adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
art
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Cassirer's gallery exhibited avant-garde art as early as 1895.
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His vision was riveted to one vanishing point on a particular horizon, and that was the story of avant-garde art .
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In the lexicon of the avant-garde art world, Meurent could not have figured as an artist.
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And in recent years, it has blossomed into an avant-garde arts center.
culture
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Contemporary art practice has found various uses for avant-garde culture .
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An additional contradiction of avant-garde culture is its distant relationship to the masses.
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As far as avant-garde culture is concerned, there is a built-in time-lag between critical reception and popular acceptance.
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This is an important issue in relation to avant-garde culture .
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
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Although she likes avant-garde music, Lydia also plays classical guitar and piano.
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an exhibition of work by avant-garde artists and sculptors
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His paintings are rather too avant-garde for my tastes.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
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But another scholar speculates that the figure was carved by a reclusive, avant-garde sculptor.
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His vision was riveted to one vanishing point on a particular horizon, and that was the story of avant-garde art.
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I can teach, do my creative avant-garde work which I love, as well as dealing with clients and performing on stage.
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It is a moot point which of these avant-garde strategies has been the more effective.
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Olsson trained in the late 1970s at the University of Arizona, where she was part of the avant-garde Paradise Group.
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The 1900 Secession exhibition was significantly international, but still included only a minority of avant-garde paintings.
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The relativist paradigm of the twentieth century has determined the form of our avant-garde literature.
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West Berlin's theatres are often avant-garde and experimental; those in the east have tended towards more classical interpretations.