A group of artistsPeople who are engaged in a broad spectrum of visually led ideas and activities aligned to the expressive arts who have agreed to work together to a set of principles or who are perceived to be working collectively by curators, artArt refers to a diverse range of human intellectual and expressive activities and the outcomes of those activities. Within this context art is further defined as visual art and includes painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, photography and work made using digital media. historians and commentators. For example, Abstract ExpressionismThis is a style of non-representational painting that combines Expressionism with abstraction. An early abstract expressionist painter was Wassily Kandinsky, later ones include Mark Rothko (1903-1970) and Willem de Kooning (1904-). Their paintings are typically large and bold, often with unrestrained use of colour., Mannerism and CubismCubism is a term that was first used in 1908 to describe the work of George Braque. This artistic style had three phases: the first was a development of Cezanne's ideas about painting from nature - that artists should look for the cone the sphere and the cube in nature and based their work upon those elements. The second phase is called analytical cubism and is characterised by an emphasis on geometric shapes, with one viewpoint superimposed upon another. The third phase is called synthetic cubism; this phase is characterised by the addition of collage.