Impressionism and Post Impressionism

Impressionism


Claude Monet, Vetheuil in the Fog, 1879. (Foundation, 2017).


Impressionism can be considered the first distinctly modern movement in painting. Its originators were artists who rejected the official, government-sanctioned exhibitions, or salons, and were consequently shunned by powerful academic art institutions. The Impressionists loosened their brushwork and lightened their palettes to include pure, intense colors. They abandoned traditional linear perspective and avoided the clarity of form that had previously served to distinguish the more important elements of a picture from the lesser ones (Foundation, 2017). 

Post Impressionism


Georges Seurat, Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte, 1886. (Foundation, 2017). 

Sources Consulted

Foundation, T. A. S., 2017. Impressionism. [Online]
Available at: http://www.theartstory.org/movement-impressionism.htm
[Accessed 10 September]

Foundation, T. A. S., 2017. Post Impressionism. [Online]

Available at: http://www.theartstory.org/movement-post-impressionism.htm
[Accessed 10 September]

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