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Realism
Impressionism
Post Impressionismweek five
The École des Beaux-Arts
• The École des Beaux-Arts (est. 1648) was a government controlled art school originally meant to guarantee a pool of artists available to decorate the palaces of Louis XIV
Artistic training at The École des Beaux-Arts
• Students at the École des Beaux Arts were required to pass exams which proved they could imitate classical art.
• An École education had three essential parts: learning to copy engravings of Classical art, drawing from casts of Classical statues and finally drawing from the nude model
The Academy, Académie des Beaux-Arts
• The École des Beaux-Arts was an adjunct to the French Académie des beaux-arts
• The Academy held a virtual monopoly on artistic styles and tastes until the late 1800s
• The Academy favored classical subjects painted in a highly polished classical style
• Academic art was at its most influential phase during the periods of Neoclassicism and Romanticism
• The Academy ranked subject matter in order of importance-History and classical subjects were the most important types of painting-Landscape was near the bottom-Still life and genre painting were unworthy subjects for art
The Salons• The Salons were annual art shows sponsored by the Academy• If an artist was to have any success or recognition, it was essential achieve success in the Salons
Background/context
What is Realism?
Courbet rebelled against the strictures of the Academy, exhibiting in his own shows. Other groups of painters followed his example and began to rebel against the Academy as well.
• Subjects attempt to make the ordinary into something beautiful
• Subjects often include peasants and workers
• Subjects attempt to show the undisguised truth of life
• Realism deliberately violates the standards of the Academy.
• Genre scenes, a favorite of the Realists, were considered unworthy subjects for art by the Academy
• The paintings are not technically sophisticated. Sometimes brushwork is still visible (impasto)
Realism
RealismGustave Courbet, Stone Breakers, 1849
Ordinary road workers are elevated to the status of art. Painted nearly life size on an enormous canvas, this painting was considered ugly, offensive and rude by Academic standards.
hyperlink: Gustave Courbet’s painting technique, 3 min
RealismGustave Courbet, Studio of a Painter: A Real Allegory Summarizing My Seven Years as an Artist, 1854
•50 people were invited to Courbet’s studio. They were posed informally• The people on the left are the peasants and workers• The people on the right are the Parisian intellectuals and collectors• Nobody pays any attention to Courbet except the nude, the boy and the dog.• Courbet organized his own exhibit for this painting in 1855. The show was called “Du Realisme.”• By organizing his own show in an era when the Academy dictated taste, Courbet was proclaiming artistic freedom from Academic tyranny.
RealismGustave Courbet, Burial at Ornans, 1849
RealismJean-François Millet, The Gleaners, 1857
RealismHonoré Daumier, Rue Transnonain, 1834
RealismHonoré Daumier, The Third Class Carriage, 1862
American RealismThomas Eakins, Wm. Rush Carving his Allegorical Figure of the Schuykill River, 1876-1877
Compare with neoclassical painting of a similar subject:Jean-Léon Gérôme, Pygmalion and Galatea, 1860
American RealismThomas Eakins, The Gross Clinic, 1875
American RealismHenry Ossawa Tanner, The Banjo Lesson, 1893
ImpressionismWhat is Impressionism?
• The term is applied to describe a group of artists who exhibited in Paris in the 1860s to 1880s•Impressionist subjects are often of the Parisian nouveaux-riche, enjoying themselves in leisurely activities• The Impressionists often made extensive use of complementary colors• The Impressionists left their brush marks visible• The goal of the Impressionists was to create beautiful canvases. Creating a sense of modeled, believable 3-D space was not a priority. The Impressionists acknowledged the flatness of the canvas.• The Impressionists left their brush marks unblended and visible. The strokes of paint sit on the surface and acknowledge the flatness of the canvas.
Artistic Freedom
• During the second half of the 1800s, artists began to decide they had the freedom to paint anything they wanted to paint• The hierarchies of the Academy were eliminated (history painting at the top, still-life at the bottom, etc.)• Artists depended less on the Salons for success. There was an increasing number of independent art dealers and galleries for exhibiting and selling art.•The Academy no longer had a monopoly on dictating style and taste
hyperlink: Sister Wendy: Impressions of Light (1), 10 min.
Manet, OlympiaMonet, Impression SunriseMonet, WaterliliesRenoir, Boating Party (beginning)
hyperlink: Sister Wendu Impres-sion of Light (2), 10 min.
Renoir, Boating PartyBerthe MorisotDegas, The Dance ClassSeurat, La Grande Jatte, Young Woman Powdering herself
ImpressionismEdouard Manet, Luncheon on the Grass, 1863
• Classical nudes had always been a favored subject of the Academy and the Parisian elite.• This nude, however, was not classical. She is an ordinary woman seated beside two men. She looks at the viewer with a frank expression.• She was a Scandal! She was considered vulgar and obscene by the elite.• The nude attacks the hypocrisy of the Academy
• The style violates Academic standards as well• The lighting is unreal. The bather is lit from a different source• The sharply defined contours of the figures contrast with the background. The figures look flat and as if they were cut from another painting and pasted on this one. • There are 3 disconnected scenes: the picnic still-life, the three people and the bather. It is as if this is 3 different paintings• The bather is too large in scale to be as far in the distance as the landscape suggests.
Impressionism
Courbet, The Bathers, 1853 (Realism)
Manet was an admirer of Courbet. In what ways does Manet’s Luncheon pay tribute to Courbet?
Impressionism
Édouard Manet, The Fifer, 1866
• The Fifer’s style was so anti-Academic, that it was considered laughable.
•The boy is sharply defined against a contrasting background. It is as if he is a paper doll
• The background does not suggest a believable 3-D space. It is as close in the foreground as the boy
•The lighting is unreal. The cast shadows are too tiny for the bright light
• The pant legs are not modeled. The folds are indicated by a single stroke of black paint.
• Manet’s deliberate measures to “flatten” his subject acknowledges the flat surface of the canvas.
ImpressionismEdouard Manet, The Bar at the Folies Bergere, 1882
•Much of the composition takes place on the surface of the mirror. This re-emphasizes the flatness of the canvas• The mirror image of the Parisian bourgeois enjoying themselves contrasts with the unhappy barmaid.• The brushstrokes are left unblended and visible to sit on the surface of the canvas. This acknowledges the flatness of the canvas.• Manet’s first loyalty was to create a beautiful canvas. Creating an illusionistic window on the canvas was always secondary.
Impressionism
Claude Monet, On The Banks of the Seine, 1868
•Monet preferred to paint landscapes, a subject that was considered inferior by the Academy.•The painting is full of sunlight. To achieve this luminosity, black is avoided and the darkest color is the green leaves•Areas of brown are enlivened with oranges, yellows and bright greens• The sky is a flat patch of pure blue• The tree is essentially a dark, flat silhouette•There is no attempt to blend colors. The colors are left pure and unmixed--as if they are mosaic tesserae
ImpressionismAuguste Renoir, Luncheon of the Boating Party, 1881
•Renoir often painted scenes of the Parisian nouveaux-riche enjoying themselves• The scene in informally posed. It has a “snapshot” quality• There is extensive use of bright complementary colors. The yellow hats contrast with the purple garments• The short brushstrokes are left unblended and visible on the surface• Unlike the other Impressionists, Renoir never fully abandoned his classical training. His figures are fully modeled and they exist in believable 3-D space.
ImpressionismEdgar Degas, The Glass of Absinthe, 1876
Absinthe is a highly addictive alcoholic drink.
• The pitiful woman slumps over her drink•the low light casts ominous shadows behind the figures•the zig-zag composition makes the eye restless. The front table juts into the viewer’s space•The use of diagonal compositions to suggest negative emotions was common in Japanese prints, which Degas studied.• Degas did not adopt the gay scenes and bright colors of the other Impressionists
ImpressionismEdgar Degas, The Tub, 1886, pastel
• Radical composition. The viewer looks over a table top.• The initial contour lines of the objects are left visible. The outlines flatten the objects against their background•The contour lines are in-filled with scratchy color. The strokes of color are left unblended to sit on the surface, emphasizing the flatness of the drawing• The perspective is conflated. The objects are tipped up toward the viewer
ImpressionismClaude Monet, Arrival of the Normandy Train, Gare St. Lazare, 1877
ImpressionismClaude Monet, Impression Sunrise, 1872
ImpressionismClaude Monet, Luncheon, 1874
ImpressionismClaude Monet, Rouen Cathedral: The Portal (Sun), 1894
ImpressionismPierre-Auguste Renoir, Le Moulin de la Galette (the pancake mill), 1876
ImpressionismEdgar Dégas, The Ballet Class, 1879
ImpressionismEdgar Dégas, Viscount Lepic and his daughters, 1873
ImpressionismEdgar Dégas, Ballet Rehearsal (Adagio), 1876
Impressionism
Edgar Dégas,The Morning Bath, 1883
compare with: Suzuki Haranobu, The Evening Glow of the Ando, 1766
ImpressionismMary Cassatt, The Bath, 1892
ImpressionismMary Cassatt, The Boating Party, 1893
Impressionism
Camille Pissarro, Place du Theatre Français, 1895
compare with photo: hippolyte Jouvin, Pont Neuf, c. 1860
ImpressionismGustave caillebotte, Paris: A Rainy Day, 1877
ImpressionismJames Abbott McNeill Whistler, Nocturne in Blue and Gold, 1877
Moving beyond Impressionism:
The last Impressionist show, 1886Georges Seurat, A Sunday Afternoon on la Grande Jatte, 1884-1886
• The sunny colors and gay subject of this painting is Impressionist in spirit• However, the painstaking technique is the antithesis of a quick “impression”• Small dots of pure color are applied with the theory that the eye will mix them. This is called “Pointillism”• Seurat left his dots large, so the effect is grainy or like a mosaic• The figures are immobile and frozen in time. Most are strictly profile or frontal, in the manner of Egyptian art• The unmoving figures recall Piero della Francesca• The figures are precisely and mechanically spaced. Few overlap.• The mechanical production of the painting (Pointillism) reflects the methodical placement and pose of the figures• This precision seems to be the antithesis of Impressionism.
Post Impressionism
What is Post-Impressionism?
• Post-Impressionism is art produced after the last Impressionist show (1886)• There is not a single style that can be called Post-Impressionist• Some Post Impressionists exhibited as “The Society of the Independents”
hyperlink: Sister Wendy Impression of light (3), 10 min
Gauguin, NevermoreVan Gogh, Church at Auvers, 1890
hyperlink: Van Gogh, Private life of a masterpiece, 12 min
Van Gogh, Self PortraitVan Gogh, Sunflowers
Post Impressionism
Paul Cezanne,Still life with Compotier, 1879-1882
•Cezanne gave importance to everyday objects. He elevated the apple to a subject worthy of art.• The brushstrokes are uniform in length and width. This unifies the composition• The perspective is conflated. The table is tipped up so we can see what’s on it• The spherical outlines of the apples are left visible.• The outlines emphasize what Cezanne believed every shape in the natural world was made of: spheres, cones and cylinders
hyperlink: Cezanne, Post Impressionists, 12 min
Post ImpressionismCezanne, Mont Sainte-Victoire, 1902-1904
detail
Post Impressionism
Vincent Van Gogh, Self-Portrait, 1889
• VanGogh’s emaciated face reflects his tortured existence.• Van Gogh sought to create “something of the eternal which the halo used to symbolize”
hyperlink: The Power of Art—Van Gogh, 59 min
Post Impressionism
Vincent Van Gogh, Wheat Field and Cypress Trees, (St. Remy) 1889
• Van Gogh’s Wheat Field is full of Expressionistic qualities• The field is not simply a field--it is alive with movement and life. The wind blows through the stalks and turns it into a stormy yellow sea• The sky undulates in the wind• The cypress trees rise from the ground like the flaming tongues of a fire
The Cypress trees reminded van Gogh of Egyptian obselisks.
Post ImpressionismVincent Van Gogh, Japonaiserie: Flowering Plum Tree, 1887
• reflects VanGogh’s interest in Japanese ukiyo-e prints (colorful wood block prints), and the Impressionist’s general fascination with Japanese prints
• this painting was closely modeled on same subject by Hisoshige
• characteristics of wood block prints:-ordinary subject matter-cropped compositions-unusual perspectives-flat areas of color (no shadowing)-decorative patterning
Post ImpressionismVincent Van Gogh, The Sower, 1888
Post ImpressionismVincent Van Gogh, Starry Night, 1889
Post ImpressionismVincent Van Gogh, The Night Café, 1888
Post Impressionism
Paul Gauguin, Vision After the Sermon (Jacob wrestling an angel), 1888
• Gauguin was disillusioned with what he called the spiritual bankruptcy of Western Civilization• Gauguin left Paris to live among the simple peasants in Brittany• Religion was still a part of the everyday life of the peasants• Gauguin was influenced by artists that worked in a style similar to cloisonné metalwork or stained glass. The flat simplified shapes and bright unreal colors are outlined in black.• There is little modeling and little attempt at perspective. The style is closer to primitive art or folk art. For Gauguin, this was an important part of his rejection of Western culture and its art based on classical forms.
Post Impressionism
Paul Gauguin, Where do we come from? What are we? Where are we going?, 1897
Gauguin left France for Tahiti in 1890. He was seeking an unspoiled Eden.
• The subject is an epic cycle of life• The sleeping girl (left) becomes a Tahitian Eve (center) and then becomes the old woman picking fruit (rear, right)• The Maori god oversees the action and acts as the demon of death• Gauguin rejected classical art and Western civilization. He tried to find inspiration in Eastern art.
Post ImpressionismPaul Gauguin, Day of the God (Mahana No Atua), 1894
Post ImpressionismPaul Gauguin, Spirit of the Dead Watching (Manao Tupapau), 1892
Post ImpressionismHenri de Toulouse-Lautrec, At the Moulin Rouge, 1893-1895
• Toulouse-Lautrec was an alcoholic who frequented bars and brothels• His subjects were the decadent world of Paris• The zig-zag composition recalls Degas, who TL admired. The zig-zag composition is used to express negative emotion in Japanese prints.• The diagonals make the composition uncomfortable. The green woman’s face is morbid and cropped.• The strange lighting gives an eerie effect. Toulouse-Lautrec paints the bar life as nightmarish and evil.
this is TL
hyperlink: Toulouse-Lautrec and Jane Avril at the Moulin Rouge, 4 min