Purpose The aim of the artistic initiatives was and still is to get in touch with other artists, to point out
avant-garde or newly defined efforts in art in the broadest sense, to break away from traditional, academic approaches altogether, to break new ground and to follow them for example by organizing joint exhibitions. The boundaries between all areas of
fine and
applied art are fluid. In contrast to the mostly programmatically oriented artist collectives, only the costs for the use of common workspaces or artist
ateliers are usually shared in studio communities. Due to long-standing friendships, thematic joint exhibitions and the inevitable examination of the work of the other members, however, mixed forms can form that go beyond the pure community of convenience.
Between Artist Duo and Artists' Colony The transition from artist collective to
artist colony is also fluid. One speaks of the latter when it comes to large-scale settlements of artists of the same direction. Examples of this are the
Nazarene movement in Rome and the
Barbizon school. The decisive factor here is the personal decision of the individual to align their place of residence with that of like-minded artists, which can be conducive to the optimal further development of the respective art movement. The opposite extreme of an artist group is the artist duo – the smallest, but also the most symbiotic form. Often there are real-life partnerships (as with
Niki de Saint Phalle and
Jean Tinguely, or also with
Gilbert & George). It is not uncommon for larger groups of artists to emerge from the "nucleus" of a duo, such as the
Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, for example, developed from the founding duo
John Everett Millais and
William Holman Hunt.
Criteria for the term "art collective" or "art group" Designations such as "
The Tachists" or
Junge Wilde (The Young Wild Ones) cannot be assigned to any real groups of artists; they merely indicate common stylistic features within an epoch. A clear indication of the actual existence of such a group is a written memorandum such as that published in
André Breton's
Surrealist Manifesto in Paris in 1924 and signed by several like-minded artists. As a result, the members of such a group committed themselves to subordinate themselves to a common goal. This also included the group exhibitions, to which everyone should contribute their part instead of just showing themselves. ==Overview==