The present page holds the title of a primary topic, and an article needs to be written about it. It is believed to qualify as a broad-concept article. It may be written directly at this page or drafted elsewhere and then moved to this title. Related titles should be described in Flatstyle, while unrelated titles should be moved to Flatstyle (disambiguation). |
Flatstyle refers to several 20th-century American Indian painting styles with limited or no shading or perspective but emphasized shape and contour. These include:
- Bacone school, popularized by Bacone College, Muskogee, Oklahoma from the 1930s through 1980s
- San Ildefonso School, active in New Mexico from the 1910s through 1940s
- Southern Plains style, popularized by the Kiowa Six, beginning in the late 1920s.
- Studio style, taught by Dorothy Dunn and Géronima Montoya Cruz at the Santa Fe Indian School, New Mexico, from the 1930s to early 1960s.