ArtistsLéopold Survage
Léopold Survage

Léopold Survage

Artist
PaintingCubismAbstract Art
Representation
None documented
8
Institutional Exhibitions
80
Works in Collection
151
Assets Indexed
0
Authority-backed Facts
0
Publications Referenced
90%
Profile Completeness

Cultural Positioning

Movements
  • Cubism
  • Abstract Art
Related Artists
No edges recorded
Influence Graph
No influence edges encoded yet.

Selected Institutional Exhibitions

View all exhibitions →
No image
Iliazd and the Illustrated Book
Museum of Modern Art, New York
1987
No image
Prints: Acquisitions, 1973�1976
Museum of Modern Art, New York
1976–1977
No image
Cubism and Its Affinities
Museum of Modern Art, New York
1976
No image
Seurat to Matisse: Drawing in France
Museum of Modern Art, New York
1974
No image
New Acquisitions and Extended Loans: Cubist and Abstract Art
Museum of Modern Art, New York
1942
About

Why this artist matters now

Léopold Survage was a French painter and filmmaker whose work pioneered abstract animation in the early twentieth century. He developed a distinctive approach to color abstraction through oil painting and experimental film, creating geometric compositions that moved between pure abstraction and organic form. His practice bridged painting, printmaking, and cinema, exploring rhythm and movement as fundamental pictorial elements. Active from the 1910s through the 1960s, Survage maintained a rigorous formal vocabulary centered on the relationship between color, line, and temporal sequence.

Source: Moma Bulk 2026 05 04 · Trust score: 92% · Updated 25d ago

Graph relationships

Taste overlap and adjacency

Movement
Cubism
Medium
Painting
Related Artists
12 in graph
Institutional

Museum Collections

Canonical record

Artworks (80)

View all 80 artworks →
Record

Images

Abstract Cityscape (Art Institute of Chicago)
Art Institute of Chicago
Record

Movements and affiliations

Institutional

Representation & Collections

In collection
Art Institute of Chicago
In collection
Museum of Modern Art
New York, US
Record

Exhibitions and timeline