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tachisme

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tach·isme or tach·ism  (tshzm)
n.
A French school of art originating in the 1950s and characterized by irregular dabs and splotches of color applied haphazardly to the canvas.

[French tachisme, from tache, stain, from Old French teche, mark, of Germanic origin; see deik- in Indo-European roots.]

tachiste, tachist n.

tachisme [ˈtɑːʃɪzəm (French) taʃism]
n
(Fine Arts & Visual Arts / Art Terms) a type of action painting evolved in France in which haphazard dabs and blots of colour are treated as a means of instinctive or unconscious expression
[French, from tache stain]

Tachism, Tachisme
a movement of the early 1950s which claimed to be in revolt against both Abstractism and naturalism, taking its name from patches of color (Fr. taches) placed on canvas spontaneously and by chance, the result being considered an emotional projection rather than an expression or a symbol. Cf. Abstract Expressionism. — Tachist, Tachiste, n.
See also: Art


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While most of the art produced during SI's early years looks pretty much the same (violent, aggressive postwar painting a la tachisme, art informel and/or CoBrA), the most innovative LI and SI projects employed detournement, a method--which Debord distinguished from collage--of reusing recognized media to create a different message.
MH SIENA Group Zero Palazzo delle Papesse May 29-September 19 Curated by Marco Meneguzzo and Stephan von Wiese Just as a generation of artists in the States revolted against the expressionist ethos of action painting, in Europe art informel and tachisme engendered a host of countermovements in the late '50s.
In 1957, however, he reinvented himself once more, quitting his teaching post and resigning from the Royal Academy to go to France and pursue tachisme.
 
 
 
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