IMPRESSIONISM, in Painting

in painting, late-19th-century French school that was generally characterized by the attempt to depict transitory visual impressions, often painted directly from nature, and by the use of pure, broken color to achieve brilliance and luminosity. It was loosely structured in that many painters were associated with the movement for only brief periods in their careers. Their association often came about more for the purpose of exhibiting their works than from an approach to painting held in common.

The Birth of Impressionism

The movement began with the friendship of four students of the academic painter Marc Gleyre: Monet, Renoir, Sisley, and Bazille. These four met regularly at the Café Guerbois in Paris with Cézanne, Pissarro, and Morisot, and later with Degas, Manet, the critics Duret and Rivière, and the art dealer Durand-Ruel. The painters repudiated academic standards and reacted against the romantics' emphasis on emotion as subject matter. They forsook literary and anecdotal subjects and, indeed, rejected the role of imagination in the creation of works of art. Instead they observed nature closely, with a scientific interest in visual phenomena. Although they painted everyday subjects, they avoided the vulgar and ugly, seeking visual realism by extraordinary stylistic means.

Impressionists and Postimpressionists

The subject matter of their painting was as diverse as the various artists' personalities: Manet chose Old Master themes which he treated in a novel and stunningly direct way so that his canvases were the focus of acid controversy and scandal. Monet, Sisley, and Pissarro were the most consistently impressionist in style. Their subject was landscape and the changing effects of light. Degas painted horse races, the ballet, and portraits of ordinary people, all with a photographic sense of "accidental" composition. Renoir, painting his idealized women and children and his lush landscapes, developed divisionism; omitting black for shadows and outlines from his palette in the 1860s, he used pure, bright color to separate forms. Monet painted many series of the same subject at different times of day so that the character of light became his subject and the forms of objects seemed to dissolve, as in the series of Rouen Cathedral.

The interests and attitudes of these painters influenced the postimpressionists Cézanne, Seurat, Gauguin, and Van Gogh. Toulouse-Lautrec gained from a study of Degas's paintings; Matisse, Vuillard, and Bonnard all owed a debt to the landscape painters. However, impressionist objectivity was limiting; the severe and total rejection of both the function of imagination and of the enduring aspects of reality began to pall. Gauguin and Van Gogh used color imaginatively and violently for its expressive emotional value. Immediate impressions and flickering light gave way to heavier subjects, solid with "meaning," in the works of the impressionists' successors.

See postimpressionism and articles on individual artists, e.g., Renoir.

The Legacy of Impressionism

Impressionism and postimpressionism ran their course and produced aesthetic revolution from within and without, putting hosts of painters to come greatly in its debt. At first, with a few exceptions, the works of the impressionist and postimpressionist schools were received with hostility from critics and public alike. This situation continued until the 1920s. By the 1930s impressionism had a large cult following, so that in the 1950s even the least works by painters associated with the movement commanded large prices.

Throughout the next three decades, impressionism and postimpressionism became increasingly popular, as evidenced by the major exhibitions of Monet and Van Gogh at the Metropolitan Museum in New York in the 1980s, both of which drew enormous crowds. Record prices to date include two 1990 sales, one at Sotheby's of Renoir's Au Moulin de la Galette for $78.1 million, the other at Christie's of Van Gogh's Portrait du Dr. Gachet for $82.5 million.

Bibliography

See J. Rewald, The History of Impressionism (1980); T. J. Clark, The Painting of Modern Life (1984); W. H. Gerdts, American Impressionism (1984); D. Bomford et al., Impressionism (1990); B. Denvir, Encyclopedia of Impressionism (1990); C. Moffett, Impressionism and Post-Impressionism (1991).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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...abroad came into our painting, this time from...by many of them in Dusseldorf, had...a pale, belated impressionism which gave their...influences of post-impressionism, fauvism, and cubism upon our painters, in fact they required...modern Parisian painting there, they found...
...literary Impressionism and Impressionism in painting? Analogies between the...historical specificity: since Impressionism in painting was in fact not the dominant...What has found expression in painting as Impressionism will soon find expression...
...terms that impressionism was about...important factor in the painting of out-of...To this impressionism is absolutely...enduring in an impressionist painting: the power...in the painting, but scintillant, vital, in virtual motion...power of impressionism derives from...
...defining literary impressionism lies in two areas: first...impressionist painting and those of...impressionist painting. 29 Because impressionism originated in the visual arts...derived from Impressionism in painting. 30 Problems...
...Pre-Raphaelite Body FEAR AND DESIRE IN PAINTING, POETRY, AND CRITICISM J...What was originally a movement in painting was later joined by poetry and...the re-inscription of the flesh in painting through the representation of the...
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...female artist: impressionism in Audrey Thomass...Cheos defined painting as mute poetry...as Shown in His Criticism...Nineteenth Century Painting," the thesis...refers to Impressionism, and the...Modern French Painting: 1855-1956...History of impressionism. In addition...
...Impressionist paintings emerged partly in reaction to those...link painterly impressionism with literary...declaring that Conrads impressionism "is not an attempt...techniques of painting"; but this implies...Peters can be found in literary works...
...and solitude of so much Impressionist painting. It was a quietness and solitude that...predilection for lyrical subject-matter. In fact, Stieglitz was afterwards actively...recollection which I have associated with Impressionism, except that in this case the photograph...
...Chen advocated pursuing Western "realism" in order to achieve a "new" style of painting (p. 12). A contrast to Kang and Chen and more...tradition and maintained that "since Post-Impressionism, the West had also abandoned realism. This...
...exhibition to move away from "meaning" and toward form. Indeed, the paintings here can be seen as precursors to Impressionism, not least because the most prominent painter in the group is Corot. Still, such an impression would be wrong for the...
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A celebration of painting in Boston by Karen Wilkin...considerations of the role of subject matter in modern painting, the relationship of perception to...Boston, two of the most unnerving paintings in the history of nineteenth-century...
...and exhibits art. In a museum, you might...ancient Greece, or a painting done last week on...French artist whose paintings might be seen in a museum. He lived...Georges liked to paint in his own unusual way. His kind of painting with dots of color...
...LEARN * Impressionism is a style of painting in which artists...finished painting to make people...been mixed in advance...believe that Impressionism was the most...system of painting called "Pointillism...or "Neo-Impressionism"). * Probably...who worked in France with...
...American Impressionism, The Phillips...Impressionist paintings into a traveling...first time in nearly 25...American Impressionism: Paintings from The...Collection, opened in Washington...collections in the world. American Impressionism: Paintings from The...
...history of painting are featured in the exhibition, "American Impressionism and Realism...turned to Impressionism after creating...distinctive paintings in the Realist...grimy slum in which they...American Impressionism and Realism: The Painting of Modern...
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...of Drawing, Painting and Observation...only because, in responding to...response to Post-Impressionism, artists have...kindred spirit in his paintings, often on a...in this, as in previous exhibitions, there are paintings that utterly...
...heralded a new era in art history. A...academic tradition with Impressionism, the then-avant...Seurats only great painting," said Douglas W...it was displayed in a separate room...matter that defined Impressionism, Seurat rejected...brushwork. Instead, his painting features the small...
Impressionism: Monet in the Bank...Mount an impressionism show, and...light-dappled paintings produced...of their paintings were finished in the studio...speaking, impressionism covers the...to do with impressionism so as to...audience. "Monet in London...circle than paintings by the Frenchman...
...Modern" and "Early Impressionism at Its Best...THE record for a painting by Impressionist...Monet has beenbroken in New York, allaying...record fora Monet painting was pounds sterling18...passing over the Seine in Paris, was sold...modern. Its early Impressionism at its best." The...
...by Rebelling against Impressionism. Byline: BRIAN SEWELL...painted by Andre Derain in 1906-07 was tucked into...yellow lights; in one painting the brushwork in the...seems, haunted Vollard in search of paintings by Cezanne, and in this...
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IMPRESSIONISM , in painting in painting...approach to painting held in common. The Birth of Impressionism The movement...in New York in the 1980s...History of Impressionism (1980); T. J. Clark, The Painting of Modern...
IMPRESSIONISM , in music in music, a French movement...the impressionist schools of French painting and letters, Debussy developed a style...J. A. Carpenter. See C. Palmer, Impressionism in Music (1973...
...unparalleled drama. From the age of the rococo, painting tended in the direction of greater intimacy. It is noteworthy...masterpieces of the 19th cent., and particularly of impressionism , are small easel paintings suitable for the private...
...important influence on future landscape painting. The Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries...inspiration to the Barbizon school in France, whose members returned to the...plein-air works, forming the basis of impressionism , elevated landscape to the highest position...
...and techniques of painting, sculpture, and other...Origins of Modern Art In the second half of...contemporaries. Impressionism Monet , Renoir...Nineteenth-Century Painting after Impressionism In the 1880s, Seurat...
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