Asian Art
Artist
Performative Arts
Art Movements
Anything Goes
100

This Chinese dynasty, known for its blue and white porcelain, ruled from 1368 to 1644.

Ming Dynasty

100

This artist's "Mona Lisa" and "The Last Supper" are masterpieces of the Renaissance

Leonardo Da Vinci

100

This ancient Greek dramatic form involves the use of masks and a chorus to tell stories of gods, heroes, and moral lessons.

Greek Tragedy

100

Claude Monet's "Impression, Sunrise" is often credited with naming this movement.

Impressionism

100

This famous temple complex in Cambodia, built in the 12th century, is known for its intricate bas-reliefs and towering spires

Angkor Wat

200

This traditional Japanese art involves the arrangement of flowers in a harmonious and balanced way.

Ikebana

200

This artist is known for his frescoes in the Vatican's Apostolic Palace, including "The School of Athens

Raphael

200

This Argentine dance, characterized by its passionate and dramatic movements, is often performed with a close embrace between partners.

Tango

200

This late 19th-century movement emphasized dreams, emotions, and the spiritual.

Symbolism

200

This ancient form of Chinese bronze vessel, often used for ritual purposes, features intricate patterns and animal motifs.

Ding

300

This traditional form of Filipino tattooing, known for its intricate patterns, is practiced by the Kalinga people in the mountains of Luzon.

Batok

300

This Spanish painter is known for his Blue and Rose periods, and works like "The Old Guitarist."

Pablo Picasso

300

his form of Chinese opera, known for its colorful makeup, elaborate costumes, and acrobatic movements, originated during the Qing Dynasty.

Peking Opera

300

This post-World War II movement, characterized by spontaneous, abstract forms, began in New York City.

Abstract Expressionism

300

This traditional Chinese art involves creating miniature landscapes, often featuring rocks, water, and plants, in a small tray

Penjing

400

This traditional Filipino dance, which originated from the province of Pampanga, is performed during the harvest festival and involves balancing oil lamps on the head and hands.

Pandanggo sa Ilaw

400

This Spanish artist's melting clocks are a hallmark of Surrealism.

Salvador Dali

400

This Southeast Asian island nation is known for its wayang kulit, a traditional form of shadow puppetry.

Indonesia

400

This movement, known for its dream-like, fantastical imagery, was founded by André Breton in the 1920s

Surrealism

400

This type of Japanese painting, often found on folding screens, depicts natural scenes with gold leaf backgrounds

Byobu

500

This type of Korean pottery, known for its blue-green glaze and elegant forms, flourished during the Goryeo Dynasty.

Celadon

500

This Spanish artist's painting "The Third of May 1808" depicts the horrors of war and is a prime example of Romanticism

Francisco Goya

500

This traditional Japanese form of verbal entertainment involves a lone storyteller seated on stage, using only a paper fan and a cloth as props to narrate a comical or sentimental tale.

Rakugou

500

This art movement, emerging in the 1960s, is characterized by its use of bright, contrasting colors and repetitive patterns, often creating a sense of visual confusion and movement.

Psychedelic Art

500

This Japanese artist, known for his woodblock prints of Mount Fuji, created the famous series "Thirty-Six Views of Mount Fuji."

Katsushika Hokusai

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