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Famous artist painter Vincent van Gogh,
impressionist Claude Monet, Camille Pissarro,
Auguste Renoir, Alfred Sisley, Paul Cézanne, Degas and
Manet. Famous Romantic artist: J.M.W.Turner, John
Constable, Eugene Delacroix.
Famous Post impressionist artist Paul Gauguin and
Silhouettist John Miers & others |
Click a thumb or link to explore a famous artist
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Claude Monet |
Auguste
Renoir |
Camille Pissarro |
Alfred
Sisley |
Famous Impressionist artist
Biography of famous Artist
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J.M.W.Turner
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Claude
Loraine |
John
Constable |
Eugene
Delacroix |
Famous
Romantic artist
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Paul
Cézanne |
Paul
Gauguin |
Vincent
van Gogh |
John Miers
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Famous
Post impressionist artist and Silhouettist
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Impressionist Portraits
French Impressionist
painting is currently the most popular of all European
bodies of art. Part of the romance of Impressionism
comes from the stories of uphill struggles against the
famous Academic painters and critics who dominated
19th-century French art, only to be swept into
obscurity by the now famous artists they had scorned.
However, a reaction was bound to set in, and during
the final decades of the 20th century, a number of
politically oriented critics began to argue that far
from being radicals, the Impressionists appealed to
bourgeois tastes partly because their technique was
easy to digest and their subject matter inoffensive.
They point out that the industrialization of Europe is
rarely reflected in their works, and that they paid
little or no attention to the sufferings of the urban
poor. Many of them were acutely conscious of their
popularity, and eager to cash in on it.
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Collecting Impressionism: “Something Solid and
Durable”
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In the
early years of Impressionism, artists struggled to
find markets for their work, and many lived
hand-to-mouth. Impressionism changed when artists
quarreled with one another, withdrew from exhibitions,
or, like Monet and Renoir, reverted to a more Academic
style they hoped would lure buyers. Cézanne also
turned away from Impressionism, disappointed that he
hadn’t been able “to make of Impressionism something
solid and durable like the art of the museums.”
However, one visionary Paris art dealer, Paul
Durand-Ruel, recognized the greatness of Impressionism
as early as 1870. “A true picture dealer should also
be an enlightened patron; he should, if necessary,
sacrifice his immediate interest to his artistic
convictions,” Durand-Ruel wrote. He regularly bought,
sold, and promoted Impressionist paintings during the
early years. Finally, in the 1880s and ‘90s, the world
the Impressionists painted began to embrace them.
American collectors were largely responsible for this
reversal of fortune, buying enough paintings to keep
several artists at work. The Musée de Luxembourg in
Paris mounted the first museum exhibition of
Impressionist art in 1897, and an exhibition at the
1900 World Exposition sealed the artists’ reputations.
Paintings sold twenty-five years earlier for a mere
fifty francs, noted Durand-Ruel, now fetched 50,000
francs.
What caused the public’s change of heart?
“Ironically,” writes art historian Ann Dumas, “the
Impressionists” former status as renegades enhanced
their appeal to the connoisseurship and speculative
skills of the bourgeois collector...(it was) a new art
for a new class that wanted images of the world they
inhabited.”
Perhaps more crucial to its present-day
popularity is the broadly appealing color,
spontaneity, and freshness of Impressionist art.
Before the first exhibition in 1874, the art critic
Armand Silvestre observed of these paintings, “A blond
light pervades them, and everything is gaiety,
clarity, spring festivals, golden evenings or apple
trees in blossom. They are windows opening on the
joyous countryside, on rivers full of pleasure boats
stretching into the distance, on a sky which shines
with light mists, on the outdoor life, panoramic and
charming.”
Acknowledgements
Impressionism: Paintings Collected by European Museums
is organized by the High Museum of Art, Atlanta, in
collaboration with the Denver Art Museum and the
Seattle Art Museum.
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Picasso's
`Boy with a Pipe' sells for $104 million, auction record
This 1905 painting by Pablo Picasso titled "Garcon a la pipe" sold for $104
million Wednesday at Sotheby's in New York. Associated Press photo via
Sotheby'sNew York Daily News -
http://www.nydailynews.com
Auction house strikes
gusher with Picasso oil
By DEREK ROSE
and LEO STANDORA
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITERS
Thursday, May 6th, 2004
Pablo Picasso smoked Vincent van Gogh last night as his 1905 painting "Boy
with a Pipe" was auctioned for a record-shattering $104 million. The new most expensive canvas in the world sold in just under five
minutes. The tab for the 39-by-32-inch masterpiece, created when Picasso was just
24, included auctioneer Sotheby's $11 million commission. The very deep-pocketed buyer was not immediately known. Until last night, van Gogh's 1890 "Portrait of Doctor Gachet" had the
record for fetching the most green. A Japanese billionaire bought it for a mere $82.5 million at a Christie's
auction in May 1990. "Garcon ... la Pipe," painted soon after Picasso
settled in Montmartre, France, shows a Parisian youth wearing blue overalls,
holding a pipe in his left hand and wearing a crown of roses against a rosy
background. The long-forgotten model was a teen who hung around Picasso's studio and
volunteered to pose for the oil work. The spirited and speedy bidding last night was begun by auctioneer Tobias
Mayer at $55 million. In just minutes, with the price at $79 million, a lull
enveloped the room. "Are we done? I'm happy to wait," Tobias told the six bidders. Then a seventh art lover entered the fray, and with a cell phone call put
the bidding into the art-world stratosphere. In less than five minutes, the deal was done. After the gavel went down, Sotheby's CEO Bill Ruprecht said, "It was an
extraordinary night. History was made tonight." "My only fear was it would make only $99.9 million and you guys would
write 'Sotheby's Misses the Mark,' " he told reporters.
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