Here's what artist styles actually are: they're the specific combination of choices—brushwork, color, composition, subject matter—that makes one creator's work instantly recognizable. You know a Frida Kahlo when you see one, just like you can spot a Banksy from across the street.
Why should you care? Well, if you're making art, understanding styles gives you a framework for your own work. Instead of randomly trying techniques, you're making informed decisions. That choice between tight, photorealistic rendering and loose, expressive marks? It's not just about skill level—it positions your work in a conversation that's been happening for centuries.
Here's something most people miss: styles aren't just aesthetic choices. They're cultural artifacts. When Cubism exploded in Paris around 1907, it wasn't just painters being weird. Artists like Picasso and Braque were responding to Einstein's relativity theories, new ideas about the fourth dimension, and a world that suddenly felt less certain. Their fragmented paintings matched a fragmented reality.
Or take mid-century modernism. Those clean lines and minimal ornamentation didn't appear randomly. Post-WWII optimism, new industrial materials like bent plywood and molded plastic, and a desire to break from the past all fed into that aesthetic. Charles and Ray Eames weren't just designing chairs—they were visualizing a new era.
For viewers and collectors, knowing your styles turns museum visits from "that's pretty" to "I see what they're ...