition with other pro-Fascist movements, especially Futurism and the regionalist Strapaese movement. Novecento Italiano also met outright opposition. Achille Starace, the General Secretary of the Fascist Party, attacked it in the Fascist daily press and there was virulent criticism of its “un-Italian" qualities by artists and critics.
In the 1930s, a group of professors and students at the Accademia di Brera established an opposition group to Novecento Italiano. Among them was the director of the academy Aldo Carpi, and students Afro, Aldo Badoli, Aldo Bergolli, Renato Birolli, Bruno Cassinari, Cherchi, Alfredo Chighine, Grosso, Renato Guttuso, Dino Lanaro, Giuseppe Migneco, Mantica, Ennio Morlotti, Aligi Sassu, Ernesto Treccani, Italo Valenti, and Emilio Vedova (and later Giuseppe Ajmone...
Category
Mid-20th Century Futurist Paintings
Materials
Paper, Pastel, Crayon, Pencil
Primary Colors and Shapes on Light Yellow, Abstract Geometric Painting, Triangle
Located in Barcelona, ES
"Primary Colors on Light Yellow" is an abstract painting diptych by Spanish artist Natalia Roman. It is a beautiful combination of geometric shapes in a classy gamut of colors. The u...
Category
2010s Futurist Paintings
Materials
Acrylic
Still Life of Books and Chinese Lanterns in Vibrant Colors
Located in Miami, FL
Joseph Stella creates a beautiful and colorful still life rendered in lush expressive bright colors and quick spontaneous bravura brushstrokes.. Signed Lower Right Joseph Stella Fra...
Category
1920s Futurist Paintings
Materials
Pastel
Fantastic Rafael Coronel Mixed Media 1961
Located in Detroit, MI
SALE ONE WEEK ONLY
"Untitled" is a dramatically placed individual who appears to be withdrawing into herself surrounded by a soft pinkish color. She has a sad look in her non-reflec...
Category
Mid-20th Century Futurist Paintings
Materials
ABS, Mixed Media, Board
Water Lily and Woodchuck - Barbados
Located in Miami, FL
Powerful visual done at Stella's peak period of creativity in Barbados. Signed lower right. Provenance: Doyle, New York
Elegantly framed.
Category
1910s Futurist Paintings
Materials
Paper, Gouache
Ivan Turetskyy - Euphoria, painting, contemporary, futurist, abstract, movement
Located in London, GB
Ivan Turetskyy (b.1956)
Euphoria
2018
oil on canvas
120 x 85 cm
signed, titled, dated and marked with the artisi's thumbprint (on the verso)
Price:
£13...
Category
2010s Futurist Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Eighty Primary Shapes on Green, Retro Futuristic Painting on Paper, Triangles
Located in Barcelona, ES
"Eighty Primary Shapes on Green" is an abstract painting by Spanish artist Natalia Roman. It is a beautiful combination of geometric shapes in a classy gamut of colors. The use of pa...
Category
2010s Futurist Paintings
Materials
Oil Pastel, Oil, Acrylic, Watercolor, Gouache
"Airplanes Dive Over Enemy Skies" Italian Futurism Futurist Transportation Plane
Located in New York, NY
"Airplanes Dive Over Enemy Skies" Italian Futurism Futurist Transportation Plane
Guglielmo “Tato” Sansoni (Italian, 1896 – 1974) "Airplanes Dive Over Enemy Skies (Aerei in Picchiata su Stabilimenti Nemici)," 20 x 28 inches. Oil on canvas. Circa 1930s. Signed lower right. Titled and signed verso.
Guglielmo Sansoni...
Category
1930s Futurist Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Vase of Flowers on the Seashore
Located in London, GB
DAVID BURLIUK [Burlyuk] 1882-1967
Kharkiv, Ukraine 1882-1967 Southampton, Long Island, New York (Ukrainian/Russian/American)
Title: Vase of Flowers on the Seashore...
Category
1960s Futurist Paintings
Materials
Oil
Self Portrait
Located in London, GB
HUGO SCHEIBER 1873-1950
1873 - Budapest - 1950 (Hungarian)
Title: Self Portrait
Technique: Original Signed Pastel Drawing on Paper
Size: 37.7 x 30 cm. / 14.8 x 11.8 in.
Additiona...
Category
1940s Futurist Paintings
Materials
Pastel
'The Rialto Bridge, Sunset', Venetian Canal, Dusseldorf Academy, Large Oil
By Karl Gasser
Located in Santa Cruz, CA
Signed lower right, 'K. Gasser' for Karl Gasser (Italian, 1948-2017) and dated 2011.
A vibrant, Futurist-derived view of Venice's Grand Canal with a row of gondolas in the foregroun...
Category
2010s Futurist Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Hotel Futura Illustration
Located in Miami, FL
Men Who Plan Beyond Tomorrow” Advertising campaign for
The world’s incredible technological inventions that we take for granted today …..
Provenance: Edgar Bronfman Sr. former C...
Category
1940s Futurist Paintings
Materials
Illustration Board, Gouache
LA NOVA
By Betty Ball
Located in Los Angeles, CA
BETTY BALL
"LA NOVA"
PASTEL, SIGNED
AMERICAN, DATED 1949
18 x 14 Inches
Category
1940s Futurist Paintings
Materials
Pastel, Paper
Two Seated Nudes, Surrealist Gouache by Handel Evans
By Handel Evans
Located in Long Island City, NY
Artist: Handel Evans, British (1932-1999)
Title: Two Seated Nudes
Year: 1972
Medium: Gouache on Paper, signed and dated l.r.
Size: 9.5 x 12.5 in. (24....
Category
1970s Futurist Paintings
Materials
Gouache
Futurist paintings for sale on 1stDibs.
Find a wide variety of authentic Futurist paintings available for sale on 1stDibs. Works in this style were very popular during the 21st Century and Contemporary, but contemporary artists have continued to produce works inspired by this movement. If you’re looking to add paintings created in this style to introduce contrast in an otherwise neutral space in your home, the works available on 1stDibs include elements of blue and other colors. Many Pop art paintings were created by popular artists on 1stDibs, including Joseph Binder, Joseph Stella, Natalia Roman, and Anastasia Kurakina. Frequently made by artists working with Paint, and Oil Paint and other materials, all of these pieces for sale are unique and have attracted attention over the years. Not every interior allows for large Futurist paintings, so small editions measuring 11.8 inches across are also available. Prices for paintings made by famous or emerging artists can differ depending on medium, time period and other attributes. On 1stDibs, the price for these items starts at $650 and tops out at $85,000, while the average work sells for $2,533.
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