Robert-Victor-Félix
Delaunay was born April 12, 1885, in Paris. By 1909, Delaunay
had progressed from a neoimpressionist phase to cubism,
applying cubist principles to the exploration of color.
He immediately enlarged cubist themes to include the architecture
of cities. He became a major figure in the movement Apollinaire
termed orphism.
This amalgam of fauve color, futurist dynamism, and analytical
cubism sought to emulate the rhythms but not the appearance
of nature. Delaunay is most famous for his series of paintings
of the Eiffel Tower; one of them is in the Solomon R.
Guggenheim Museum, New York City.
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