Puteaux Group
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Puteaux Group is the name applied to a group of European artists and critics associated with an offshoot of Cubism known as Orphism. The group was formed around 1911 by gathering regularly to discuss their views at the home of Jacques Villon in Puteaux, which was at that time a village in the western outskirts of Paris, France.
The group's name was adopted by them in order to distinguish themselves from the narrower definition of Cubism developed earlier by Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque in the Montmartre quarter of Paris. They came to prominence in the wake of their controversial showing at the Salon des Indépendants in the spring of 1911.
Some members of the Puteaux Group were:
- Guillaume Apollinaire - (1880-1918), Italian
- Robert Delaunay - (1885-1941), French
- Marcel Duchamp - (1887-1968), French
- Raymond Duchamp-Villon - (1876-1918), French
- Roger de la Fresnaye - (1885-1925), French
- Albert Gleizes - (1881-1953), French
- Frantisek Kupka - (1871-1957), Czech
- Henri Le Fauconnier - (1881-1946), French
- Fernand Léger - (1881-1955), French
- Louis Marcoussis - (1878-1941), Polish
- Jean Metzinger - (1883-1956), French
- Francis Picabia - (1879-1953), French/Spanish
- Georges Ribemont-Dessaignes - (1884-1974), French
- Jacques Villon - (1875-1963), French
- Alexander Calder -(1898-1976), American
- Jeanne Rij-Rousseau - (1870-1956), French