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Impressionism
Impressionism was a 19th-century art movement that began as a loose association of Paris-based artists whose independent exhibitions brought them to prominence in the 1870s and 1880s. The name of the movement is derived from the title of a Claude Monet work, Impression, Sunrise (Impression, soleil levant), which provoked the critic Louis Leroy to coin the term in a satiric review published in Le Charivari.
Impressionism also describes art created in this style, but outside of the late 19th century time period.
Radicals in their time, early Impressionists broke the rules of academic painting. They began by giving colours, freely brushed, primacy over line, drawing inspiration from the work of painters such as Eugene Delacroix. They also took the act of painting out of the studio and into the modern world. Previously, still lifes and portraits as well as landscapes had usually been painted indoors. The Impressionists found that they could capture the momentary and transient effects of sunlight by painting en plein air. Painting realistic scenes of modern life, they emphasized vivid overall effects rather than details. They used short, “broken” brush strokes of pure and unmixed colour, not smoothly blended, as was customary, in order to achieve the effect of intense colour vibration.
Although the rise of Impressionism in France happened at a time when a number of other painters, including the Italian artists known as the Macchiaioli, and Winslow Homer in the United States, were also exploring plein-air painting, the Impressionists developed new techniques that were specific to the movement. encompassing what its adherents argued was a different way of seeing, it was an art of immediacy and movement, of candid poses and compositions, of the play of light expressed in a bright and varied use of colour.
The public, at first hostile, gradually came to believe that the Impressionists had captured a fresh and original vision, even if it did not receive the approval of the art critics and establishment.
By re-creating the sensation in the eye that views the subject, rather than recreating the subject, and by creating a welter of techniques and forms, Impressionism became a precursor seminal to various movements in painting which would follow, including Neo-Impressionism, Post-Impressionism, Fauvism, and Cubism.
In an atmosphere of change as emperor Napoleon III rebuilt Paris and waged war, the Academie des Beaux-Arts dominated the French art scene in the middle of the 19th century. The Academie was the upholder of traditional standards for French painting, both in content and style. Historical subjects, religious themes, and portraits were valued (landscape and still life were not), and the Academie preferred carefully finished images which mirrored reality when examined closely. Colour was somber and conservative, and the traces of brush strokes were suppressed, concealing the artist’s personality, emotions, and working techniques.
The Academie held an annual, juried art show, the Salon de Paris, and artists whose work displayed in the show won prizes, garnered commissions, and enhanced their prestige. The standards of the juries reflected the values of the Academie, represented by the highly polished works of such artists as Jean-Leon Gerome and Alexandre Cabanel. Some younger artists painted in a lighter and brighter manner than painters of the preceding generation, extending further the realism of Gustave Courbet and the Barbizon school. They were more interested in painting landscape and contemporary life than in recreating scenes from history. each year, they submitted their art to the Salon, only to see the juries reject their best efforts in favour of trivial works by artists working in the approved style. A core group of young realists, Claude Monet, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Alfred Sisley, and Frederic Bazille, who had studied under Charles Gleyre, became friends and often painted together. They soon were joined by Camille Pissarro, Paul Cezanne, and Armand Guillaumin.
In 1863, the jury rejected The Luncheon on the Grass (Le dejeuner sur l’herbe) by Edouard Manet primarily because it depicted a nude woman with two clothed men at a picnic. While nudes were routinely accepted by the Salon when featured in historical and allegorical paintings, the jury condemned Manet for placing a realistic nude in a contemporary setting. The jury’s sharply worded rejection of Manet’s painting, as well as the unusually large number of rejected works that year, set off a firestorm among French artists. Manet was admired by Monet and his friends, and led the discussions at Cafe Guerbois where the group of artists frequently met.
Artists’ petitions requesting a new Salon des Refuses in 1867, and again in 1872, were denied. In the latter part of 1873, Monet, Renoir, Pissarro, and Sisley organized the Societe Anonyme Cooperative des Artistes Peintres, Sculpteurs, Graveurs (“Cooperative and Anonymous Association of Painters, Sculptors, and engravers”) for the purpose of exhibiting their artworks independently. Members of the association, which soon included Cezanne, Berthe Morisot, and Edgar Degas, were expected to forswear participation in the Salon. The organizers invited a number of other progressive artists to join them in their inaugural exhibition, including the slightly older eugene Boudin, whose example had first persuaded Monet to take up plein air painting years before. Another painter who greatly influenced Monet and his friends, Johan Jongkind, declined to participate, as did Manet. In total, thirty artists participated in their first exhibition, held in April 1874 at the studio of the photographer Nadar. Claude Monet, The Cliff at etretat after the Storm, 1885, Clark Art Institute, Williamstown, Massachusetts
The critical response was mixed, with Monet and Cezanne bearing the harshest attacks. Critic and humorist Louis Leroy wrote a scathing review in the Le Charivari newspaper in which, making wordplay with the title of Claude Monet’s Impression, Sunrise (Impression, soleil levant), he gave the artists the name by which they would become known. Derisively titling his article The exhibition of the Impressionists, Leroy declared that Monet’s painting was at most, a sketch, and could hardly be termed a finished work.
Monet, Sisley, Morisot, and Pissarro may be considered the “purest” Impressionists, in their consistent pursuit of an art of spontaneity, sunlight, and colour. Degas rejected much of this, as he believed in the primacy of drawing over colour and belittled the practice of painting outdoors. Renoir turned against Impressionism for a time in the 1880s, and never entirely regained his commitment to its ideas. Edouard Manet, despite his role as a leader to the group, never abandoned his liberal use of black as a colour, and never participated in the Impressionist exhibitions. He continued to submit his works to the Salon, where his Spanish Singer had won a 2nd class medal in 1861, and he urged the others to do likewise, arguing that “the Salon is the real field of battle” where a reputation could be made.
Among the artists of the core group (minus Bazille, who had died in the Franco-Prussian War in 1870), defections occurred as Cezanne, followed later by Renoir, Sisley, and Monet, abstained from the group exhibitions in order to submit their works to the Salon. Disagreements arose from issues such as uillaumin’s membership in the group, championed by Pissarro and Cezanne against opposition from Monet and Degas, who thought him unworthy. Degas invited Mary Cassatt to display her work in the 1879 exhibition, but he also caused dissention by insisting on the inclusion of Jean-Francois Raffaelli, Ludovic Lepic, and other realists who did not represent Impressionist practices, leading Monet in 1880 to accuse the Impressionists of “opening doors to first-come daubers”. The group divided over the invitation of Signac and Seurat to exhibit with them in 1886. Pissarro was the only artist to show at all eight Impressionist exhibitions.
The individual artists saw few financial rewards from the Impressionist exhibitions, but their art gradually won a degree of public acceptance. Their dealer, Durand-Ruel, played a major role in this as he kept their work before the public and arranged shows for them in London and New York. Although Sisley would die in poverty in 1899, Renoir had a great Salon success in 1879. Financial security came to Monet in the early 1880s and to Pissarro by the early 1890s. By this time the methods of Impressionist painting, in a diluted form, had become commonplace in Salon art.
Painters throughout history had occasionally used these methods, but Impressionists were the first to use all of them together, and with such boldness. earlier artists whose works display these techniques include Frans Hals, Diego Velazquez, Peter Paul Rubens, John Constable, and J. M. W. Turner.
French painters who prepared the way for Impressionism include the Romantic colourist Eugene Delacroix, the leader of the realists Gustave Courbet, and painters of the Barbizon school such as Theodore Rousseau. The Impressionists learned much from the work of Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot and Eugene Boudin, who painted from nature in a style that was close to Impressionism, and who befriended and advised the younger artists.
Prior to the Impressionists, other painters, notably such 17th-century Dutch painters as Jan Steen, had focused on common subjects, but their approaches to composition were traditional. They arranged their compositions in such a way that the main subject commanded the viewer’s attention. The Impressionists relaxed the boundary between subject and background so that the effect of an Impressionist painting often resembles a snapshot, a part of a larger reality captured as if by chance. Photography was gaining popularity, and as cameras became more portable, photographs became more candid. Photography inspired Impressionists to capture the moment, not only in the fleeting lights of a landscape, but in the day-to-day lives of people.
The rise of the impressionist movement can be seen in part as a reaction by artists to the newly established medium of photography. The taking of fixed or still images challenged painters by providing a new medium with which to capture reality. Initially photography’s presence seemed to undermine the artist’s depiction of nature and their ability to mirror reality. Both portrait and landscape paintings were deemed somewhat deficient and lacking in truth as photography “produced lifelike images much more efficiently and reliably”. Alfred Sisley, View of the Saint-Martin Canal, Paris, 1870, Musee d’Orsay
Another major influence was Japanese art prints (Japonism), which had originally come into France as wrapping paper for imported goods. The art of these prints contributed significantly to the “snapshot” angles and unconventional compositions which would become characteristic of the movement.
Edgar Degas was both an avid photographer and a collector of Japanese prints. His The Dance Class (La classe de danse) of 1874 shows both influences in its asymmetrical composition. The dancers are seemingly caught off guard in various awkward poses, leaving an expanse of empty floor space in the lower right quadrant.
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Hiver à Giverny
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $289.00
The Seine at Bougival, 1869
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $269.00
Ice-Floes-On-The-Seine-at-Bougival-1868
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $279.00
Road Toward the Farm, Saint-Simeon, Honfleur
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $289.00
Train In the Snow at Argenteuil
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $279.00
Sandvika, Norway 1895
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $279.00
Houses In the Snow, Norway
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $279.00
Houses In the Snow
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $289.00
Au Bord Du Fjord De Christiania
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $279.00
Au Bord Du Fjord, Près Christiania
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $299.00
Norway, Houses Under the Snow, 1895
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $279.00
Landscape of Norway, the Blue Houses, 1895
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $279.00
Norway, Sandviken Village In the Snow
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $279.00
Paysage De Norvège, Sandviken
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $279.00
Red Houses at Bjornegaard In the Snow, Norway
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $259.00
Sandviken, Norway, 1895
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $279.00
Twilight, Venice 1908
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $279.00
Le Grand Canal 1908
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $279.00
Le Palais Contarini
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $279.00
Palazzo Da Mula In Venice
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $289.00
San Giorgio Maggiore, 1908
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $279.00
Le Palais Ducal Vu De Saint-Georges Majeur
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $299.00
Le Palais Ducal
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $299.00
The Doges Palace (Le Palais Ducal)
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $259.00
The Red House, 1908
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $259.00
Le Palais Dario
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $249.00
Le Palais Dario
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $259.00
Palazzo Dario, Venice
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $259.00
Le Rio De La Salute
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $259.00
Rouen Cathedral Façade and Tour D’albane (Morning Effect)
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $279.00
Rouen Cathedral, West Facade, Sunlight
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $299.00
Rouen Cathedral, West Facade
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $299.00
Rouen Cathedral, West Portal, Grey Weather
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $279.00
The Portal of Rouen Cathedral In Morning Light
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $299.00
La Cathédrale Dans Le Brouillard
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $279.00
Gulls, River Thames In London, Parliment Building
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $249.00
Houses of Parliament In the Mist, 1903
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $249.00
Houses of Parliament In Winter, 1903
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $259.00
Houses of Parliament, 1904
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $259.00
Houses of Parliament, Effect of Sunlight In the Fog, 1904
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $249.00
Houses of Parliament, Fog Effect, 1903
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $259.00
Houses of Parliament, Fog Effect, 1904
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $249.00
Parliament at Sunset
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $259.00
Houses of Parliament, London 1900
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $259.00
Houses of Parliament, London, Sun Breaking Through, 1904
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $259.00
Houses of Parliament, Night Effect, 1903
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $249.00
Houses of Parliament, Reflection of the Thames, 1900-01
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $259.00
Houses of Parliament, Sunlight Effect, 1903
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $259.00
Houses of Parliament, Sunset, 1904
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $259.00
Houses of Parliament, Westminster, 1900-01
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $259.00
The Houses of Parliament, Seagulls
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $259.00
Charing Cross Bridge
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $259.00
Charing Cross Bridge, 1902
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $259.00
Charing Cross Bridge, 1902
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $259.00
Charing Cross Bridge, 1903
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $279.00
The Thames at Charing Cross
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $289.00
Charing Cross Bridge, London 1901
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $279.00
Waterloo Bridge, Gray Weather 1900
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $279.00
Waterloo Bridge
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $299.00
Waterloo Bridge, Sunlight Effect 1903
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $299.00
Waterloo Bridge, Sunlight Effect With Smoke
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $299.00
Waterloo Bridge
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $299.00
Waterloo Bridge
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $299.00
Vache à La Pâture
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $299.00
The Turkeys, 1876
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $229.00
Red Mullets, 1869
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $289.00
Faisans Suspendus
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $479.00
Faisans, Bécasses Et Perdrix
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $269.00
Still Life With Pheasants and Plovers
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $289.00
Jar of Peaches
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $259.00
Citrons Sur Une Branche
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $249.00
Branche De Citronnier
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $279.00
Peaches, 1883
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $279.00
Peaches
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $419.00
Prunes Et Abricots
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $389.00
The Plate With Apples
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $279.00
Nature Morte Au Melon D’espagne
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $269.00
Still Life – Apples and Grapes, 1879
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $259.00
Flowers and Fruit, 1869
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $259.00
Still Life With Melon
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $289.00
Still Life With Pears and Grapes, 1880
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $279.00
Apples and Grapes
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $289.00
Basket of Graphes, Quinces and Pears, 1882-85
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $279.00
Bouquet De Glaïeuls, Lis Et Marguerites
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $269.00
Bouquet of Sunflowers
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $259.00
Chrysanthemums, 1882
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $259.00
Spring Flowers
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $269.00
Two Vases With Chrysanthems, 1888
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $279.00
Vase De Pivoines
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $259.00
Vase of Chrysanthemums, 1878
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $259.00
Vase of Chrysanthemums, 1882
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $279.00
Christmas Roses, 1883
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $269.00
Chrysanthemums, 1897
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $299.00
Clématites
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $299.00
Vase of Tulips, 1885
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $269.00
White Azaleas In A Pot, 1885
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $279.00
Roses (Les Roses)
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $299.00
Mauves
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $479.00
Roses Blooming
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $359.00
Self Portrait With A Beret, 1886
By Claude MonetSizes starting at $279.00




































































































