Academic literature on the topic 'Sculpture – XXe siècle'
Create a spot-on reference in APA, MLA, Chicago, Harvard, and other styles
Consult the lists of relevant articles, books, theses, conference reports, and other scholarly sources on the topic 'Sculpture – XXe siècle.'
Next to every source in the list of references, there is an 'Add to bibliography' button. Press on it, and we will generate automatically the bibliographic reference to the chosen work in the citation style you need: APA, MLA, Harvard, Chicago, Vancouver, etc.
You can also download the full text of the academic publication as pdf and read online its abstract whenever available in the metadata.
Journal articles on the topic "Sculpture – XXe siècle"
Tsagkari, Nikoleta. "Isabelle Waldberg, sculpteur (1911-1990) : une trajectoire émancipée." Source(s) – Arts, Civilisation et Histoire de l’Europe, no. 8-9 (October 19, 2022): 119–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.57086/sources.304.
Full textLapacherie, Jean-Gérard. "Artiste ou artisan ?" Figures de l'Art. Revue d'études esthétiques 7, no. 1 (2003): 41–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/fdart.2003.1266.
Full textDufrêne, Thierry, and Paul-Louis Rinuy. "La sculpture du XXe siècle, une histoire en cours. État des recherches en France." Histoire de l'art 44, no. 1 (1999): 3–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/hista.1999.2838.
Full textNachtchokina, Mariya. "Метаморфозы восприятия стиля модерн в россии." Modernités Russes 11, no. 1 (2010): 293–305. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/modru.2010.934.
Full textFouilloux, Étienne. "Sculpture moderne ou sculpture du 20e siècle ?" Vingtième Siècle, revue d'histoire 14, no. 1 (1987): 90–100. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/xxs.1987.1863.
Full textJurkovic, Miljenko. "La sculpture du XIe siècle en Dalmatie." Bulletin de la Société Nationale des Antiquaires de France 1999, no. 1 (2002): 222–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/bsnaf.2002.10385.
Full textDurliat, Marcel. "La sculpture du XIe siècle en Occident." Bulletin Monumental 152, no. 2 (1994): 129–213. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/bulmo.1994.3458.
Full textOmodeo, Christian. "Marbre et sculpture en Italie au xixe siècle." Perspective, no. 3 (September 30, 2007): 468–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/perspective.3620.
Full textPingeot, Anne. "La sculpture du XIXe siècle. La dernière décennie." Revue de l'Art 104, no. 1 (1994): 5–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/rvart.1994.348118.
Full textHardgrove, James. "Corpus de sculptures françaises du XIXe siècle." Perspective, no. 3 (September 30, 2006): 407–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/perspective.4239.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Sculpture – XXe siècle"
Varia, Radu. "Brancusi : une recherche du spirituel dans l'art du XXe siècle." Paris, EHESS, 1989. http://www.theses.fr/1989EHES0335.
Full textConstantin brancusi, the greatest sculptor of modern times, was born at the very centre of the landspace between the carpathian mountains and the danube. A repository of europe's most ancient civilisations, this is an environment particularly conducive to vivid awareness of the values of the archaic consciousness, perpetuated through primary, primeval forms, unmodified by time, remaining contemporaneous with its own eternity. Each time a genius brings out the archaic structure in a work that resuscitates and revitalises it, the work itself becomes contemporaneous with its origins. Brancusi would recreate the monumentality, the same urge for lastigness, the same radiant purity of primary forms that characterised the sacred sculpture and architecture of ancient egypt. Egyptian in its form, hinu its spiritual quest (the sculptor's favorite reading was the jetsun kahbum, with its teachings of the elventh century tibetan monk milarepa), brancusi's art also exudes the full force of its celtic inspiration. This study, based largely on documents which are revealed here for the first time, seeks to analyse and clarify these various aspects of the spiritual approach in brancusi's work, considered from the formal, mystical and mathematical angles
Le, Follic-Hadida Stéphanie. "L'oiseau dans la sculpture du XXe siècle : animal, emblème, vol, envol et apesanteur." Paris 1, 2001. http://www.theses.fr/2001PA010672.
Full textRionnet, Florence. "Le rôle de la Maison Barbedienne (1834-1954) dans la diffusion de la sculpture aux XIXe et XXe siècles : considérations sur les bronzes d’édition et l’histoire du goût." Paris 4, 2006. http://www.theses.fr/2006PA040092.
Full textThe Maison Barbedienne was founded in 1834 and was one of the most important companies of art bronzes in the 19th century in France. As early as 1838, the founder of the company, Ferdinand Barbedienne (1810-1892), formed a partnership with Achille Collas (1795-1859) – the man who invented the process for the automatic reduction of statues. This enabled him to widely spread the production of small bronzes in series. His success resulted mostly from his policy and commercial strategy. His choice of an “academic” catalogue – close to the prevailing taste – fits the wishes of his middle class clients, who requested safe values. He managed to distinguish himself from the other founders by using fashionable living artists such as Antonin Mercié or Paul Dubois. His regular attendance at the Expositions Universelles and the numerous prizes that he won favoured the extension of the company which counted several hundred workers at the beginning of the Third Republic. This Golden Age ended at the turn of the century, when small-size industrial sculpture partly lost its appeal because clients began to request “originality”, and sculptors asked for more control. Gustave Leblanc-Barbedienne (1849-1945), Ferdinand’s nephew and successor, and his son Jules (1882-1961) failed to give a new impetus to the company in spite of their efforts. The company disappeared in December 1954, as a result of the depressed economic climate which followed the 1929 crisis and the 2nd World War and – above all – due to the general lack of appreciation of artistic bronzes and the values that they conveyed
Monvoisin, Alain. "Analyse d'une procédure "in progress" à la lumière des modes de liaison utilisés dans quelques systèmes sculpturaux du XXe siècle, de l'objet au site." Paris 8, 1998. http://www.theses.fr/1998PA081316.
Full textThis thesis is on plastic arts. It questions a personal artistic work which uses different media (painting, sculpture, object, photography. . . ) and which belongs to the form of art most often called installation. Its generic title is le monde est tout ce qui arrive (named lmetcqa for short), referring to the first proposition of the tractatus logico-philosophicus of ludwig wittgenstein. This work has been going on for several years, taking the form of a "work in progress". However, the thesis itself is the study of a sequence lasting only a few months which is made up of 10 stages. The principle is that each installation grows richer than the precedent through the addition of new elements at the same time as some other elements transmit from one installation to the next, taking on different functions and spatial positions. The constitutive elements come from extracting operations out the real or from previous personal works which apply in the new context. This thesis analyses the technical, conceptual, linguistic bindind modes which link the different constituents of the elements, the elements in relation to one another as well as the installative stages (in relation to one another), taking inspiration from certain representative works of art selected from the history of 20th century western sculpture, and more particularly from those which were not conceived in a monolithic way
Gleyze, Valentin. "Alina Szapocznikow à Paris (1963-1973) : une histoire culturelle du champ élargi de la sculpture en France au tournant des années 1960." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Rennes 2, 2023. http://www.theses.fr/2023REN20042.
Full textThe last decade of the Polish sculptor Alina Szapocznikow's (1926-1973) career in Paris is a particularly rich case study for art history. Indeed, while the artist's work between her establishment in the French capital in 1963 and her death in 1973 belonged to sculpture, she challenged its traditional means. Its use of plastic, moulding and readymade objects, its increasing dematerialisation (in connection with conceptual art) and its utilitarian status (in the case of design objects) pushes its towards what has been called the "expanded field" of this medium, in a very singular way. The thesis thus aims to open up Szapocznikow's work in the light of a cultural history of this expanded field of sculpture, situating it within a history of materials, exhibitions, art criticism and the market, and placing it in dialogue with other artists of its time. Our study is divided into two parts which are two unfoldings of Szapocznikow's production in Paris. The first part looks at Szapocznikow and other artists' experiments with the utilitarian object, in the wake of the 1962 exhibition "Antagonismes 2 – L'Objet" at the Musée des Arts Décoratifs, which sparked a vital debate about the role played by artists in inventing "useful forms”. The second part focuses on Szapocznikow's final years, when her experience of cancer reviving the trauma of the concentration camps results in an individual mythology that serves a narrative of the self as a body preparing for imminent death
Autissier, Anne. "La sculpture romane en Bretagne, XIe-XIIe siècles." Poitiers, 2001. http://www.theses.fr/2001POIT5010.
Full textKern, Pierre-Gilles. "Autour de la Ruche, les cités d’artistes à Paris (XIXe-XXe siècles)." Paris 4, 2007. http://www.theses.fr/2007PA040094.
Full textThis thesis treats the phenomenon of Parisian artist’s gathered in a hundred groups of private houses since two centuries. The first part deals with the origin of this movement concerning, at the beginning, official artists with “le Louvre”, since the reign of Henri IV, then “la Sorbonne”, in particular, from the years 1800 to 1820 ; this reality has been spreading out progressively at the less well-off artists, installed at the end of century XIXth in places like “la Cité Falguière”, “la Cité fleurie”, “la Villa des arts”, “le Bateau-Lavoir”. The second part concentrates on the analysis of the first years to 1945 of a special colony but representing the whole, “la Ruche” : its creator, the sculptor Alfred Boucher, opened indiscriminately the city in 1902 for painters, sculptors, musicians. . . Frenchmen as well as foreigners, then the period of the First World War, with its refugees, who modified this community up to its decline. The third part proposes, on the one hand, from the thirties up to today, the study of the principal new places, exp : “Montmartre aux artistes”, “la Cité internationale des arts”, the problem concerning groups of private houses demolitions, the actual ways of occupation ; on the other hand, the new development of “la Ruche”, which is well known and an art seller, made an active copy in Japan
Derrot, Sophie. "Michel Liénard (1810-1870) : luxuriance et modestie de l'ornement au XIXe siècle." Paris, EPHE, 2014. http://www.theses.fr/2014EPHE4009.
Full textThe ornemanist occupies an essential but hardely well defined place in the creative processes of the decorative arts world of the ninteenth century. Michel Liénard (1810-1870) takes place in the heart of the society of ornament; he is one of these curious artists, involved in many decorative fields, both turned to past and contantely looking for progress and innovation. As a specialist of the néo-Renaissance style and ecclecticism in general, Michel Liénard collaborated with the great names of the time: the goldsmith François-Désiré Froment-Meurice as well as the furniture house of the Grohé brothers or the organ maker Aristide Cavaillé-Coll. His works are related to religious sculpture (royal chapel of Dreux, Sainte-Clotilde church in Paris), interior decoration (palace of the Ministry of Foreign Affaires in Paris) or Haussmann's renovation of the capital. This biographical study goes along with a repertory of the artists who Liénard sees during his carrier (ornamentists, sculptors, architects, company heads) and who are often related to one another by professional and personnal bounds
Flammin, Anne. "La sculpture du VIe au Xe siècle entre Loire et Gironde." Poitiers, 1999. http://www.theses.fr/1999POIT5015.
Full textVanderheyde, Catherine. "La sculpture architecturale méso byzantine empire du Xe au XIIIe siècle." Paris 1, 1996. http://www.theses.fr/1996PA010682.
Full textThe subject of the thesis concerns the study of the middle-byzantine architectural sculpture of Epiros. All in all, 235 reliefs - of which 76 are unpublished - from the 10th to the 13th century are gathered in a catalogue. The history of the places from which the reliefs come has been studied in the first part of the thesis. The second part deals with the stones, the tools and the carving techniques used by the sculptor. The third part is a thorough study of the reliefs' patterns. These three parts of the thesis show the main characteristics of the mesobyzantine sculpture of Epiros. Beside the archaeological discoveries (sculptors' workshops, patterns' diffusion,. . . ). This study proves the existence of an urban development in epiros in the mesobyzantine period, before the birth of the despotate
Books on the topic "Sculpture – XXe siècle"
Hôtel Drouot. Collection Cavalero: Peinture et sculpture du XXe siècle. Paris: Hôtel Drouot, 2002.
Find full textLa statuaire johannique du XVIe au XXe siècle. Vesoul: Mugnier, 2008.
Find full textPaire, Alain. Peinture et sculpture à Marseille au XXe siècle (1906-1999). [Marseille]: Éditions Jeanne Laffitte, 1999.
Find full textGoyens de Heusch, Serge, 1939-, ed. XXe siècle, l'art en Wallonie: Peinture, sculpture, gravure, tapisserie, photograpie, architecture. Tournai, Belgique: Renaissance du livre, 2001.
Find full textFrance) Musée des beaux-arts (Lyon. Sculptures: Du XVIIe au XXe siècle : musée des beaux-arts de Lyon. Lyon]: Musée des beaux-arts de Lyon, 2017.
Find full texteditor, Gaudichon Bruno, ed. Le travail, la lutte & les passions: Bronzes belges au tournant du XXe siècle : autour de la donation Philippe et Françoise Mongin. Lille]: Éditions Invenit, 2019.
Find full textLes guerriers et les chevaux en terre cuite des Qin: Une des plus importantes découvertes du XXe siècle. Bejing, Chine: Éditions de la Chine populaire, 1997.
Find full textDenise, Grouard, ed. Les orientalistes: Dictionnaire des sculpteurs, XIXe-XXe siècles. Paris: L'Amateur, 2008.
Find full textHôtel Drouot. Sculptures des XIXe et XXe siècles. Paris: Massol S.A., 2003.
Find full textTajan, Espace. Tableaux & sculptures des XIXe et XXe siècles. Paris: Tajan, 2001.
Find full textBook chapters on the topic "Sculpture – XXe siècle"
Chappey, Frédéric. "Sculpture XVIe-XIXe siècles." In Historiographie de l'histoire de l'art religieux en France à l'époque moderne et contemporaine, 29–34. Turnhout: Brepols Publishers, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1484/m.behe-eb.4.00815.
Full textMarguerite, Marie-Lys. "Albus et candidus: usages du blanc sur quelques sculptures pisanes en bois de la fin du xive au début du xve siècle." In Études Renaissantes, 35–47. Turnhout: Brepols Publishers, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1484/m.er-eb.4.00139.
Full textPowell, Véronique Gérard. "La sculpture polychrome espagnole dans la France du XIXe et début du XXe siècle." In Les échanges artistiques entre la France et l’Espagne, xve-fin xixe siècles, 223–33. Presses universitaires de Perpignan, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pupvd.7812.
Full textGheerardyn, Claire. "Identités de sculpteur : l’artiste moindre (xixe‑xxie siècle)." In Identités de l’artiste, 39–61. Éditions universitaires de Dijon, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.eud.3877.
Full textBresc-Bautier, Geneviève. "Les réseaux des sculpteurs parisiens sous Henri IV et Louis XIII." In La forme des réseaux : France et Europe (xe-xxe siècle), 9–25. Éditions du Comité des travaux historiques et scientifiques, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.cths.657.
Full textRinuy, Paul-Louis. "Entretien avec le sculpteur Denis Monfleur « Je sculpte des têtes, l’ensemble de la tête, pas seulement des visages »." In Sainte Face, visage de Dieu, visage de l’homme dans l’art contemporain (xixe - xxie siècle), 197–99. Presses universitaires de Paris Nanterre, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pupo.20942.
Full textRoland, Recht. "Avant-propos." In La sculpture allemande du xie au xiiie siècle, 7–8. Presses universitaires de Strasbourg, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pus.36663.
Full textPanofsky, Erwin. "Index des lieux." In La sculpture allemande du xie au xiiie siècle, 459–62. Presses universitaires de Strasbourg, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pus.36708.
Full textFreigang, Christian. "Présentation." In La sculpture allemande du xie au xiiie siècle, 9–38. Presses universitaires de Strasbourg, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pus.36673.
Full textPanofsky, Erwin. "Index bibliographique et commentaires des planches." In La sculpture allemande du xie au xiiie siècle, 105–205. Presses universitaires de Strasbourg, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pus.36703.
Full textConference papers on the topic "Sculpture – XXe siècle"
Jaurégui, Léa. "La sculpture chimérique, la sculpture confisquée." In Les chefs-d'œuvre inconnus au XIXe siècle. Fabula, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.58282/colloques.6912.
Full text