Museum of contemporary Art
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On this page, we review the best works of contemporary art
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Mother, spinning and weaving factory. Photo by Kamran Adel
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Wassily Kandinsky, Transverse Line, 1923.
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Andy Warhol’s Campbell’s Soup Cans, 1962
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Untitled, Bahman Mohasses
1962
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Young woman stands behind men during anti - Shah demonstration. Tehran, Iran. 1978.
Abbas | Magnum Photos
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No. 1 (Royal Red and Blue) - Mark Rothko
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Girl Before a Mirror 1932 by Pablo Picasso Art
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The Royal Family of Iran, Andy Warhol 1978,
Farah Diba was the last queen of Iran. She was a lover of art and in an effort to create new Iranian art, she founded the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art in cooperation with Kamran Diba, a great Iranian architect.
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The Great Masturbator (1929)

This is one of the most famous Salvador Dalí's surrealist paintings, and this art mainly represents the artist’s fear of female sexuality and castration. Nevertheless, it also highlights the potential to attain sexual and spiritual liberation.
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Louise Bourgeois, Spider, 1997. Steel, tapestry, wood, glass, fabric, rubber, silver, gold, and bone – variable dimensions. Photograph: Maximilian Geuter /The Easton Foundation / VEGAP, Madrid.
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Pablo Picasso, Les Demoiselles d’Avignon, 1907. Oil on canvas – 243.9 x 233.7 cm. Collection MoMA, New York.
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The Persistence of Memory (1931)

Another famous Salvador Dalí's surrealist artwork can be described as a 'hand-painted dream photograph.' With this painting, he applied quite a few methods of surrealism and wanted to tap into the non-rational mechanisms of his mind.
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René Magritte's Son of Man (1964). © Charly Herscovici, Brussels /Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.
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René Magritte’s La Courbure de l’univers (The Curvature of the Universe) (1950). The Menil Collection, © Charly Herscovici, Brussels/Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY. Photo: Paul Hester.
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Robert Rauschenberg, Rebus, 1955. Oil, alkyd paint, pencil, crayon, pastel, cut-and-pasted printed and painted papers, and fabric on canvas mounted and stapled to fabric, three panels – 243.8 x 333.1 cm. Collection MoMA, New York / © 2021 Robert Rauschenberg Foundation
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Contemporary art styles in one image
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Robert Rauschenberg, Rebus, 1955. Oil, alkyd paint, pencil, crayon, pastel, cut-and-pasted printed and painted papers, and fabric on canvas mounted and stapled to fabric, three panels – 243.8 x 333.1 cm. Collection MoMA, New York / © 2021 Robert Rauschenberg Foundation
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René Magritte’s La Courbure de l’univers (The Curvature of the Universe) (1950). The Menil Collection, © Charly Herscovici, Brussels/Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY. Photo: Paul Hester.
mocart.bsky.social
René Magritte's Son of Man (1964). © Charly Herscovici, Brussels /Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.
Reposted by Museum of contemporary Art
mocart.bsky.social
On this page, we review the best works of contemporary art
mocart.bsky.social
Wassily Kandinsky, Transverse Line, 1923.
mocart.bsky.social
Louise Bourgeois, Spider, 1997. Steel, tapestry, wood, glass, fabric, rubber, silver, gold, and bone – variable dimensions. Photograph: Maximilian Geuter /The Easton Foundation / VEGAP, Madrid.
mocart.bsky.social
Pablo Picasso, Les Demoiselles d’Avignon, 1907. Oil on canvas – 243.9 x 233.7 cm. Collection MoMA, New York.
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‏This included imagination, dreams, and even the subconscious to create the unreal forms and shapes that form the painting. Since 1934, it has been a part of the Museum of Modern Art’s collection.
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