Abstract

Figurative, abstract, and abstraction, which manifested itself in Italy in the late 1940s, has revealed the aniconic (non-depictive) language of expression in artistic perspectives. The dynamism experienced in the art movements after 1945 enabled the enrichment of material possibilities by revealing the artistic subjectivity and the enrichment of the relationship between form and content by using waste objects as a means of expression. Using the postmodern language of expression, Italian artist Alberto Burri developed innovative techniques in terms of form and content with the materials he chooses. This study aims to explain the relationship between form and content in Burri's work. Burri opens a window into the world of human existence with his materials; while showing the tragedies, wounds, and unhappiness of people by going into the depths of the human, he also gives the message that happiness will reemerge. In his works, with his fictional understanding imitating nature, he questions the concept of art, relates his artistic practice to life, and reveals the reality of life with his art.

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