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Friday, April 18, 2008

Realism And Impressionism In France

(via The Outline of Art) William Orpen writes:

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Camille Pissarro (1830-1930) was born at St Thomas in the Danish West Indies and came to Paris with his parents when he was twenty five. He became a pupil of Corot, and his earlier works show the influenec of Corot as regards style and color and of Millet in subject adn drawing. He was the eldest of the Impressionists, being two years older than Manet; but throughout his life Pissarro was an ardent student, never ceasing to investigate and experiment, always ready to listen to the theories and to observe the practice of a junior who claimed to have discovered a new truth. Though darker in color than his later work, a small landscape now in the Musée des Arts Decoratis at Paris, painted by Pissarro in 1869, shows that even at this time he was experimenting in the division of tones. Unfortunately nearly all the earlier paintings of Camille Pissarro are lost, for his home and studio were in the line of approach of the destroying Prussians in 1870. Owing to the war Pissarro and Monet came to London in 1871, and there they saw the later paintings of Turner, which confirmed their ideas about color and encouraged them to paint brighter and still brighter.

Claude Monet was ten years younger than Pissarro. Though born in 1840 at Paris, where his father was a merchant, he spent much of his boyhood at Havre, where he learnt a good deal about painting from Boudin. After completing his military service in Algeria, Monet returned to Paris and entered the studio of Gleyre. Here he formed a close friendship with two fellow students, Renoir and Sisley, and became acquainted later with Manet, as has already been related. Monet’s earliest paintings, however, are not lighter than those by Boudin and Corot, and he was first influenced by these and others of the Barbizon School.

Auguste Renoir (1841-1919) was born at Limoges, where his father was a tailor in a small way of business, and at the age of thirteen young Auguste began to earn his living as a painter on porcelain. This early apprenticeship left a certain trace on his art which was always decorative adn evel elegiac in spite of its later realism. In time Renoir saved up enough money to go to Paris and become a pupil of Gleyre, but while his friends were landscapists Renoir was first and foremost a figure painter.

Alfred Sisley (1839-99) was born in Paris of English parents, and his development was parallel to that of Monet, whose work his own pictures closely resemble. We may say that all these young men, together with Pissarro, were discontented with the state of painting before 1870. They looked at their pictures and they looked at Nature; but while they realized how far their painting fell short of their intention, they had not yet found the way to secure greater brilliancy and truth. That way was discovered during the ‘seventies, after Pissarro and Monet had seen the Turners in London and returned to Paris. It is possible to exaggerate the influence of Turner on the new movement, for it had really begun earlier with Delacroix, but the sight of the Turners undoubtedly hastened its accomplishment as far as Pissarro and Monet are concerned. Not the beginning of Impressionism, but the first public revelation of Impressionism, was an exhibition held at Nadar’s galleries, Boulevard des Capucines, in 1874. Here were gathered together works by many of the ‘rejected’ of 1863, Manet being the best known of them and generally considered the leader of the movement, and also works by new adherents to Impressionist doctrine. The exhibitions provoked much controversy, but it was sufficiently talked about to be something of a success, and thereafter for several years a Salon des Impressionistes was an annual event. But in 1874, the science of color was still in its infancy, and if the exhibitors were ‘Impressionists’ they were not all ‘luminists’. Even Renoir’s famous picture of people in a theatre box, painted about this time, is sombre in color, in comparison with the scintillating canvases he was to paint later.

Realism And Impressionism In France (continued)

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