%0 Journal Article %T The Modernist Visual and Plastic Arts in the Catalan-speaking Lands %A Francesc Fontbona %J Catalan Historical Review %D 2008 %I Institut d¡¯Estudis Catalans %X Studies on Catalan Modernism got underway shortly before the Spanish Civil War but did not become widespread untilabout 1950, when the books Modernismo y modernistas by J.-F. R¨¤fols and El arte modernista catal¨¢n by A. Cirici Pellicerwere published. Substantial biographies of Gaud¨ª appeared from the start but some considerable time was to pass beforein-depth studies of most of the key figures of Catalan Modernist Art were undertaken. In 1969 a major official exhibition was devoted to Modernism and in the 1970s there was an outburst of research into Modernism in fields including art and literature. In the 1980s major exhibitions on Modernism began to the staged in countries such as England, Japan and Sweden and were boosted by the presence of the names of Gaud¨ª himself or the young Picasso, both of whom arose fromthe core of Modernism. Monographs with catalogues raisonn¨¦s have appeared on various Modernist painters: Anglada-Camarasa (1981), Santiago Rusi ol (1995) and Ramon Casas (1999), while new overall exhibitions have been dedicated to Catalan Modernism (1990) and Valencian Modernism (1997). Between 2002 and 2004, knowledge about Catalan Modernism and its background was condensed into five volumes comprising contributions from some eighty specialists. %K Modern Style %K Modernism %K Art Nouveau %K Catalan art %U http://revistes.iec.cat/revistes/index.php/CHR/article/viewFile/1959/Fontbona