Answer
Futurism, an early 20th-century art movement that rejected the past and embraced the modern, particularly the speed, technology, and dynamism of the industrial age, served as a catalyst for Urmuz's creative output. Urmuz's works, despite his largely self-contained style, bore the influence of Futurism's iconoclastic spirit and its celebration of the innovative and the unconventional, contributing to the distinct character of his literary universe.