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MiniRobotLanguage (MRL)
SDL.Get Movement / SDL.Gmv
Retrieves art movements based on a given index number, which ranges from 0 to 200.
Intention
The SDL.Get Movement and its shorthand SDL.Gmv are designed to retrieve art movements.
Is also a sort of Painting styles.
These commands return a specific art movement based on an index number provided by the user.
You can append or prefix these to the positive prompt, to have the result going into that direction.
The commands are part of the Stable Diffusion Local (SDL) suite, which works locally on the user's system.
Syntax
SDL.Get Movement[|P1][|P2]
SDL.gmv[|P1][|P2]
Parameter Explanation
•P1: (Optional) An index number between 0 and 200. If omitted, the default value of 0 is used, and the result will be empty ("").
You can also specify a Text like "modern art" etc. then the command will try to find the best match Movement for you.
Below you will find tables with the implemented Art-Movements.
•P2: (Optional) A variable that will be used to store the art movement name retrieved. If omitted, the result is placed on TOS (Top Of Stack).
Example
'***********************************
' SDL.-Sample for retrieving art movements
'***********************************
$$IDX = 25
SDL.Get Movement|$$IDX|$$ART
DBP. The art movement for index $$IDX is: $$ART
ENR.
Number |
Art Movement |
Description |
0 |
No specific art movement. |
|
1 |
Abstract Art |
Art that does not attempt to represent an accurate depiction of a visual reality. |
2 |
Abstract Expressionism |
Post-World War II art movement focused on expressive, abstract forms. |
3 |
Abstract Illusionism |
A painting style that creates the illusion of three-dimensional space. |
4 |
Academic Art |
Art influenced by the standards of art academies. |
5 |
Action Painting |
A style of painting in which paint is spontaneously dribbled or splashed onto the canvas. |
6 |
Aestheticism |
Late 19th-century movement that believed in "art for art's sake." |
7 |
Afrofuturism |
Cultural, aesthetic genre that involves a mix of science fiction and African culture. |
8 |
Altermodern |
A term coined by Nicolas Bourriaud, relating to how artists are responding to our globalized world. |
9 |
American Barbizon School |
Inspired by the French Barbizon, focused on natural landscapes. |
10 |
American Impressionism |
American version of the 19th-century art movement focusing on light and color. |
11 |
American Realism |
Art style focused on depicting American life in a naturalistic manner. |
12 |
American Romanticism |
19th-century American art and literature movement focusing on emotion and nature. |
13 |
American Scene Painting |
Depicts scenes of rural or small-town America primarily in the first half of the 20th century. |
14 |
Analytical Art |
Art that focuses on different forms and spatial relationship. |
15 |
Antipodeans |
A group of Australian artists who protested against abstract art. |
16 |
Arabesque |
Islamic art decoration consisting of surface decorations based on rhythmic linear patterns. |
17 |
Arbeitsrat für Kunst |
A council for art established in Berlin during the Weimar Republic. |
18 |
Art & Language |
A conceptual artists' collaboration that questioned the critical assumptions of mainstream modern art practice. |
19 |
Art Brut |
Raw or rough art, often outsider art or naïve art. |
Number |
Art Movement |
Description |
20 |
Art Deco |
A style of visual arts, architecture, and design that first appeared in France before World War I. |
21 |
Art Informel |
A style similar to Abstract Expressionism that emerged in France during the 1940s. |
22 |
Art Nouveau |
An international style of art and architecture that peaked in popularity at the turn of the 20th century. |
23 |
Art Photography |
Photography considered as an art form. |
24 |
Arte Povera |
An Italian contemporary art movement that emerged in the late 1960s. |
25 |
Arts and Crafts Movement |
An international movement in the decorative and fine arts that originated in Britain and flourished in Europe and North America. |
26 |
ASCII Art |
Art made up of computer characters. |
27 |
Ashcan School |
An art movement in the United States that depicted scenes of daily life in New York's poorer neighborhoods. |
28 |
Assemblage |
An artistic process in which a three-dimensional artwork is made from putting together found objects. |
29 |
Australian Tonalism |
An Australian art movement that emerged in the late 20th century, emphasizing tone over color. |
30 |
Auto-Destructive Art |
A term coined by Gustav Metzger, referring to artworks which are destroyed in the process of their creation. |
31 |
Barbizon School |
A 19th-century French art movement that had a strong influence on the introduction of Realism in art. |
32 |
Baroque |
An art style that used exaggerated motion and detail to produce drama, tension, and grandeur. |
33 |
Bauhaus |
A German art school operational from 1919 to 1933 that combined crafts and the fine arts. |
34 |
Bengal School of Art |
An art movement and a style of Indian painting that originated in Bengal, primarily Kolkata and Shantiniketan. |
35 |
Berlin Secession |
An art association founded by Berlin artists in 1898 as an alternative to the conservative state-run Association of Berlin Artists. |
36 |
Black Arts Movement |
A cultural or artistic movement that took place in the USA and other nations. |
37 |
Brutalism |
An architectural style which emerged in the mid-20th century and gained popularity in the late 1950s and 1960s. |
Number |
Art Movement |
Description |
38 |
Classical Realism |
A 20th-century art movement that places a high value upon skill and beauty. |
39 |
Cloisonnism |
A style of post-Impressionist painting with bold and flat forms separated by dark contours. |
40 |
Cobra |
A European avant-garde movement active from 1948 to 1951. |
41 |
Color Field |
A style of abstract painting that emerged in New York City during the 1940s and 1950s. |
42 |
Computer Art |
Art made with the assistance of computers. |
43 |
Conceptual Art |
Art for which the idea (or concept) behind the work is more important than the finished product. |
44 |
Concrete Art |
An art movement with a strong emphasis on abstraction. |
45 |
Constructivism |
An artistic and architectural philosophy that originated in Russia beginning in 1913. |
46 |
Context Art |
Art that is created based on the surrounding environment and culture. |
47 |
Crayon Art |
Art created using crayons. |
48 |
Crystal Cubism |
A distilled form of Cubism consistent with a shift, between 1915 and 1916. |
49 |
Cubism |
An early 20th-century art movement that brought European painting and sculpture into modernity. |
50 |
Cubo-Futurism |
A Russian art movement which combined aspects of Cubism and Futurism. |
Number |
Art Movement |
Description |
51 |
Cynical Realism |
A contemporary movement in Chinese art, particularly in painting, that began in the 1990s. |
52 |
Dada |
An avant-garde movement that began in Europe during World War I. |
53 |
Danube School |
A circle of painters of the first third of the 16th century in Bavaria and Austria. |
54 |
Dau-al-Set |
A Catalan artistic group founded in Barcelona in 1948. |
55 |
De Stijl |
A Dutch art movement focused on geometric abstraction. |
56 |
Deconstructivism |
An architectural movement that started in the late 20th century. |
57 |
Digital Art |
An artistic work or practice that uses digital technology as part of the creative process. |
Number |
Art Movement |
Description |
58 |
Ecological Art |
Art that is centered on ecological awareness and is created to improve the health of ecosystems. |
59 |
Environmental Art |
Art that helps improve our relationship with the natural world. |
60 |
Excessivism |
A modern art movement that emphasizes the excessive use of certain elements. |
61 |
Expressionism |
An art movement in which the representation of reality is not the objective but to express the artist's feelings. |
62 |
Fantastic Realism |
A form of magic realism in visual arts. |
63 |
Fantasy Art |
A genre of art that depicts magical or other supernatural themes, ideas, creatures, or settings. |
64 |
Fauvism |
An early 20th-century art movement that emphasized painterly qualities and strong color. |
65 |
Feminist Art |
Art that seeks to challenge the dominance of male artists and question the role of women in society. |
Number |
Art Movement |
Description |
66 |
Figuration Libre |
A French art movement that broke away from abstraction to embrace a free, expressive style. |
67 |
Figurative Art |
Art that is clearly derived from real object sources, representing them through forms and figures. |
68 |
Figurativism |
Art that retains strong references to the real world and particularly to the human figure. |
69 |
Fine Art |
A visual art considered to have been created primarily for aesthetic and intellectual purposes. |
70 |
Fluxus |
An art movement that emphasized the artistic process over the finished product. |
71 |
Folk Art |
Art produced from an indigenous culture or by peasants or other laboring tradespeople. |
72 |
Funk Art |
An American art movement that was a reaction against the non-objectivity of abstract expressionism. |
73 |
Furry Art |
Art related to the Furry fandom, depicting fictional anthropomorphic animal characters with human personalities and traits. |
74 |
Futurism |
An early 20th-century art movement that captured the dynamism and energy of the modern world. |
75 |
Generative Art |
Art that has been generated, composed, or constructed in an algorithmic manner. |
76 |
Geometric Abstract Art |
A form of abstract art based on geometric forms and structures. |
Number |
Art Movement |
Description |
77 |
German Romanticism |
German variant of Romanticism, emphasizing national history, folklore, and cultural identity. |
78 |
Gothic Art |
Art that originated from the Medieval period, characterized by intricate details and religious themes. |
79 |
Graffiti |
Art created on walls or other public surfaces, often in an unauthorized or unsanctioned manner. |
80 |
Gutai Group |
A post-war Japanese art movement that focused on the relationship between body and matter. |
81 |
Happening |
A performance, event, or situation meant to be considered art, usually as performance art. |
82 |
Harlem Renaissance |
A cultural, social, and artistic explosion centered in Harlem, New York, spanning the 1920s. |
83 |
Heidelberg School |
An Australian art movement that achieved international recognition in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. |
84 |
Holography |
A technique to produce 3D photographic imagery. |
85 |
Hudson River School |
A 19th-century American art movement embodied by landscape painters influenced by Romanticism. |
86 |
Hurufiyya |
An art movement that sought to integrate Islamic calligraphy into modern visual art. |
87 |
Hypermodernism |
A cultural, artistic, and architectural movement that extends and intensifies modernism. |
88 |
Hyperrealism |
An art style that mimics high-resolution photography, creating illusionistic paintings. |
89 |
Impressionism |
A 19th-century art movement characterized by small, thin, visible brush strokes and focus on light and color. |
90 |
Incoherents |
A French art movement in the late 19th century, noted for absurd or humorous works. |
91 |
Institutional Critique |
An art practice that reflects critically on its own housing in galleries and museums. |
92 |
Interactive Art |
Art that involves the spectator in some way. |
93 |
International Gothic |
A period of Gothic art that began in Burgundy, France, and Northern Italy in the late 14th and early 15th century. |
94 |
International Typographic Style |
A graphic design style developed in Switzerland in the 1950s, emphasizing cleanliness, readability, and objectivity. |
Number |
Art Movement |
Description |
95 |
Kinetic Art |
Art that contains movement perceivable by the viewer or depends on motion for its effect. |
96 |
Kinetic Pointillism |
A technique combining pointillism and kinetic art, often involving optical illusions. |
97 |
Kitsch Movement |
Art considered to be in poor taste because of excessive garishness or sentimentality. |
98 |
Land Art |
Art that is made directly in the natural environment, often involving earthworks. |
99 |
Les Automatistes |
A Canadian art movement emphasizing spontaneous, subconscious creation. |
100 |
Les Nabis |
A group of Post-Impressionist avant-garde artists in France. |
101 |
Letterism |
A French avant-garde movement, established in Paris in the mid-1940s. |
102 |
Light and Space |
An art movement founded in the 1960s focusing on the viewer’s perception of light and space. |
103 |
Lowbrow |
A populist art movement with origins in the underground comix world, punk music, and hot-rod street culture. |
104 |
Lyco Art |
A lesser-known art movement focusing on the use of light and color. |
105 |
Lyrical Abstraction |
A type of freewheeling abstract painting inspired by the emotional resonance of color and shape. |
106 |
Magic Realism |
A genre where magical or unreal elements play a natural part in an otherwise realistic environment. |
107 |
Magical Realism |
A literary and artistic genre in which realistic narrative is combined with surreal elements. |
108 |
Mail Art |
Art that uses the postal system as a medium. |
109 |
Mannerism |
A style in European art that emerged in the later years of the Italian High Renaissance. |
110 |
Massurrealism |
A portmanteau of Mass Media and Surrealism, often involving the use of technology in the creation of art. |
111 |
Maximalism |
An aesthetic of excess, contrasting with minimalism. |
112 |
Metaphysical Painting |
A style of painting that flourished in the 1910s, characterized by eerie, archaic scenes. |
113 |
Mingei |
A Japanese folk art movement founded in the late 1920s and 1930s. |
114 |
Minimalism |
An art movement characterized by extreme simplicity of form and a literal approach. |
115 |
Modern European Ink Painting |
Modern interpretations of traditional East Asian ink painting techniques. |
116 |
Modernism |
A broad movement that developed in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, characterized by a break with traditional styles. |
117 |
Modular Constructivism |
An architectural movement that utilizes crystalline or agglomerated forms in a non-repetitive sequence. |
118 |
Naive Art |
Art created by untrained artists, often characterized by simplicity and a lack of sophistication. |
119 |
Naturalism |
A style and theory of representation based on the accurate depiction of detail. |
120 |
Neo-Dada |
A movement that combines aspects of Dadaism and abstract expressionism, and includes found art. |
121 |
Neo-Expressionism |
A style of modern painting and sculpture that emerged in the late 1970s and dominated the art market until the mid-1980s. |
122 |
Neo-Fauvism |
An art movement that revives the bright colors and wild brushwork of Fauvism. |
123 |
Neo-Figurative |
Art that includes recognizable objects, particularly the human figure, in a more modern context. |
124 |
Neo-Primitivism |
A Russian art movement which took its name and attributes from the non-academic art of the early 20th century. |
125 |
Neo-Romanticism |
A subjectively emotional approach originating in the arts during the early 20th century. |
126 |
Neoclassicism |
A Western movement in the fine arts that drew inspiration from the classical art and culture of ancient Greece or ancient Rome. |
127 |
NeoGeo |
An art movement of the 1980 |
Number |
Art Movement |
Description |
127 |
NeoGeo |
An art movement of the 1980s and 1990s that is an abbreviation for Neo-Geometric conceptualism. |
128 |
Neoism |
A contemporary art movement with roots in the 1980s, known for its subversion of social norms. |
129 |
Neoplasticism |
A style founded by Piet Mondrian, characterized by the use of horizontal and vertical lines and primary colors. |
130 |
Net Art |
Art made on the internet or that uses the internet as its medium. |
131 |
New Objectivity |
A movement in Germany in the 1920s that aimed to depict objective reality as opposed to romantic idealization. |
132 |
New Sculpture |
A movement in late 19th-century British sculpture marked by a departure from traditional formats and styles. |
133 |
Northwest School |
A regional art movement centered in the Seattle area, involving both visual and performing arts. |
134 |
Nuclear Art |
Art inspired by or commenting on nuclear energy and its implications. |
135 |
Objective Abstraction |
Abstract art that aims to portray the objective world, often through geometric forms. |
136 |
Op Art |
A style of visual art that makes use of optical illusions. |
137 |
Optical Illusion |
Art designed to visually deceive the viewer into perceiving something other than what is actually represented. |
138 |
Orphism |
A French art movement that sought to combine the musical qualities of color with Cubist abstraction. |
139 |
Panfuturism |
A futurist art movement that seeks to combine various styles and mediums. |
140 |
Paris School |
A group of artists who lived and worked in Paris, particularly during the first half of the 20th century. |
141 |
Photorealism |
A genre of art in which paintings and drawings are created to resemble high-resolution photographs. |
142 |
Pixel Art |
A form of digital art where images are edited at the pixel level. |
143 |
Plasticien |
A Canadian art movement in the 1950s focused on the aesthetic qualities of geometric shapes. |
144 |
Plein Air |
Painting done outdoors, capturing landscapes and natural light. |
145 |
Pointillism |
A painting technique using tiny dots of color to form an image. |
146 |
Pop Art |
Art based on modern popular culture and the mass media. |
147 |
Pop Surrealism |
A movement that combines the whimsy and fantasy of Surrealism with the techniques and subjects of Pop Art. |
148 |
Post-Impressionism |
A French art movement that followed Impressionism, embracing various styles and techniques. |
149 |
Postminimalism |
A term used to describe changes in Minimalist art in the late 1960s and 1970s, moving towards complexity. |
150 |
Pre-Raphaelitism |
A British art movement that sought to return to the style and techniques of art before the High Renaissance. |
151 |
Precisionism |
A style characterized by the depiction of industrial and architectural subjects with precision and clarity. |
152 |
Primitivism |
A Western art movement that borrows visual forms from non-Western or prehistoric peoples. |
153 |
Private Press |
A movement to produce books by hand, often with a focus on high-quality materials and design. |
154 |
Process Art |
Art that emphasizes the process of its making, rather than the finished product. |
155 |
Psychedelic Art |
Art inspired by the experience or aesthetics of hallucination and psychedelic experiences. |
156 |
Purism |
An art movement that aimed to simplify geometric forms and remove extraneous detail. |
157 |
Qajar Art |
A style of Persian art from the Qajar dynasty, characterized by elaborate ornamentation and portraiture. |
158 |
Quito School |
A Latin American school of art that is a blend of Indigenous and European styles. |
159 |
Rasquache |
A Chicano art movement that makes the most from the least, often using found materials. |
160 |
Rayonism |
A Russian abstract art movement that sought to depict the rays of light as dynamic forms. |
161 |
Realism |
An art movement that seeks to depict objects or scenes as they appear objectively. |
162 |
Regionalism |
An American art movement that emerged in the Midwest in the early 20th century, focusing on rural scenes. |
163 |
Remodernism |
A movement that aims to reintroduce traditional techniques and spirituality into modern art. |
Number |
Art Movement |
Description |
164 |
Renaissance |
A cultural, artistic, and intellectual movement that originated in Italy, emphasizing classical forms. |
165 |
Retrofuturism |
Artistic and creative disciplines that explore the themes of what the future may hold, based on the past. |
166 |
Rococo |
An 18th-century artistic movement and style, affecting many aspects of the arts including painting. |
167 |
Romanesque |
A style of art and architecture that was common in Europe from the 10th to the 12th century. |
168 |
Romanticism |
A movement emphasizing emotion and individualism as well as glorification of the past and nature. |
169 |
Samikshavad |
An Indian art movement that focuses on social issues. |
170 |
Serial Art |
Art that adheres to a strict order or sequence, often realized in multiple parts. |
171 |
Shin Hanga |
A 20th-century art movement in Japan that revitalized traditional ukiyo-e art. |
172 |
Shock Art |
Art that incorporates shocking or provocative elements. |
173 |
Socialist Realism |
A style of idealized realistic art, developed in the Soviet Union and used to glorify Communist values. |
174 |
Sots Art |
A Russian art movement that arose in the 1970s, a fusion between Socialist Realism and Pop Art. |
175 |
Space Art |
Artistic representations of astronomical phenomena or space exploration. |
176 |
Street Art |
Visual art created in public spaces, often unsanctioned. |
177 |
Stuckism |
An international art movement that promotes figurative painting in opposition to conceptual art. |
178 |
Sumatraism |
A lesser-known movement focusing on the art and culture of the Sumatra region. |
179 |
Superflat |
A postmodern art movement founded by Takashi Murakami, influenced by manga and anime. |
180 |
Suprematism |
A Russian art movement focused on geometric shapes like squares, circles, and lines. |
181 |
Surrealism |
A movement that seeks to express the workings of the subconscious through art. |
182 |
Symbolism |
A movement that seeks to depict the more emotional and subjective aspects of human experience. |
183 |
Synchromism |
An art movement founded by Stanton Macdonald-Wright and Morgan Russell in Paris in 1913. |
184 |
Synthetism |
A term used by post-Impressionist artists to describe their method of creating and defining form. |
185 |
Sōsaku Hanga |
A 20th-century Japanese art movement focusing on creative prints. |
186 |
Tachisme |
A French style of abstract painting in the 1940s and 1950s, similar to Abstract Expressionism. |
187 |
Temporary Art |
Art that is made to exist only for a short period of time. |
188 |
Tonalism |
An art style that emerged in the 1880s in the US, characterized by soft, diffused light and muted colors. |
189 |
Toyism |
A contemporary art movement that originated in the 1990s in the Netherlands. |
190 |
Transgressive Art |
Art that aims to transgress or violate basic mores and sensibilities of the status quo. |
191 |
Ukiyo-e |
A genre of Japanese art which flourished from the 17th through 19th centuries, often depicting landscapes. |
192 |
Underground Comix |
Small press or self-published comic books that are often socially relevant or satirical in nature. |
193 |
Unilalianism |
A less-known contemporary art movement focused on universal language through visual art. |
194 |
Vancouver School |
A term applied to a group of conceptual photographers based in Vancouver, Canada. |
195 |
Vanitas |
A genre of still-life painting that has been common in the Netherlands in the early 17th century. |
196 |
Verdadism |
A form of art and philosophy emphasizing social change, founded in 1992 by Soraida Martinez. |
197 |
Video Art |
Art which relies on moving pictures and comprises video and/or audio data. |
198 |
Viennese Actionism |
A short and violent movement in 20th-century art, associated with Vienna. |
199 |
Visual Art |
Art forms that create works that are primarily visual in nature. |
200 |
Vorticism |
An early 20th-century movement in British art and poetry, influenced by Cubism and Futurism. |