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Realism, Impressionism, Post-Impressionism Symbolism

Realism, Impressionism, Post-Impressionism Symbolism. 19 th century Reaction to Romanticism’s flight of fantasy Photography 2 types 1. Daguerreo produced lightly detailed, mirror like images on a metal plate 2. photography on paper was invented in England by William Henry Talbot

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Realism, Impressionism, Post-Impressionism Symbolism

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  1. Realism, Impressionism, Post-Impressionism Symbolism

  2. 19th century • Reaction to Romanticism’s flight of fantasy • Photography • 2 types • 1. Daguerreo produced lightly detailed, mirror like images on a metal plate • 2. photography on paper was invented in England by William Henry Talbot • Depicted botanical specimens reproducing works of art, and taking surveillance pictures in the dark Realism

  3. Daguerreo by Daguerre

  4. Daguerreo by Daguerre

  5. Daguerrerotype

  6. Sculptural realism • Rumors started that he was trying to pass off a statue taken directly from plaster casts of a living model • Sculpted by hand • “Age of Bronze” • Too lifelike Auguste Rodin

  7. Auguste Rodin

  8. Rodin: The Age of Bronze

  9. Rodin: Burghers of Calais

  10. French artist Gustave Courbet realistic painter • Paintings were of real people who posed for him • Did not believe in painting souls or goddesses • When he was asked why he never painting angels he replied, “Show me an angel and I’ll paint one “Show Me an Angel”

  11. Gustave Courbet

  12. Mädchen an der Seine

  13. “The Stonebreakers” 1849oil on canvas

  14. Manet-Olympia • Nude, seems unbothered by things/people • People found it hard to understand • Not goddess, but real model Realism Scandal

  15. Edouard Manet-Olympia, 1863

  16. The unfinished, the complete, an act of instantaneous vision, a sensation rather than a perception • Stimulate by the new discoveries in science of optics, color theory, and nature of light, as well as recent knowledge about the physiology of the eye • Discovered when all of the colors of the spectrum are rotated, the eye sees them as white • Made discoveries about art in Nature • No hard lines shadows take on color of objects • Ex. grass shadow in greenish • Use primary colors to make the spectrum • Impressionists invented a new method of visual representation Impressionism

  17. Impressionism

  18. Impressionism

  19. Impressionist

  20. Idea of creating a stream of suggestive ideas • Symbolists investigated recent discoveries in psychology • Left the connection, order, and form of their of their poetry inconclusive and fragmented • Reader was given plenty of room for use of their imagination (room for interpretation) Symbolism

  21. Impressionists left the mixing of color to the eye and the relationship of subject matter to the mind of the viewer • Symbolists left the connection, order, and form of their verbal still lifes to be completed by the reader

  22. A combination of the senses, or an attempt to have one sense, such as sight, be stimulated by another sense • Chain reaction • Tried to stimulate the capacity for new and peripheral experiences • Implies that the images are revelations of something beyond sense data Synesthesia

  23. Symbolists explored “listening” to colors, “looking” at sounds, “savoring” perfumes, and all such mixtures of separate sensations • Synesthesia

  24. Synesthesia, Sounds and Perfumes Turn in the Evening Air

  25. Synesthesia

  26. Philadelphia born painter • Absorbed the tenets of Impressionist color and atmospheric effects • Added the dimension of fine drawing • Carefully controlled composition • Worked with Parisian friend • Berthe Morisot • Worked closely together with Impressionist painter • Helped create ideas generated by the movement • Cassatt often painted pictures of women’s activities • Pushed impressionism in a different direction from that represented by Monet and Renoir Mary Cassatt

  27. Mary Cassatt

  28. Mary Cassatt

  29. Mary Cassatt

  30. Mary Cassatt

  31. Central figure of impressionism • La Gare Saint Lazare • Renders the humid atmosphere, the mixture of steam and smoke, the hazy sunlight filtering from the open background and transparent ceiling glass • His figures are represented by thick dabs of paint • Full development of Monet’s broke color technique is seen clearly in Japanese Bridge at Giverny • In order to capture a particular moment, Money would paint a succession of canvases during a single day Claude Monet

  32. Monet

  33. Monet, La Gare Saint Lazare

  34. Monet, Japanese Bridge at Giverny

  35. Monet, The Iris Garden at Giverny

  36. Monet, Lady with Parasol

  37. Later work was on the style of impressionism • Introduced a contemplative note in the figure • Rue Mosnier, Paris and Bar at the Folies-Bergere are examples of his work • Bar at the Folies-Bergere was his last large scale work and is a technical tour de force Edouard Manet

  38. Edouard Manet

  39. Manet, Bar at the Folies-Bergere

  40. Manet, Rue Mosnier

  41. Manet, Rue Mosnier Flags

  42. Depicted casual, light-hearted city scenes • Ex. gaslit evening at a popular Parisian café • Le Moulin de la Galette • The Moulin was frequented by working class families • Use of full force Impressionist colors Auguste Renoir

  43. Renoir

  44. Renoir, Le Moulin de la Galette

  45. Renoir Girl

  46. Renoir Girl

  47. Renoir Girl, Lorelai Gilmore

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