ACADEMY REALISM AESTHETIC MOVEMENT IMPRESSIONISM MODERN SCULPTURE SYMBOLISM POST-IMPRESSIONISM NEO-IMPRESSIONISM ART NOUVEAU ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) Founding of Hague School of painting; in existence until 1890 ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) A group of fourteen students leave the Imperial Academy of Arts, Russia, forming independent artistic society known as the “Peredvizhniki” ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) Establishment of Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture, one of largest educational institutions in Russia ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) Leo Tolstoy’s War and Peace published ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) Peredvizhniki form the Association of Traveling Exhibitions, in existence until 1923 ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) First Impressionist exhibition, Paris ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) Eighth and last Impressionist exhibition, Paris ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) Berlin Secession founded as alternative to conservative, state-run Association of Berlin Artists ![Green line](/images20/green_line_down.png) ![Green dot](/images20/green_dot.gif) Jews granted civil rights in every part of Germany, except Bavaria ![Green line](/images20/green_line_down.png) ![Green dot](/images20/green_dot.gif) Jews emancipated in England ![Green line](/images20/green_line_down.png) ![Green dot](/images20/green_dot.gif) Jews given equal rights in Russian-controlled Congress Poland ![Green line](/images20/green_line_down.png) ![Green dot](/images20/green_dot.gif) Ku Klux Klan organized to maintain "white supremacy" ![Green line](/images20/green_line_down.png) ![Green dot](/images20/green_dot.gif) Jews emancipated in Germany ![Green line](/images20/green_line_down.png) ![Green dot](/images20/green_dot.gif) The First Aliyah, first major wave of Jewish immigrants to build a homeland in Palestine; lasts until 1903 ![Green line](/images20/green_line_down.png) ![Green dot](/images20/green_dot.gif) Educational Alliance founded on New York’s Lower East Side to assist Eastern European immigrants ![Green line](/images20/green_line_down.png) ![Green dot](/images20/green_dot.gif) French artillery officer Alfred Dreyfus tried and convicted of treason based on fabricated evidence—an event later known as the Dreyfus Affair ![Green line](/images20/green_line_down.png) ![Green dot](/images20/green_dot.gif) First Zionist Congress held in Basel, Switzerland ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) Emancipation of Russian serfs ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) January Uprising: Polish-Lithuanan Commonwealth’s revolt against the Russian Empire ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) Austro-Prussian War, which results in dissolution of German Confederation and creation of North German Confederation and Austro-Hungarian Dual Monarchy ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) Franco-Prussian War; lasts until 1871 ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) Russo-Turkish War; ends in 1878 ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) Tsar Alexander II assassinated ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) France and the Russian Empire sign military alliance ![Purple line](/images20/purple_line_down.png) ![Puprle dot](/images20/purple_dot.gif) Russian critic Vladimir Stasov and artist Mark Antokolsky begin exploring concept of developing a handicraft-inspired Jewish art ![Purple line](/images20/purple_line_down.png) ![Puprle dot](/images20/purple_dot.gif) Beginning of strict quotas on Jews in Russian educational institutions; culminates in establishment of formal quota system in 1887 ![Purple line](/images20/purple_line_down.png) ![Puprle dot](/images20/purple_dot.gif) Sholem Aleichem begins writing first episode of life of Tevye the Dairyman ![Purple line](/images20/purple_line_down.png) ![Puprle dot](/images20/purple_dot.gif) First Jewish museum opens in Vienna ![Purple line](/images20/purple_line_down.png) ![Puprle dot](/images20/purple_dot.gif) Yehuda Pen founds first Jewish art school in Russian Empire, School of Drawing and Painting, in Vitebsk | MODERN PHOTOGRAPHY CUBISM FUTURISM COLLAGE READYMADE SUPREMATISM DADA DE STIJL ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) The Russo-Japanese War—“the first great war of the twentieth century”—begins; ends in 1905 ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) Russian Revolution of 1905 ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) Peak year for European immigration to the United States, with roughly 1,285,000 individuals entering the country ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) Archduke Franz Ferdinand assassinated, leading to start of World War I ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) World War I ends ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) Amedeo Modigliani arrives in Paris, among the many foreign artists to resettle in this city in the early decades of the twentieth century and form what comes to be known as the “École de Paris” ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) El Lissitzky creates his first Proun, an acronym for “Project for the Affirmation of the New.” ![Green line](/images20/green_line_down.png) ![Green dot](/images20/green_dot.gif) Blood libel case Beilis Affair begins in Russia; lasts until 1913 ![Green line](/images20/green_line_down.png) ![Green dot](/images20/green_dot.gif) American Jewish Relief Committee established to distribute funds to needy Jews; later combined with other Jewish relief organizations to become Joint Distribution Committee ![Green line](/images20/green_line_down.png) ![Green dot](/images20/green_dot.gif) Start of third major wave of pogroms; lasts until 1920 ![Purple line](/images20/purple_line_down.png) ![Puprle dot](/images20/purple_dot.gif) Magazine Ost und West, which regularly features articles on East and West European Jewish artists, founded in Berlin ![Purple line](/images20/purple_line_down.png) ![Puprle dot](/images20/purple_dot.gif) Bezalel School, which lends name to first Israeli art movement, founded in Jerusalem ![Purple line](/images20/purple_line_down.png) ![Puprle dot](/images20/purple_dot.gif) Jewish Historical and Ethnographic Society founded in St. Petersburg ![Purple line](/images20/purple_line_down.png) ![Puprle dot](/images20/purple_dot.gif) Jewish Society for the Encouragement of the Arts formed in Petrograd ![Purple line](/images20/purple_line_down.png) ![Puprle dot](/images20/purple_dot.gif) Hebrew theater Habimah founded in Moscow ![Purple line](/images20/purple_line_down.png) ![Puprle dot](/images20/purple_dot.gif) Yiddish cultural organization Kultur Lige established in Kiev ![Purple line](/images20/purple_line_down.png) ![Puprle dot](/images20/purple_dot.gif) State Jewish Chamber Theater founded in Moscow | CONSTRUCTIVISM SURREALISM BAUHAUS ART DECO NEUE SACHLICHKEIT/ NEW OBJECTIVITY TOTALITARIAN ART SOCIAL REALISM WELDED METAL SCULPTURE ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) Soviet Union officially established ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) Passage of Immigration Act in U.S., aimed, like the Emergency Quota Art of 1921, at restricting the flow of Southern and Eastern Europeans into the country ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) Adolf Hitler publishes Mein Kampf ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) Stock Market crash, signaling the start of the Great Depression ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) Franklin D. Roosevelt elected U.S. President ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) Comintern announces policy of Popular Front in response to rising threat of fascism ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) Spanish Civil War starts ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) Anschluss: Nazi Germany annexes Austria ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) Germany invades Poland, starting World War II ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) Start of German occupation of Paris; collaborationist Vichy regime established ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) Japanese forces bomb Pearl Harbor; U.S. enters World War II ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) World War II ends ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) Term “École de Paris” coined to describe group of foreign painters that resettled in the city in the years preceding and immediately following World War I ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) Museum of Modern Art opens in New York ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) Nazis close down the Bauhaus ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) Socialist Realism proclaimed as only permissible style of Soviet art ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) Roosevelt administration creates Works Progress Administration and Farm Security Administration ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) Walter Benjamin writes “The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction” ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) Paris Exposition Internationale des Arts et Techniques dans la Vie Moderne (“Paris World’s Fair) ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) Works Progress Administration closes ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) Farm Security Administration closes ![Green line](/images20/green_line_down.png) ![Green dot](/images20/green_dot.gif) Adolf Hitler comes to power in Germany, leading to a mass exodus of Jews, mostly to neighboring countries, particularly France ![Green line](/images20/green_line_down.png) ![Green dot](/images20/green_dot.gif) Soviet government establishes Jewish Autonomous Oblast in Birobidzhan to give Jews their own “unity of territory” ![Green line](/images20/green_line_down.png) ![Green dot](/images20/green_dot.gif) Kristallnacht: Jews attacked throughout Nazi Germany and parts of Austria, November 9–10 ![Green line](/images20/green_line_down.png) ![Green dot](/images20/green_dot.gif) Jewish refugees on SS. St. Louis denied American sanctuary by the U.S. government, forcing the ship’s return to Europe ![Green line](/images20/green_line_down.png) ![Green dot](/images20/green_dot.gif) News of systematic extermination of Jews in Nazi death camps reaches throughout the world ![Purple line](/images20/purple_line_down.png) ![Puprle dot](/images20/purple_dot.gif) Degenerate Art Exhibition ![Purple line](/images20/purple_line_down.png) ![Puprle dot](/images20/purple_dot.gif) Marc Chagall and Jacques Lipchitz flee Nazi-controlled France for the U.S., among the many European artists and intellectuals so helped by Varian Fry and Emergency Relief Committee | ART INFORMEL ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM KINETIC ART OP ART ASSEMBLAGE POP ART FLUXUS ARTE POVERA MINIMALISM POST-MINIMALISM CONCEPTUAL ART ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) Joseph Stalin dies ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) Treaty of Rome signed, leading to formation of European Economic Community the following year ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) Nikita Khrushchev appointed Soviet Premier ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) Fidel Castro becomes Prime Minister of Cuba ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) John F. Kennedy elected U.S. President ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) Cuban Missile Crisis ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) JFK assassinated; Lyndon B. Johnson succeeds to U.S. presidency ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) Leonid Brezhnev takes over as leader of Soviet Union ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) Women’s Strike for Equality held throughout U.S. ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) House Un-American Activities Committee holds nine days of hearings into alleged Communist influence in the Hollywood motion-picture industry ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) Barnett Newman paints Onement I ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) Jackson Pollock creates some of his most famous drip paintings ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) Harold Rosenberg’s essay “American Action Painters” appears in ARTnews ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) Vladimir Nabokov’s Lolita published in Paris; appears in New York in 1958 ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) Jackson Pollock dies in car crash ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) Boris Pasternak’s novel Doctor Zhivago first published; Pasternak awarded Nobel Prize for it the following year ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) Joseph Kosuth creates One and Three Chairs ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) Survey of Minimalism, Primary Structures, at the Jewish Museum, New York ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) Joseph Kosuth’s essay "Art After Philosophy" published ![Green line](/images20/green_line_down.png) ![Green dot](/images20/green_dot.gif) Hermann Goring commits suicide two hours before scheduled execution of first major group of Nazi war criminals at Nuremburg ![Green line](/images20/green_line_down.png) ![Green dot](/images20/green_dot.gif) General Assembly of the United Nations adopts partition plan for Palestine, calling for division into Jewish and Arab states, with Jerusalem-Bethlehem to be administered by the UN ![Green line](/images20/green_line_down.png) ![Green dot](/images20/green_dot.gif) Following its nationalization of Suez Canal, Egypt blockades the Gulf of Aqaba, closing the Suez Canal to Israeli shipping. Israel, England, and France go to war and force Egypt to end blockade and open the canal to all nations ![Green line](/images20/green_line_down.png) ![Green dot](/images20/green_dot.gif) Adolf Eichmann captured in Argentina by Israeli Secret Service ![Green line](/images20/green_line_down.png) ![Green dot](/images20/green_dot.gif) Eichmann tried in Jerusalem for crimes against the Jewish people, crimes against humanity, and war crimes; hanged In Ramla, the following year ![Green line](/images20/green_line_down.png) ![Green dot](/images20/green_dot.gif) Vatican II revolutionizes Christian-Jewish relations ![Green line](/images20/green_line_down.png) ![Green dot](/images20/green_dot.gif) Six-Day War between Israel and neighboring states of Egypt, Jordan, and Syria ![Purple line](/images20/purple_line_down.png) ![Puprle dot](/images20/purple_dot.gif) Primo Levi publishes If This Is a Man, account of his year as a prisoner at Auschwitz ![Purple line](/images20/purple_line_down.png) ![Puprle dot](/images20/purple_dot.gif) Yad Vashem, Israel’ official memorial to the Jewish victims of the Holocaust, established through Yad Vashem Law passed by the Knesset ![Purple line](/images20/purple_line_down.png) ![Puprle dot](/images20/purple_dot.gif) Alain Resnais directs French documentary short film Night and Fog, featuring abandoned grounds of Auschwitz and Majdanek and describing lives of prisoners in the camps ![Purple line](/images20/purple_line_down.png) ![Puprle dot](/images20/purple_dot.gif) Elie Wiesel’s account of his and his father’s experiences as prisoners at Auschwitz and Buchenwald, appears in France as La Nuit; published in U.S. as Night in 1960 ![Purple line](/images20/purple_line_down.png) ![Puprle dot](/images20/purple_dot.gif) Hannah Arendt, a Jew who fled Germany during Adolf Hitler's rise to power and reported on the Eichmann trial for The New Yorker, publishes Eichmann in Jerusalem ![Purple line](/images20/purple_line_down.png) ![Puprle dot](/images20/purple_dot.gif) Harold Rosenberg, major art critic associated with Abstract Expressionism, delivers talk “Is There a Jewish Art?” at New York’s Jewish Museum | PERFORMANCE ART LAND ART GRAFFITI ART NEO-EXPRESSIONISM ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) Vietnam War ends ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) SALT II Treaty signed by Jimmy Carter and Leonid Brezhnev ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) Ronald Reagan elected U.S. President ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) Leonid Brezhnev dies ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) Mikhail Gorbachev becomes head of Soviet Union ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) Fall of Berlin Wall ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) Bill Clinton elected U.S. President ![Red line](/images20/red_line_down.png) ![Red dot](/images20/red_dot.gif) Bill Clinton reelected U.S. President ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) Linda Nochlin publishes groundbreaking essay “Why Have There Been No Great Women Artists?” in ArtNews ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) Joseph Beuys stages groundbreaking performance I Like America and America Likes Me at Rene Block Gallery, New York ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) First issue of the feminist art magazine Heresies published ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) Pablo Picasso's Guernica(1937) sent to Madrid, after being on extended loan at New York's MoMA since 1939 ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) Christo and Jeanne-Claude complete one of their major projects, Surrounded Islands, in which they surround islands in Miami’s Biscayne Bay with pink polypropylene fabric ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) Following eight-year-long controversy surrounding Richard Serra’s Tilted Arc (1981), the sculpture is dismantled and then consigned to a New York warehouse ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) Vincent Van Gogh’s Portrait of Dr. Gachet (1890) sells at Christie’s auction for $82.5 million ![Blue line](/images20/blue_line_down.png) ![Blue dot](/images20/blue_dot.gif) The exhibition Sensation: Young British Artists from the Charles Saatchi Collection provokes major scandal in New York, after previous scandal in London ![Green line](/images20/green_line_down.png) ![Green dot](/images20/green_dot.gif) Start of large-scale emigration of Jews from Soviet Union, when about 13,000 Soviet Jews and their relatives leave the country ![Green line](/images20/green_line_down.png) ![Green dot](/images20/green_dot.gif) Munich Massacre: members of Israeli Olympic team taken hostage and then killed at Munich Olympics by members of Palestinian group Black September ![Green line](/images20/green_line_down.png) ![Green dot](/images20/green_dot.gif) Yom Kippur War ![Green line](/images20/green_line_down.png) ![Green dot](/images20/green_dot.gif) Comprehensive peace treaty Camp David Accords signed by Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat ![Green line](/images20/green_line_down.png) ![Green dot](/images20/green_dot.gif) Start of First Intifada, Palestinian uprising against Israeli occupation of Palestinian Territories ![Green line](/images20/green_line_down.png) ![Green dot](/images20/green_dot.gif) Madrid Conference, early international attempt to launch Middle East peace process ![Green line](/images20/green_line_down.png) ![Green dot](/images20/green_dot.gif) Oslo Accords, an outgrowth of Madrid Conference, seeking to resolve Palestinian-Israeli conflict; signed in presence of PLO chairman Yasser Arafat, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, and U.S. President Bill Clinton ![Green line](/images20/green_line_down.png) ![Green dot](/images20/green_dot.gif) Yitzhak Rabin assassinated ![Purple line](/images20/purple_line_down.png) ![Puprle dot](/images20/purple_dot.gif) Jewish artists’ group Aleph formed in Leningrad to exhibit “a group of works linked to the spirit and life of the Jewish people and its national and cultural traditions ![Purple line](/images20/purple_line_down.png) ![Puprle dot](/images20/purple_dot.gif) Isaac Bashevis Singer awarded Nobel Prize in Literature ![Purple line](/images20/purple_line_down.png) ![Puprle dot](/images20/purple_dot.gif) French filmmaker Claude Lanzmann completes Shoah, nine-hour thirty-six minute documentary film about the Holocaust ![Purple line](/images20/purple_line_down.png) ![Puprle dot](/images20/purple_dot.gif) Elie Wiesel wins Nobel Peace Prize ![Purple line](/images20/purple_line_down.png) ![Puprle dot](/images20/purple_dot.gif) Steven Spielberg directs Schindler's List, about the German businessman who saved the lives of more than a thousand mostly Polish-Jewish refugees during the Holocaust United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, official U.S. memorial to the Holocaust, opens in Washington, D.C., adjacent to the National Mall |