Essay Topic Hub

Abstract Art
Essays

39+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

39 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic AI GENERATED

Abstract art refers to visual work that departs from accurate depictions of reality, using form, color, line, and composition to express ideas or emotions independent of recognizable subjects. Students encounter this topic across studio art courses, art history surveys, and aesthetic theory classes. It holds strong academic interest because it sits at the intersection of artistic technique, philosophy, and cultural history, raising fundamental questions about what art is meant to do and how meaning is created. Papers in this area often grapple with how artists define and redefine visual language, and how movements like Surrealism, Impressionism, Cubism, and Fauvism contributed to the broader development of abstraction as both a practice and a concept.

The papers archived here take a variety of approaches. Some are historical, tracing the evolution of artistic technique from landscape painting and Renaissance perspective through modernist movements. Others are comparative, examining connections between abstract art and related traditions such as Surrealism or Zen Buddhist thought. Artist-focused case studies also appear, looking at specific figures like Paul Klee to ground broader claims in concrete examples. A smaller number of papers engage with formalist theory, including how thinkers developed critical frameworks to reflect on and define abstract work.

A strong essay on abstract art needs a focused thesis that moves beyond simply describing what abstraction looks like toward arguing how or why it functions in a specific context. Visual evidence drawn from particular artworks carries the most weight, so close formal analysis is essential. The most common pitfall is treating "abstract art" as a single unified movement rather than acknowledging it as a broad and internally diverse tendency that artists have developed across many cultures and periods.

Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
Graphic Art it Is Possible
It is possible to study art in a variety of ways, because of the impact that it has had throughout human development. For example, art can be studied by looking at periods of specific art forms, such as impressionism or…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Poetic Themes of Female Writers
Long before Feminism was established as a movement in literature and the arts in general, America produced quite a few brilliant female writers who went before their time and demonstrated that women have a voice and can…
Paper Undergraduate
Paul Klee\'s Painting Style Reflects
Paul Klee's painting style reflects the two art movements with which he was most familiar: the Der Blaue Reiter and Bauhaus. Although his work changed in character and tone over the course of his career, paintings like…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Japanese artist Tawaraya Sotatsu and his work
Tawaraya Sotatsu is one of the biggest names in the history of art in Japan. He was not always considered thus, however. He had fallen into obscurity for several centuries after his death, and it was not until the early…
Paper Doctorate
Motherwell Visual and Philosophical Connections
In a formal philosophical sense Zen Buddhism was introduced to the West mainly through the works of D.T Suzuki and his extensive and insightful studies and commentaries on Zen texts.
Essay Doctorate
Artistic Technique as an Expression of the Modern World
This paper examines three different works of mid-20th century modern art: Jackson Pollock's White Light, Richard Hamilton's "Just What Is It that Makes Today's Homes So Different, So Appealing?" and Norman Rockwell's "Four Freedoms"--three very different works that all illustrate Pollock's view concerning the artist's mission to use unique technique.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Romanticism Art Help Roger Fry
At the root of the Formalist theory, an esthetic vision that conceives the understanding of art work through the pure forms that construct it, we can name Roger Elliot Fry as the main author of this particular approach…
Paper Doctorate
Art the Painting Techniques of the Impressionists,
This paper examines works by Impressionists, Fauvists and Cubists and shows how their techniques and objectives were different and how they related one to the other. It looks at works by Monet, Pissarro, Picasso, Gleizes, Braques and Matisse as well as others. It concludes that Impressionists sought to reflect beauty in nature, Fauvists sought to startle, and Cubists sought to disintegrate.
Research Paper Doctorate
Landscape Painting From the 17th Through the 20th Century
¶ … art historian W.J.T. Mitchell asserted that there is no doubt that the classical and romantic genres of landscape painting evolved during the great age of European imperialism but have since been retired, accepted…
Thesis Masters
Art One Point Linear Perspective in the Renaissance
This paper discuses the history of single-point perspective from the Easy Renaissance onwards. It explores the development of Western ideals of perceptive in the works of Masaccio and Brunelleschi, and others. The paper also discusses the denial of the centrality of perspective and the alternatives to perspective in modern. At the same time the fact that modern artists and art movements like Surrealism make use of single- point perspective is also discussed.