
TheReturn to Order (French:retour à l'ordre) was a Europeanart movement following theFirst World War that rejected the extremeavant-garde art of the years up to 1918 and emphasized the classical ideals of order and rationality. The movement is often thought to be a reaction to the war, though strands of theReturn to Order began before its outbreak, such as theNoucentista movement in Spain.Futurism, which had praised machinery, dynamism, violence and war, was rejected by most of its adherents. The return to order was associated with arevival of classicism and representational painting. Among the many artists who participated in the movement were notable figures in modernism such asPicasso andBraque,Matisse,Cezanne,Renoir, and much of theItalian Futurists.
Artists of theReturn to Order placed high emphasis on the classical ideals of rationality, quality of line, illusionism and order, in opposition to the preceding decades of irrationality and emotional turbulence which characterised the artworks of the avant-garde. Although taking classicism as its foundational inspiration, artists were keen to reinterpret the essence of classical art through the lens of modernism, and a link was often made between the idealism of the classical period and the “Plastic-like” art of the modern era. Many of the works made during the period display modernist tendencies alongside classical subjects and techniques.
This change of direction was reflected and encouraged by the magazineValori plastici published in Italian and French from 1918 to 1922. The termreturn to order to describe this renewed interest in tradition is said to derive fromLe rappel à l'ordre, a book of essays by the poet and artistJean Cocteau published in 1926.