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Post-Impressionism
Post-Impressionism is the term coined by the British artist and art critic Roger Fry in 1910 to describe the development of French art since Manet.
Post-Impressionists extended Impressionism while rejecting its limitations: they continued using vivid colours, thick application of paint, distinctive brushstrokes and real-life subject matter, but they were more inclined to emphasize geometric forms, to distort form for expressive effect, and to use unnatural or arbitrary colour.
The Post Impressionists were dissatisfied with the triviality of subject matter and the loss of structure in Impressionist paintings, though they did not agree on the way forward. Georges Seurat and his followers concerned themselves with Pointillism, the systematic use of tiny dots of colour. Paul Cezanne set out to restore a sense of order and structure to painting, to “make of Impressionism something solid and durable, like the art of the museums”. He achieved this by reducing objects to their basic shapes while retaining the bright fresh colours of Impressionism. The Impressionist Camille Pissarro experimented with Neo-Impressionist ideas between the mid 1880s and the early 1890s. Discontented with what he referred to as romantic Impressionism, he investigated Pointillism which he called scientific Impressionism before returning to a purer Impressionism in the last decade of his life. Vincent van Gogh used colour and vibrant swirling brush strokes to convey his feelings and his state of mind. Although they often exhibited together, Post-Impressionist artists were not in agreement concerning a cohesive movement. Younger painters during the 1890s and early 20th century worked in geographically disparate regions and in various stylistic categories, such as Fauvism and Cubism.
The term was coined in 1910 by Roger Fry in the title of an exhibition of modern French painters, organized by Fry in London. Most of the artists in the exhibition were younger than the Impressionists. Fry later explained: “For purposes of convenience, it was necessary to give these artists a name, and I chose, as being the vaguest and most non-committal, the name of Post-Impressionism. This merely stated their position in time relatively to the Impressionist movement.” John Rewald, one of the first professional art historians to focus on the birth of early modern art, limited the scope to the years between 1886 and 1892 in his pioneering publication on Post-Impressionism: From Van Gogh to Gauguin (1956): Rewald considered it to continue his History of Impressionism (1946), and pointed out that a “subsequent volume dedicated to the second half of the post-impressionist period”-Post-Impressionism: From Gauguin to Matisse-was to follow, extending the period covered to other artistic movements derived from Impressionism and confined to the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Rewald focused on outstanding early Post-Impressionists active in France: on Van Gogh, Gauguin, Seurat, Redon, and their relations as well as the artistic circles they frequented (or they were in opposition to):
* Neo-Impressionism: ridiculed by contemporary art critics as well as artists as Pointillism, Seurat and Signac would have preferred other terms: Divisionism for example.
* Cloisonnism: a short-lived term introduced in 1888 by the art critic Edouard Dujardin, was to promote the work of Louis Anquetin, and was later also applied to contemporary works of his friend emile Bernard.
* Synthetism: another short-lived term coined in 1889 to distinguish recent works of Gauguin and Bernard from that of more traditional Impressionists exhibiting with them at the Cafe Volpini.
* Pont-Aven School: implying little more than that the artists involved had been working for a while in Pont-Aven or elsewhere in Brittany.
* Symbolism: a term highly welcomed by vanguard critics in 1891, when Gauguin dropped Synthetism as soon as he was acclaimed to be the leader of Symbolism in painting.
Furthermore, in his introduction to Post-Impressionism, Rewald opted for a second volume featuring Toulouse-Lautrec, Henri Rousseau “le Douanier”, Les Nabis and Cezanne as well as the Fauves, the young Picasso and Gauguin’s last trip to the South-Sea, it was to expand the period covered at least into the first decade of the 20th century-yet this second volume remained unfinished.In a basic sense, the term “Romanticism” has been used to refer to certain artists, poets, writers, musicians, as well as political, philosophical and social thinkers of the late 18th and early to mid 19th centuries. It has equally been used to refer to various artistic, intellectual, and social trends of that era. Despite this general usage of the term, a precise characterization and specific definition of Romanticism have been the subject of debate in the fields of intellectual history and literary history throughout the twentieth century, without any great measure of consensus emerging. Arthur Lovejoy attempted to demonstrate the difficulty of this problem in his seminal article “On The Discrimination of Romanticisms” in his Essays in the History of Ideas (1948), some scholars see Romanticism as essentially continuous with the present, some see in it the inaugural moment of modernity, some see it as the beginning of a tradition of resistance to the Enlightenment-a Counter-Enlightenment-and still others place it firmly in the direct aftermath of the French Revolution. An earlier definition comes from Charles Baudelaire: “Romanticism is precisely situated neither in choice of subject nor exact truth, but in the way of feeling.”
Reviews and adjustments
Rewald wrote that “the term ‘Post-Impressionism’ is not a very precise one, though a very convenient one.” Convenient, when the term is by definition limited to French visual arts derived from Impressionism since 1886. Rewald’s approach to historical data was narrative rather than analytic, and beyond this point he believed it would be sufficient to “let the sources speak for themselves.”
Rival terms like Modernism or Symbolism were never as easy to handle, for they covered literature, architecture and other arts as well, and they expanded to other countries.
* Modernism thus, is now considered to be the central movement within international western civilization with its original roots in France, going back beyond the French Revolution to the Age of Enlightenment.
* Symbolism, however, is considered to be a concept which emerged a century later in France, and implied an individual approach. Local national traditions as well as individual settings therefore could stand side by side, and from the very beginning a broad variety of artists practising some kind of symbolic imagery, ranged between extreme positions: The Nabis for example united to find synthesis of tradition and brand new form, while others kept to traditional, more or less academic forms, when they were looking for fresh contents: Symbolism is therefore often linked to fanatastic, esoteric, erotic and other non-realist subject matter.
To meet the recent discussion, the connotations of the term ‘Post-Impressionism’ were challenged again: Alan Bowness and his collaborators expanded the period covered to 1914, but limited their approach widely on the 1890s to France. Other European countries are pushed back to standard connotations, and Eastern Europe is completely excluded.
So, while a split may be seen between classical ‘Impressionism’ and ‘Post-Impressionism’ in 1886, the end and the extend of ‘Post-Impressionism’ remains under discussion. For Bowness and his contributors as well as for Rewald, ‘Cubism’ was an absolutely fresh start, and so Cubism has been seen in France since the beginning, and later in Anglosaxonia. Meanwhile Eastern European artists, however, did not care so much for western traditions, and proceeded to manners of painting called abstract and suprematic-terms expanding far into the 20th century.
Conclusion
According to the present state of discussion, Post-Impressionism is a term best used within Rewald’s definition in a strictly historical manner, concentrating on French art between 1886 and 1914, and re-considering the altered positions of impressionist painters like Claude Monet, Camille Pissarro, Auguste Renoir, and others-as well as all new brands at the turn of the century: from Cloisonnism to Cubism. The declarations of war, in July/August 1914, indicate probably far more than the beginning of a World War-they signal a major break in European cultural history, too.
Showing 1401–1500 of 2161 results

Still Life with Peaches
By Paul GauguinSizes starting at $249.00
The road Bridge at L’estaque
By Paul CezanneSizes starting at $269.00
Chestnut Trees at Louveciennes, Spring 1870
By Camille PissarroSizes starting at $259.00
Public Garden With Couple And Blue Fir Tree
By Vincent Van GoghSizes starting at $259.00
Still Life with Peonies
By Paul GauguinSizes starting at $259.00
The Tree by the Bend
By Paul CezanneSizes starting at $259.00
Chestnut Trees in Louveciennes
By Camille PissarroSizes starting at $259.00
The Poet’s Garden
By Vincent Van GoghSizes starting at $279.00
Tomatoes and a Pewter Tankard on a Table
By Paul GauguinSizes starting at $259.00
View of the Bay of Marseille with the Village of Saint-Henri 1883
By Paul CezanneSizes starting at $259.00
Dans Le Pré En automne à ÉRagny, 1901
By Camille PissarroSizes starting at $279.00
Park At Asnieres In Spring
By Vincent Van GoghSizes starting at $289.00
TêTe De Chat
By Paul GauguinSizes starting at $259.00
View of L’estaque
By Paul CezanneSizes starting at $279.00
Enfants attabléS Dans Le Jardin à Eragny 1892
By Camille PissarroSizes starting at $259.00
Garden In Auvers 1890
By Vincent Van GoghSizes starting at $279.00
In the Henhouse
By Paul GauguinSizes starting at $329.00
Paysage 1865
By Paul CezanneSizes starting at $269.00
Edge of the Woods Near L’Hermitage, Pontoise 1879
By Camille PissarroSizes starting at $269.00
Path In The Park At Arles 1888
By Vincent Van GoghSizes starting at $269.00
Paysage 1867
By Paul CezanneSizes starting at $279.00
Rouen, L’Eglise Saint-Ouen (1884)
By Paul GauguinSizes starting at $259.00
Effect of Snow in Eragny
By Camille PissarroSizes starting at $289.00
Entrance to the Village of Osny
By Paul GauguinSizes starting at $259.00
Garden With Weeping Willow
By Vincent Van GoghSizes starting at $259.00
Paysage 1879
By Paul CezanneSizes starting at $279.00
ÉPinglé Sur arbres
By Camille PissarroSizes starting at $289.00
Femme Dans Un Jardin
By Vincent Van GoghSizes starting at $279.00
L’Eglise De Vaugirard, 1879
By Paul GauguinSizes starting at $289.00
Poplars
By Paul CezanneSizes starting at $279.00
Ears Of Wheat
By Vincent Van GoghSizes starting at $279.00
Epping Landscape 1893
By Camille PissarroSizes starting at $269.00
Houses At Vaugirard
By Paul GauguinSizes starting at $279.00
Vue Prise Du Jas De Bouffan
By Paul CezanneSizes starting at $269.00
Bibemus
By Paul CezanneSizes starting at $279.00
Field and Mill at Osny 1884
By Camille PissarroSizes starting at $249.00
Garden With Butterflies 1889
By Vincent Van GoghSizes starting at $249.00
Little Girl Playing, or Pond with Ducks
By Paul GauguinSizes starting at $299.00
Bibémus
By Paul CezanneSizes starting at $269.00
Chou Quarry, Hole in the Cliff
By Paul GauguinSizes starting at $269.00
Clumps Of Grass
By Vincent Van GoghSizes starting at $249.00
Flowering Orchard 1871
By Camille PissarroSizes starting at $299.00
Fox Hill, Upper Norwood
By Camille PissarroSizes starting at $269.00
Grass And Butterflies
By Vincent Van GoghSizes starting at $279.00
The Bibémus Quarry 1895
By Paul CezanneSizes starting at $279.00
Abandoned house near Aix-En-Provence 1886
By Paul CezanneSizes starting at $279.00
Hameau aux Environs de Pontoise 1872
By Camille PissarroSizes starting at $279.00
Long Grass With Butterflies 1890
By Vincent Van GoghSizes starting at $279.00
A Field Of Yellow Flowers 1889
By Vincent Van GoghSizes starting at $299.00
Banks of the Seine at Médan
By Paul CezanneSizes starting at $279.00
Haystacks, Morning, ÉRagny 1899
By Camille PissarroSizes starting at $259.00
Arbres et Maisons Au Bord De L’eau
By Paul CezanneSizes starting at $269.00
Hermitage Garden, Maison Rouge 1877
By Camille PissarroSizes starting at $259.00
Path In The Woods
By Vincent Van GoghSizes starting at $249.00
At the Water’s Edge 1890
By Paul CezanneSizes starting at $279.00
Houses at Bougival (Autumn) 1870
By Camille PissarroSizes starting at $269.00
Trees 1887
By Vincent Van GoghSizes starting at $249.00
Jardin de Kew, Londres, PrèS D’Un ÉTang 1892
By Camille PissarroSizes starting at $269.00
Landscape
By Paul CezanneSizes starting at $279.00
Trees And Undergrowth 1887
By Vincent Van GoghSizes starting at $269.00
Jardin et Poulailler Chez Octave Mirbeau, Les Damps 1892
By Camille PissarroSizes starting at $279.00
The Terrace at the Garden at Les Lauves
By Paul CezanneSizes starting at $259.00
Undergrowth 1889
By Vincent Van GoghSizes starting at $279.00
Jardin Mirbeau aux Damps 1892
By Camille PissarroSizes starting at $279.00
Trees and House, Provence
By Paul CezanneSizes starting at $289.00
Undergrowth
By Vincent Van GoghSizes starting at $259.00
Church At Montigny-Sur-Loing
By Paul CezanneSizes starting at $259.00
Juin, Temps Pluvieux, ÉRagny 1898
By Camille PissarroSizes starting at $259.00
Undergrowth, 1887
By Vincent Van GoghSizes starting at $279.00
Julie et Ludovic-Rodolphe Pissarro Dans Les Fleurs 1879
By Camille PissarroSizes starting at $269.00
Undergrowth, With Ivy
By Vincent Van GoghSizes starting at $269.00
Village Derrière Des Arbres, Île-De-France 1879
By Paul CezanneSizes starting at $249.00
La Maison de Monsieur Musy, Route de Marly, Louveciennes 1872
By Camille PissarroSizes starting at $289.00
Rochers Dans La Fôret, Fontainebleau
By Paul CezanneSizes starting at $259.00
Undergrowth
By Vincent Van GoghSizes starting at $269.00
La Maison Rondest et Son Jardin à L’Hermitage, Pontoise 1878
By Camille PissarroSizes starting at $269.00
The Grove, 1890
By Vincent Van GoghSizes starting at $269.00
Vue d’Auvers-sur-Oise-La Barrière 1873
By Paul CezanneSizes starting at $259.00
Houses in Le Chou, in Pontoise 1881
By Paul CezanneSizes starting at $259.00
La Route D’Osny 1883
By Camille PissarroSizes starting at $269.00
Trunk Of An Old Yew Tree
By Vincent Van GoghSizes starting at $279.00
Detour in Auvers
By Paul CezanneSizes starting at $259.00
Landscape Near Pontoise 1872
By Camille PissarroSizes starting at $269.00
The Railway Bridge Over Avenue Montmajour 1888
By Vincent Van GoghSizes starting at $269.00
Bend in a road in Provence 1866
By Paul CezanneSizes starting at $259.00
Landscape Through Trees, Pontoise, 1875
By Camille PissarroSizes starting at $269.00
The Trinquetaille Bridge
By Vincent Van GoghSizes starting at $259.00
Bedroom In Arles 1889
By Vincent Van GoghSizes starting at $269.00
Bend in the road through the Forest
By Paul CezanneSizes starting at $249.00
Late afternoon in Our Meadow
By Camille PissarroSizes starting at $269.00
Forest Scene (Path from Mas Jolie To Château Noir)
By Paul CezanneSizes starting at $259.00
Gauguin’s Chair 1888
By Vincent Van GoghSizes starting at $259.00
Le Grand Noyer au Printemps, ÉRagny, 1894
By Camille PissarroSizes starting at $259.00
Bedroom In Arles 1889
By Vincent Van GoghSizes starting at $269.00
L’allée 1879
By Paul CezanneSizes starting at $249.00
Le Grand Noyer Dans Le Pré, ÉRagny 1885
By Camille PissarroSizes starting at $259.00
Avenue at Chantilly
By Paul CezanneSizes starting at $259.00
Le Jardin de Maubuisson, Pontoise, Poiriers Enfleur 1877
By Camille PissarroSizes starting at $259.00
Van Gogh’s Chair 1888
By Vincent Van GoghSizes starting at $259.00
Bedroom In Arles 1888
By Vincent Van GoghSizes starting at $279.00




































































































