He is remembered for his still-life paintings with oranges and for cubistic scenes with nudes.
From the en.wikipedia.org
So named for his cubistic markings, Picasso was skeptical of this newcomer who antagonized him mercilessly.
From the sfgate.com
Only the vaguest form of a hoof in the cubistic sculpture resembles a steed thundering down the stretch.
From the time.com
Though the girls consider themselves sisters, they stem from unrelated branches of the cubistic Picasso family tree.
From the time.com
Skyscraper-shaped tea sets, cubistic creamers and boomerang dishes are a far cry from the historical styles associated with the medium.
From the washingtontimes.com
First among those films is Martin Scorsese's cubistic entertainment about men divided by power, loyalty and their own selves.
From the movies.nytimes.com
Godard's latest installment, subtitled The Children of Marx and Coca-Cola, is a cubistic jigsaw-puzzle picture of the go-go generation.
From the time.com
A cubistic formation of white, black, lucite and chrome, the room suggests that a fashionable decorator has just made a hasty exit.
From the time.com
Meyer's art has a distinctly playful cubistic sensibility as she incorporates horizontal, vertical and right-angled sectional rhythms into her forms.
From the ocregister.com
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Cubist: relating to or characteristic of cubism; "cubist art"
Cubism was a 20th century avant-garde art movement, pioneered by Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque, that revolutionized European painting and sculpture, and inspired related movements in music and literature. ...