The term flatness can be used to describe much of the popular American art work of the 1950s and 1960s. The art of this period had a basic yet colorful design that held a degree of two dimensional form. Thus the term flatness is used to describe this medium. The groundwork idea for
Minimalism began in
Russia in 1913 when
Kazimir Malevich placed a
black square on a white background claiming that: Art no longer cares to serve the state and religion it no longer wishes to illustrate the history of manners, it wants to have nothing further to do with the object as such, and believes that it can exist in and for itself without things. One of the first
Minimalism artworks was created in 1964 by
Dan Flavin. He produced a neon sculpture titled
Monument for V. Tatlin. This work was a simplistic assembly of neon tubes that were not carved or constructed in any way. The idea was that they were not supposed to symbolize anything but to just merely exist. The Minimalist approach to art was to conceive by the mind before execution. Traditional modes of art composition were rejected in favor of improvisation, spontaneity and
automatism. This new
expressionist style consisted of improvised pattern making where every stroke of the brush was viewed as expression and subjective freedom. ==Pop Art==