Avant Garde Movement

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Avant Garde Avant Garde was the most controversial art movements that originated in France in the mid 1800s. Avant Garde art was drawn about the working class of the world. Coubet being one of the first artist of the Avant Garde movement claimed he was the best artist in France. Artist named Millet was also portraying the working class in his art. Millet highly inspired Van Gogh and Dali. Salvador Dali was a key figure in the Avant Garde Movement. Dali was a master of surrealism, taking the French movement to a new level. Dali desired to paint on a level that all people would be able to understand. The effect people unwillingly played right into his hand and began to question and reevaluate their moral standards. Dali was successful in his attempt to make a closed minded society broaden their perspective and evaluate what they hold as real and true. Though these Avant Garde artists despised the system, they lived by the system, and eventually found themselves liking their patrons. Later down the road the Avant Garde Movement began to take another role in society. The avant garde wished to serve as the moral conscience of the upper class much like religion does. Work by Heizser brought religious associations with his rock sculpture out in the middle of the desert. The work emphasized through physical isolation and the social isolation of the artwork while fighting the myth that to be of value the artwork had to be portable, tradable, and able to hang on one's wall. The downfall of the Avant Garde Movement was to push the elite society to broaden their perspective and validate the artwork of the expressionist. Eventually people were no longer able to see the meaning in the works because they were too consumed by its price tag. The Avant Garde could no longer be the conscience of the upper class because it was now the
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