Title: Chapter Thirteen
1Chapter Thirteen
Gardner's Art through the Ages, Concise Edition
by Fred Kleiner
- Europe and America, 1870-1900
Prepared by Kelly Donahue-Wallace Randal
Wallace University of North Texas
2Impressionism
- Dates and Places
- 1870 to 1890
- France, England, US
- People
- Industrialization, urbanization
- Leisure
- Self-conscious modernity and modernism
JAMES ABBOTT MCNEILL WHISTLER, Nocturne in Black
and Gold (The Falling Rocket), ca. 1875. Fig.
13-1.
3Impressionism
- Themes
- Landscape, cityscape
- Urban life
- Leisure activities
- Forms
- Fleeting effects of light
- Unblended brushstrokes
- Plein air (outdoor) painting
- Influence of Japanese prints
MARY CASSATT, The Bath, ca. 1892. Fig. 13-6.
4Impressionism
- Example
- Impressionist Movements name derived from
painting title - First Impressionist show
- Honesty of materials
- Capture sensations of moment
- Painted outdoors
CLAUDE MONET, Impression Sunrise, 1872. Fig.
13-2.
5Impressionism
- Example
- Urban life
- Technology, travel, speed
- Fleeting effects of smoke
- Agitated brushwork
CLAUDE MONET, Saint-Lazare Train Station, 1877.
Fig. 13-3.
6Impressionism
- Example
- Leisure activities of city dwellers
- Dappled light through leaves
- Casual composition, forms cut off continuity of
space - Incidental, momentary
PIERRE-AUGUSTE RENOIR, Le Moulin de la Galette,
1876. Fig. 13-4.
7Impressionism
- Example
- Leisure activities of city dwellers
- Influence of imported Japanese prints
- Japanese composition, viewpoint
- Photography for preliminary studies
EDGAR DEGAS, Ballet Rehearsal, 1874. Fig. 13-5.
8Post-Impressionism
- Dates and Places
- 1890 to 1905
- France
-
- People
- Urbanization
- Café society
- Colonization
- Individual exploration of feeling, mental state
PAUL GAUGUIN, Vision after the Sermon, or Jacob
Wrestling with the Angel, 1888. Fig. 13-11.
9Post-Impressionism
- Themes
- Urban life
- Landscape
- Exotic themes
- Forms
- No single approach
- Rejection of illusionism, window onto the world
- Expressive use of color, line, brush stroke
PAUL CÉZANNE, Mont Sainte-Victoire, 19021904.
Fig. 13-13.
10Post-Impressionism
- Example
- Café society
- Influence of Japanese prints
- Expressive exaggeration of forms, lines
- Expressive use of non-local color
HENRI DE TOULOUSE-LAUTREC, At the Moulin Rouge,
18921895. Fig. 13-7.
11Post-Impressionism
- Example
- Color theory
- Pointillism, divisionism
- Leisure activity of urban working class
GEORGES SEURAT, A Sunday on La Grande Jatte,
18841886. Fig. 13-8.
12Post-Impressionism
VINCENT VAN GOGH, Starry Night, 1889. Fig. 13-10.
13Post-Impressionism
- Example
- Formal properties to communicate his state of
mind - Feeling about landscape, not objective record
- Expressive distortion
- Expressive brush strokes
VINCENT VAN GOGH, Starry Night, 1889. Fig. 13-10.
14Post-Impressionism
- Example
- Expressive power of color
- Flat color, outlines
- Sought natural people
- French colonialism in Tahiti
- Paints as exotic, primitive people
PAUL GAUGUIN, Where Do We Come From? What Are We?
Where Are We Going? 1897. Fig. 13-12.
15Post-Impressionism
- Example
- Systematic representation of shapes and colors
- Properties of lines, planes, colors
- Solidity of forms
- Seen from different viewpoints
PAUL CÉZANNE, Basket of Apples, ca. 1895. Fig.
13-14.
16Post-Impressionism
- Example
- Expressive use of light and shadow
- Emphasis on human emotion to tragic event
- Treatment of surface emphasizes reality, not
smoothness
AUGUSTE RODIN, Burghers of Calais, 18841889.
Fig. 13-18.
17Symbolist Painting
- Dates and Places
- End of 19th century
- Western Europe
-
- People
- Hedonism, pessimism, escapism at the end of
century - Influence of psychiatry and study of mind
HENRI ROUSSEAU, Sleeping Gypsy, 1897. Fig. 13-15.
18Symbolist Painting
- Themes
- Fantasy, dreamlike images
- Mysterious, exotic
- Nightmarish
- Forms
- Not a unified style
- Expressive use of form and color
- Rejected illusionism
EDVARD MUNCH, The Scream, 1893. Fig. 13-16.
19Symbolist Painting
- Example
- Untrained artist
- Dreamlike theme
- Threatening lion
- Uneasy reminder of vulnerability
- Unconscious mind
HENRI ROUSSEAU, Sleeping Gypsy, 1897. Fig. 13-15.
20Symbolist Painting
- Example
- Angst of modern, urban life
- State of mind, madness
- Expressive distortion of form
- Expressive non-local color
EDVARD MUNCH, The Scream, 1893. Fig. 13-16.
21Architecture 1870-1900
- Example
- Created for exhibition
- Honesty of structure and purpose
- Skeleton exposed
- Transparent
ALEXANDRE-GUSTAVE EIFFEL, Eiffel Tower, 1889.
Fig. 13-19.
22Architecture 1870-1900
- Example
- New material steel
- Skyscraper, open work spaces
- Rejects traditions
- Form follows function
- Limited ornament
- Honesty to interior organization
LOUIS HENRY SULLIVAN, Guaranty (Prudential)
Building, 18941896. Fig. 13-20.