| PIETMONDRIAN | Dutch painter; an exponent of the abstract art movement De Stijl (4,8) |
| MONDRIAN | Dutch painter and exponent of the abstract art movement De Stijl (4,8) |
| PIET | Dutch painter and exponent of the abstract art movement De Stijl (4,8) |
| ANDREDERAIN | French painter, an exponent of Fauvism, d.1954 (5,6) |
| IONESCO | An exponent of the Theatre of the Absurd, which French playwright wrote The Bald Soprano (1950) |
| ELIELSAARINEN | Who, an exponent of the Finnish Romantic style of early 20th-century architecture, had his designs f |
| ANTONWEBERN | Austrian composer who was an exponent of the 12-tone technique |
| CARPACCIO | Named after a Venetian painter, an Italian hors d'oeuvre of thinly sliced raw beef served with ingre |
| RAPHAEL | It. painter; an archangel |
| MATHEMATICAL | Relating to the abstract science of number, quantity and space (12) |
| ALBERS | Josef, German-born U.S. painter of the abstract series Homage to the Square (6) |
| DESTIJL | From the Dutch meaning the style, an abstract art movement founded by Theo van Doesburg and Piet Mondrian (2,5) |
| GAUDI | Spanish architect who was an exponent of art nouveau in Europe (1852-1926)(5) |
| TACHISM | Abstract art movement of the 1940s using irregular splotches of colour |
| ANDYWARHOL | This American artist and filmmaker was a leading exponent of the Pop art movement of the 1960s, and he is best known for his mass-produced art. His work Silver Car Crash (Double Disaster) (1963) sold |
| THEATRICAL | The abstract art I state to be spectacular (10) |
| KATHAK | Birju Maharaj was an exponent of this dance |
| UTRECHT | City in the central Netherlands where De Stijl co-founder Theo van Doesburg was born (7) |
| AVATAR | Manifestation of the abstract (6) |
| REAGANITE | An exponent of 1980s US economics (9) |