I. Realism: - Gustave Courbet - Edouard Manet
I. Realism: - Gustave Courbet - Edouard Manet
I. Realism: - Gustave Courbet - Edouard Manet
I. Realism
- Gustave Courbet
- Edouard Manet
II. Impressionism
- Pierre-Aguste Renoir
- Edgar Degas
- Paul Cezanne
- Vincent Van Gogh
- Paul Gauguin
IV. Bibliography
Realism
The Realist movement in French art flourished from about 1840 until the late nineteenth century,
and sought to convey a truthful and objective vision of contemporary life. Realism emerged in
the aftermath of the Revolution of 1848 that overturned the monarchy of Louis-Philippe and
developed during the period of the Second Empire under Napoleon III. As French society fought
for democratic reform, the Realists democratized art by depicting modern subjects drawn from
the everyday lives of the working class. Rejecting the idealized classicism of academic art and
the exotic themes and the exaggerated emotionalism and drama of Romanticism, Realism was
based on direct observation of the modern world.
It sought to portray real and typical contemporary people and situations with truth and accuracy,
and not avoiding unpleasant or sordid aspects of life. The movement aimed to focus on
unidealized subjects and events that were previously rejected in art work. Realist works depicted
people of all classes in situations that arise in ordinary life, and often reflected the changes
brought by the Industrial and Commercial Revolutions. Realism was primarily concerned with
how things appeared to the eye, rather than containing ideal representations of the world.
Realism rejected traditional forms of art, literature, and social organization as outmoded in the
wake of the Enlightenment and the Industrial Revolution. Beginning in France in the 1840s,
Realism revolutionized painting, expanding conceptions of what constituted art. Working in a
chaotic era marked by revolution and widespread social change, Realist painters replaced the
idealistic images and literary conceits of traditional art with real-life events, giving the margins
of society similar weight to grand history paintings and allegories. Their choice to bring
everyday life into their canvases was an early manifestation of the avant-garde desire to merge
art and life, and their rejection of pictorial techniques, like perspective, prefigured the many 20 th
century definitions and redefinitions of modernism.
Following the explosion of newspaper printing and mass media in the wake of the Industrial
Revolution, Realism brought in a new conception of the artist as self-publicist. Gustave
Courbet, Édouard Manet, and others purposefully courted controversy and used the media to
enhance their celebrity in a manner that continues among artists to this day.
Gustave Courbet
"[They] call me ‘the socialist painter.' I accept that title with pleasure. I am not only a socialist
but a democrat and a Republican as well--in a word, a partisan of all the revolution and above
all a Realist ... for ‘Realist' means a sincere lover of the honest truth."
Gustave Courbet, born as Jean Désiré Gustave Courbet, was a renowned French artist during the
19th century Realist movement. He was controversial not only because he addressed social
issues with his work, such as peasants and the working condition of the poor, and the rural
bourgeoisie, but also because of the unsentimental way in which he portrayed them. Unlike the
Romantic school of painters, Courbet did not use smooth lines and soft forms. Instead, he
employed spontaneous brush strokes and a roughness of paint texture, which indicated that he
was observing his subject directly from life, and thus challenging the academic ideas of the way
art should be painted. Because of his development of a realistic form of painting, Courbet was a
celebrity, and considered a genius, socialist, and savage. He also encouraged the perception of
himself as an unschooled peasant.
Courbet established himself as the leading proponent of Realism by challenging the primacy of
history painting, long favored at the official Salons and the École des Beaux-Arts, the state-
sponsored art academy. The self-proclaimed “proudest and most arrogant man in France,”
Gustave Courbet created a sensation at the Paris Salon of 1850–51 when he exhibited a group of
paintings set in his native Ornans, a village in the Franche-Comté in eastern France. These
works, including The Stonebreakers (1849–50; now lost) and A Burial at Ornans (1849–50;
Musèe d’Orsay, Paris) challenged convention by rendering scenes from daily life on the large
scale previously reserved for history painting and in an emphatically realistic style. Confronted
with the unvarnished realism of Courbet’s imagery, critics derided the ugliness of his figures and
dismissed them as “peasants in their Sunday best.”
On 31 December 1877, a day before the first installment was due, Courbet died, aged 58, in La
Tour-de-Peilz, Switzerland, of a liver disease aggravated by heavy drinking.
Edouard Manet
"I paint what I see and not what others like to see.”
Édouard Manet was a French painter who broke new ground by defying traditional techniques of
representation and by choosing subjects from the events and circumstances of his own time.
Édouard was the son of Auguste Manet, the chief of personnel at the Ministry of Justice, and
Eugénie-Désirée Fournier. From 1839 he was a day pupil at Canon Poiloup’s school in
Vaugirard, where he studied French and the classics. From 1844 to 1848 he was a boarder at the
Collège Rollin, then located near the Panthéon. A poor student, he was interested only in the
special drawing course offered by the school.
With ample experience and confidence in himself, Manet decided to open his very first art
studio. His early works were inspired by Gustave Courbet, who was a realist artist. Most of
Manet's artworks during the mid-1850s depicted contemporary themes and everyday life
situations including bullfights, people in pavement cafes, singers, and Gypsies. His brush strokes
were also rather loose, and the details were quite simplified and lacked much transitional tones.
Manet's modernity lies above all in his eagerness to update older genres of painting by injecting
new content or by altering the conventional elements. He did so with an acute sensitivity to
historical tradition and contemporary reality. This was also undoubtedly the root cause of many
of the scandals he provoked.
The Paris Salons were considered the most expedient way for an artist to make himself known to
the public, and Manet submitted paintings to Salon juries throughout his career. In 1861, at the
age of twenty-nine, he was awarded the Salon’s honorable mention for The Spanish Singer. His
hopes for continued early success were dashed at the subsequent Salon of 1863. That year, more
than half of the submissions to the official Salon were rejected, including Manet’s own. To
staunch public outcry, Napoleon III ordered the formation of a Salon des Refusés. Manet
exhibited three paintings, including the scandalous Le Déjeuner sur l’herbe (Musée d’Orsay,
Paris).
The public professed to be shocked by the
subject of a nude woman blithely enjoying a
picnic in the company of two fully clothed
men, while a second, scantily clad woman
bathes in a stream. While critics recognized
that this scene of modern-day debauchery was,
to a certain degree, an updated version of
Titian’s Concert champêtre (a work then
thought to be by Giorgione; Musée du Louvre,
Paris), they ruthlessly attacked Manet’s
Le Déjeuner sur l’herbe, 1862 - 1863 painting style.
When Manet’s health began to deteriorate toward the end of the decade, he was advised to take a
cure at Bellevue. In the summer of 1880, he rented a villa in that Parisian suburb, and he painted
his last portrait of his wife, the Dutch-born pianist Suzanne Leenhoff, in the villa’s garden. He
continued to work until his death in April 30, 1883 at the age of 51.
Impressionism
Impressionism is a 19th-century art movement characterized by relatively small, thin, yet visible
brush strokes, open composition, emphasis on accurate depiction of light in its changing qualities
(often accentuating the effects of the passage of time), ordinary subject matter, inclusion
of movement as a crucial element of human perception and experience, and unusual visual
angles. Impressionism originated with a group of Paris-based artists whose independent
exhibitions brought them to prominence during the 1870s and 1880s.
Radicals in their time, early Impressionists violated the rules of academic painting. They
constructed their pictures from freely brushed colours that took precedence over lines and
contours, following the example of painters such as Eugène Delacroix and J. M. W. Turner. They
also painted realistic scenes of modern life, and often painted outdoors. Previously, still
lifes and portraits as well as landscapes were usually painted in a studio. The Impressionists
found that they could capture the momentary and transient effects of sunlight by painting
outdoors or en plein air. They portrayed overall visual effects instead of details, and used short
"broken" brush strokes of mixed and pure unmixed colour—not blended smoothly or shaded, as
was customary—to achieve an effect of intense colour vibration.
The first group exhibition was in Paris in 1874 and included work by Monet, Auguste
Renoir, Edgar Degas and Paul Cezanne. The work shown was greeted with derision with
Monet’s Impression, Sunrise particularly singled out for ridicule and giving its name (used by
critics as an insult) to the movement. Seven further exhibitions were then held at intervals until
1886.
Its many facets and varied participants make the Impressionist movement difficult to define.
Indeed, its life seems as fleeting as the light effects it sought to capture. Even so, Impressionism
was a movement of enduring consequence, as its embrace of modernity made it the springboard
for later avant-garde art in Europe.
Pierre-Auguste Renoir
“Work lovingly done is the secret of all order and happiness”
Pierre-Auguste Renoir, or more commonly known as Auguste Renoir, was painter originally
associated with the Impressionist movement. Famed for his sensual nudes and charming scenes
of pretty women, Renoir was a far more complex and thoughtful painter than generally assumed.
He was a founding member of the Impressionist movement, nevertheless he ceased to exhibit
with the group after 1877. From the 1880s until well into the twentieth century, he developed a
monumental, classically inspired style that influenced such avant-garde giants as Pablo Picasso.
His ambitions to become a professional artist prompted him to seek other instruction. He began
copying paintings at the Louvre and eventually entered the studio of the academic artist Charles
Gleyre, where he met Claude Monet, Frédéric Bazille, and Alfred Sisley. The four friends soon
began painting in the forest of Fontainebleau, although Renoir always remained dedicated to
figure painting and portraits. His early female nudes were heavily influenced by the earthy
palette and buxom figure types of Realist painter Gustave Courbet.
In the summer of 1869, Renoir painted for two months alongside Monet at La Grenouillère, a
boating and bathing establishment outside Paris. Their sketchlike technique of broad, loose
brushstrokes and their brightened palette attempted to capture the effects of the sun streaming
through the trees on the rippling water. This painting campaign catalyzed the development of the
Impressionist aesthetic.
In the early twentieth century, despite old age and declining health, Renoir persisted in artistic
experimentation. He took up sculpture, hiring a young assistant and collaborator, Richard Guino,
to create models after his designs. He continued to paint portraits, and Tilla Durieux is arguably
the finest of his late period. He died on December 3, 1919 at the age of 78. Renoir was celebrated
in the early twentieth century as one of the greatest modern French painters, not only for his
work as an Impressionist but also for the uncompromising aesthetic of his late works.
Edgar Degas
“A painting requires a little mystery, some vagueness, some fantasy. When you always make
your meaning perfectly plain you end up boring people.”
Degas continued working as late as 1912, when he was forced to leave the studio in Montmartre
in which he had labored for more than twenty years. He died five years later in 1917, at the age
of eighty-three.
Post-Impressionism
Post-Impressionism is a predominantly French art movement that developed roughly between
1886 and 1905, from the last Impressionist exhibition to the birth of Fauvism. Post-
Impressionism emerged as a reaction against Impressionists' concern for the naturalistic
depiction of light and colour.
Breaking free of the naturalism of Impressionism in the late 1880s, a group of young painters
sought independent artistic styles for expressing emotions rather than simply optical impressions,
concentrating on themes of deeper symbolism. Through the use of simplified colors and
definitive forms, their art was characterized by a renewed aesthetic sense as well as abstract
tendencies. Among the nascent generation of artists responding to Impressionism include Paul
Gauguin (1848–1903), Georges Seurat (1859–1891), Vincent van Gogh (1853–1890), and the
eldest of the group, Paul Cézanne (1839–1906), and followed diverse stylistic paths in search of
authentic intellectual and artistic achievements. These artists, often working independently, are
today called Post-Impressionists. Although they did not view themselves as part of a collective
movement at the time, Roger Fry (1866–1934), critic and artist, broadly categorized them as
“Post-Impressionists,” a term that he coined in his seminal exhibition Manet and the Post-
Impressionists installed at the Grafton Galleries in London in 1910.
The Post-Impressionists rejected Impressionism’s concern with the spontaneous and naturalistic
rendering of light and color. Instead they favored an emphasis on more symbolic content, formal
order and structure. Similar to the Impressionists, however, they stressed the artificiality of the
picture. The Post-Impressionists also believed that color could be independent from form and
composition as an emotional and aesthetic bearer of meaning.
Paul Cezanne
“Art is a harmony parallel with nature.”
One of the most influential artists in the history of modern painting, Paul Cézanne (1839–1906)
has inspired generations of artists. Generally categorized as a Post-Impressionist, his unique
method of building form with color and his analytical approach to nature influenced the art
of Cubists, Fauves, and successive generations of avant-garde artists.
Cézanne's experience with painting from nature and rigourous experimentation led him
to develop his own approaches to art. He strove to depart from the portrayal of the
transient moment, long favored by the Impressionists; instead, Cézanne sought true and
permanent pictorial qualities of objects around him. According to Cézanne, the subject
of the painting was first to be "read" by the artist through the understanding of its
essence. Then, in the second stage, this essence must be "realized" on a canvas
through forms, colors, and their spatial relations. The colors and forms thus became the
dominant elements of his compositions, completely freed from the rigid rules of
perspective and paint application as promoted by the Academy.
Still Life with Apples and a Pot of Primroses, a mature work from about 1890, reveals Cézanne’s
artistic evolution and mastery of this style of building forms completely from color and creating
scenes with distorted perspectival space. The objects in this painting, such as the fruit and
tablecloth, are rendered without use of light or shadow, but through extremely subtle gradations
of color. In such still lifes as Dish of Apples of about 1876–77, as in his landscapes, Cézanne
ignores the laws of classical perspective, allowing each object to be independent within the space
of a picture while the relationship of one object to another takes precedence over traditional
single-point perspective.
In the last decade of his life, Cézanne limited his artistic pursuits almost exclusively to two
pictorial motifs. One was the depiction of the Mont Sainte-Victoire, a dramatic mountain that
dominated the parched and stony landscape at Aix. The other was the final synthesis of nature
and the human body in a series of so-called Bathers (nudes depicted frolicking in a landscape).
The later versions of the Bathers were becoming increasingly abstract in regard to how form and
color seemed to fuse together on the canvas.
After contracting pneumonia, Paul Cézanne died in his familial house in Aix on October 22,
1906. The last decade of his life had been marred by the development of diabetes and severe
depression, which contributed toward alienating the artist from most of his friends and family.
Vincent van Gogh
“What am I in the eyes of most people — a nonentity, an eccentric, or an unpleasant person —
somebody who has no position in society and will never have; in short, the lowest of the low.
All right, then — even if that were absolutely true, then I should one day like to show by my
work what such an eccentric, such a nobody, has in his heart. That is my ambition, based less
on resentment than on love in spite of everything, based more on a feeling of serenity than on
passion. Though I am often in the depths of misery, there is still calmness, pure harmony and
music inside me.”
There’s a longstanding link between mental illness and creative genius; and there is probably no
better-known epitome of a mad artist than Vincent Willem van Gogh, who hacked off his ear
with a razor 130 years ago today while staying in a self-described “Yellow House” in Arles,
France.
In 1886, he moved to Paris, where he met members of the avant-garde, who were reacting
against the Impressionist sensibility. As his work developed he created a new approach; his
paintings grew brighter in color as he developed a style that became fully realized during his stay
in Arles in the south of France in 1888.
While staying at that house in the south of France, Van Gogh became agitated on the eve of
Christmas Eve and did himself harm. Using the razor, Van Gogh removed his entire left ear – not
just the lobe. He spent time in psychiatric hospitals, including a period at Saint-Rémy. His
depression continued and on 27 July 1890, Van Gogh shot himself in the chest with a revolver.
Eugène Henri Paul Gauguin styled himself and his art as “savage.” Although he began his artistic
career with the Impressionists in Paris, during the late 1880s he fled farther and farther from
urban civilization in search of an edenic paradise where he could create pure, “primitive” art. Yet
his self-imposed exile to the South Seas was not so much an escape from Paris as a bid to
become the new leader of the Parisian avant-garde. Gauguin cultivated and inhabited a dual
image of himself as, on the one hand, a wolfish wild man and on the other, a sensitive martyr for
art. His notoriety helped to promote his astonishing work, which freed color from mimetic
representation and distorted form for expressive purposes. Gauguin pioneered the Symbolist art
movement in France and set the stage for Fauvism and Expressionism.
After the stock market crashed in 1882, Gauguin decided to become a full-time artist. He painted
Impressionist landscapes, still lifes, and interiors heavily influenced not only by Pissarro but also
by Paul Cézanne, whom he had met through Pissarro. Gauguin adopted and adapted Cézanne’s
parallel, constructive brushstrokes; he in fact bought several paintings by Cézanne in order to
study the brushwork more carefully. Nevertheless, Gauguin’s pictures showed a preoccupation
with dreams, mystery, and evocative symbols that revealed his own artistic inclinations. He also
sculpted, carved wood reliefs and objects, and made ceramics, signaling an interest in three-
dimensional decorative objects from the beginning of his career.
During his second visit to Pont-Aven, Brittany in
1888, his encounter with the artist Émile Bernard
resulted in the groundbreaking painting Vision of
the Sermon. This work became the clarion call for
Symbolist art. Dropping the Cézannist brushstroke,
Gauguin used broad, matte fields of stridently non-
naturalistic color to express the transcendent visions
of Breton peasant women. The painting depicts a
scene from the Bible in which Jacob wrestles an
angel.
With financial success continuing to elude him in France, Gauguin decided to return to Tahiti
permanently in 1895. He was suffering from syphilis by this time, yet between hospitalizations,
he was able to paint his masterpiece, Where Do We Come From? What Are We? Where Are We
Going? This monumental allegorical painting served as a synthesis or culmination of his art.
Afterwards, his Tahitian work became increasingly self-referential; he drew and painted the
same figures over and over again, cutting and pasting them in different configurations and
settings
Despite the arcadian content of his
pictures, Gauguin became disillusioned
with the Westernization and colonial
corruption of Tahiti. He left in 1901 for
the Marquesan island of Hiva Oa,
perpetually searching for a lost
paradise. He died there in 1903, having
become a legend for a new generation
of artists halfway across the world in
Paris.
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Realism:
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http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/rlsm/hd_rlsm.htm (October, 2004)
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