School of Paris
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School of Paris
Summary
School of Paris is an art movement[1]. It draws 436 Wikipedia views per month (art_movement category, ranking #114 of 334).[2]
Key Facts
- School of Paris's instance of is recorded as art movement[3].
- School of Paris's instance of is recorded as art group[4].
- The location of School of Paris was Paris[5].
- School of Paris's Commons category is recorded as École de Paris[6].
- School of Paris comprises Q112685506[7].
- School of Paris comprises Fauvism[8].
- School of Paris comprises cubism[9].
- School of Paris's topic's main category is recorded as Category:School of Paris[10].
- School of Paris's described at URL is recorded as https://www.kettererkunst.com/dict/nouvelle-ecole-de-paris.php[11].
- School of Paris's described at URL is recorded as https://stedelijkstudies.com/journal/ecole-de-paris-in-and-out-of-paris-1928-1930-a-transregional-perspective/[12].
- School of Paris's excluding is recorded as abstract art[13].
- School of Paris's excluding is recorded as surrealism[14].
- School of Paris's topic has template is recorded as Template:École de Paris[15].
- School of Paris's significant person is recorded as Pablo Picasso[16].
- School of Paris's significant person is recorded as Moïse Kisling[17].
- School of Paris's significant person is recorded as Maurice Utrillo[18].
- School of Paris's significant person is recorded as Marc Chagall[19].
- School of Paris's significant person is recorded as Chaïm Soutine[20].
- School of Paris's significant person is recorded as Q469063[21].
- School of Paris's significant person is recorded as Amedeo Modigliani[22].
Body
Brands and Namesakes
Things named for School of Paris include Musée Mendjisky - Écoles de Paris[23], an art museum[24], in France[25], founded in 2014[26].
Why It Matters
School of Paris draws 436 Wikipedia views per month (art_movement category, ranking #114 of 334).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 22 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[27] It is known by 23 alternative names across languages and contexts.[28]
Entities named for it include Musée Mendjisky - Écoles de Paris[23], an art museum[24], in France[25], founded in 2014[26].