Impressionism Teacher Guide
Impressionism Teacher Guide
douard Manet. The Fifer, 1866. Oil on canvas, 63 x 38 1/4 in. RMN (Muse d'Orsay), Herv Lewandowski
Scavenger Hunt Available as a resource for self-guided tour groups, The Birth of Impressionism scavenger hunt encourages close investigation of select works throughout the galleries. Curriculum Connections The Birth of Impressionism docent-guided tours support the Tennessee Curriculum Standards by introducing ideas relevant to the visual arts, language arts, and social studies curricula. Specific standards are addressed at grade-appropriate levels. View connections for all grade levels (K12) at www.fristcenter.org.
douard Manet (French, 18321883) The Fifer, 1866 Oil on canvas, 63 x 38 1/4 in. RMN (Muse d'Orsay), Herv Lewandowski
Birth of Venus (Naissance de Vnus), 1879 Oil on canvas, 118 1/8 X 84 5/8 in. Salon, Paris, 1879 RMN (Muse d'Orsay), Herv Lewandowski
Selected for the Salon of 1879, this monumental picture epitomizes academic paintinga polished surface, controlled brushwork, classical subject matter, and a fascination with the idealized nude. The beautiful articulation of the body is achieved through careful study and preparatory drawings from human models and classical sculpture. This practice provided the very foundation of art sanctioned by the state-run Salon. The Impressionists rejected this academic discipline, preferring to capture the fleeting essence of their modern subjects.
The Harvester (La glaneuse), 1877 Oil on canvas, 90 3/4 X 49 1/4 in. Salon, Paris, 1877 Musee des Beaux-Arts, Arras, France / Giraudon / The Bridgeman Art Library International
This painting relates to the subject of gleaning, a practice in which peasants were permitted to take leftover grain from the fields after a harvest. While they were often viewed as lowly scavengers, Breton gives this gleaner dignity and beauty, symbolizing the humanity of even the humblest classes. This painting was featured in Agns Vardas 2000 film Les Glaneurs et la glaneuse (The Gleaners and I), which portrays modern day gleaners who live by salvaging the discarded food and leftovers from restaurants, farms, and supermarkets. Investigate: Compare and Contrast Look closely and compare the central figure in Bretons The Harvester to Bouguereaus Birth of Venus. Despite her social status, the young woman in The Harvester is shown standing tall. Even though she has a tired expression on her face, she manages to effortlessly carry the grain. What might this pose suggest about her? Why do you think Breton would choose to convey a commoner in such a stance? Now look back at Adolphe-William Bouguereaus Birth of Venus. First compare the quality of the brushwork with that of The Harvester. Of the two artists, who was concerned with creating a smooth surface and who was interested in a rough, realistic texture? Next, look at the body of Venus in the center of the painting. She has a perfect, idealized form, which was the French standard in painting at the time. Think about why it might have upset some people to see the young woman in The Harvester when the trend at the time was painting women similar to the one in Birth of Venus.
Gustave Dor created documentary sketches and painted bleak allegories about the Franco-Prussian War and its aftermath. At once realistic and symbolic, The Enigma shows a battlefield littered with dead bodies on a hillside overlooking a besieged Paris. At center a winged woman representing France clutches at the figure of the Sphinx. In Greek mythology, this hybrid beingpart woman and part lionposed confounding riddles to travelers. If the answer was incorrect, the Sphinx was said to have strangled and devoured the victim. The question why war? seems here to be the enigma. Unsolved, it has resulted in the destruction of Paris. Investigate and Create: Color and Mood Look closely at the colors Dor chose for this painting. Think about the ways color can be used in an artwork to create a mood and perhaps even stir an emotional response. Why do you think the artist chose ranges of gray as the dominant colors in this painting? What feeling is created by the grays in the painting? How might your reaction to the artwork change if the colors were more lively and vivid? Try it! Identify an important historical event, such as a battle, and paint the scene twice using a different color palette each time. For example, paint the first using realistic color and the second in grayscale or a monochromatic palette that suggests a particular mood. Once your paintings are complete, reflect on your artworks and describe how your color choices impact the mood of the artwork.
Juan Prim, October 8, 1868 (Juan Prim, 8 Octobre 1868), 1869 Oil on canvas, 124 x 101 5/8 in. Salon, Paris, 1869 RMN (Muse dOrsay), Herv Lewandowski
This dramatic portrait is one of the most important paintings completed during Henri Regnaults tenure in Madrid during the liberal revolution of 1868. Although General Prim commissioned it, he was not satisfied with the picture and refused to accept it. Regardless, it was a great success at the 1869 Salon. Having received the Prix de Rome in 1866, Regnault was consequently exempt from military duty. However, he volunteered for service in the FrancoPrussian War and was killed at age 27.
Investigate and Create: Conveying Character Look closely at Regnaults portrait of Spanish General Juan Prim. What do you think Regnault intended to communicate about the generals position in society? Note Prims clothing, where he is sitting, and where other characters are placed throughout the painting. List at least three visual clues that support your conclusions about Prim. Try it! Identify a figure who is of great importance to you, and create a portrait of the person. Think about what you would like to communicate about the individual. Before you begin the portrait, make a list of visual clues that you will include in the artwork to help others learn about your sitter. For example, what would your sitter be wearing? How would he/she be posed? Will other people be included and if so, how would they interact with the main character?
While Manet was often accused of being against tradition, he was as much a student of paintings history as he was an innovator. Like many painters of his time, he was influenced by such Spanish masters as Diego Velzquez, whose works were characterized by a stark realism, brooding tones, and mysterious, dark backgrounds. A consummate synthesizer, Manet also brought such influences as Venetian painting, seventeenth-century Dutch painting, and Japanese art to bear in his work.
This portrait was made in appreciation of mile Zola, who wrote a series of articles in the newspaper Lvnement in defense of Manet after The Fifer had been rejected from the Salon. A summation of Manets interests, the works precise realism and compressed depth of field suggest the influence of photography. On the wall is a reproduction of Olympia (1863), a favorite work of Zolas, which had caused a scandal at the 1865 Salon for its frank depiction of a prostitute. The 1860 Japanese print, from Utagawa Kuniaki IIs Wrestler series, indicates modern artists growing interest in the abstract harmonies and decorative flatness of Japanese art. The Spanish influence is shown in the print of Diego Velzquezs Los Borrachos (The Drunkards) (1629), partly covered by Olympia. The open book in front of Zola is Charles LeBlancs History of Painters, indicating Manets desire for art historical recognition and Zolas belief that Manets paintings belonged in the Louvre. Investigate and Create: Paintings in a Painting Look closely at Manets mile Zola. Notice the works of art and literature that are included in the painting. What do these items reveal about Manet and Zola? Try it! Pair up with a friend and create portraits of one another. Think about your individual styles and tastes as well as your favorite music, art, sports, etc. What objects will you include in the portrait of your friend? What objects would you like your friend to include in the portrait of you? When both artworks are complete, take turns looking at them; discuss what each portrait communicates about the sitter and the artist.
Investigate and Create: More than a Portrait Look closely at Whistlers Arrangement in Gray and Black, No. 1. Though this is a painting of the artists mother, it is clear from the title that Whistler is interested in more than just creating a likeness of his sitter. In fact, the figure in this work is treated primarily as an element of the overall composition. Try it! Examine Whistlers Arrangement in Gray and Black, No. 1. Then, create a sketch of Whistlers painting in which you reduce the central figure and objects to basic shapes. (See provided example.) Notice the harmonious arrangement of the shapes and colors. Next time you create a portrait, consider more than just capturing the likeness of your sitter. Try to also create harmony through your arrangement of shapes, forms, and colors.
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Bazilles Studio (Latelier de Bazille), 1870 Oil on canvas, 38 5/8 x 50 5/8 in. RMN (Muse dOrsay), Herv Lewandowski
The towering figure of Bazille in the center of this canvas, which depicts visitors to the artists studio, was actually painted by Manet. Several pictures on the studios walls are recognizable as Bazillesparticularly The Toilet (1870), which is displayed prominently behind the pink couch. Reinforcing the dynamic and evolving relationship between the avant-garde and the Salon, these painted depictions of traditional subjects represent the younger generation, which would eventually supplant the entrenched academic hierarchy. Investigate and Create: The Artists Studio Look closely at Bazilles Studio and notice how each figure is posed. Some are sitting and others are standing, but all of them are engaged. Manet is depicted next to the towering figure of Bazille, gesturing with his hand. What do you think the three men in the center are talking about? What are they viewing as they talk? Does there seem to be camaraderie or dispute between them, and how can you tell? These activities were clearly important enough to prompt Bazille to depict them in a work of art. Why might these moments between colleagues be worth capturing? Consider the avant-gardes relationship with the Salon at the time. Try it! Create a scene in which all participants are engaged in an activity or activities that are important to you. What will the setting for these activities be? What will the artwork communicate about you and your friends? Consider your common likes, dislikes, and each individuals relationship with the group.
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The Floor Scrapers (Raboteurs de parquet), 1875 Oil on canvas, 40 1/8 x 57 5/8 in. RMN (Muse dOrsay), Herv Lewandowski
Caillebotte initially studied painting in the academic tradition with Lon Bonnat. After The Floor Scrapers was rejected by the Salon in 1875, Pierre-Auguste Renoir invited Caillebotte to join the Impressionist group, and the work was exhibited in 1876 at the second Impressionist exhibition. Likely inspired by laborers renovating his home, Caillebotte approached the proletarian subject in an academic fashion, completing numerous preparatory drawings. However, his focus on the working class and his accurate treatment of the anonymous figures bare torsos distinguish the artist as a true realist. The work was well received at the exhibition, although mile Zola referred to it as a painting that is so accurate that it makes it bourgeois. Investigate: Composition Comparison Look closely at Caillebottes The Floor Scrapers. Describe the painting in terms of subject matter, composition, and color harmonies. Notice especially the angles, cropping, and the artists ability to capture his subjects in mid-action. Compare Caillebottes painting to Jules BretonsThe Harvester on page four. Both artists were interested in portraying everyday life, and their paintings show people engaged in rigorous activity. However, consider the differences between the artists portrayal of their subjects. What seems to be of primary importance in each artists composition?
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One of Edgar Degas favored subjects was the ballerina at work, training, or rest. His many paintings, pastels, and sculptures on this theme capture not only formal performance, but also unguarded moments, in which the figures move their bodies in spontaneous gesturesstretching, twisting, bending over, and even slumping in exhaustion. This painting shows a variety of such postures: On the left, a student carefully follows the masters instruction. Another ballerina stretches at the barre, while seated next to the master is an exhausted dancer, her dress draped unceremoniously on the chair back behind her. Investigate and Create: Capturing Movement Look closely at the variety of poses seen in Degas The Dance Foyer at the Opera on Rue Le Peletier. Professional ballerinas would pose for Degas in his studio, and the resulting drawings were often used to construct scenes such as this one. How many different positions can you identify and describe? What do you think it would feel like to hold some of these poses for long periods of time? Degas sometimes used photography to capture his models poses. Is there any evidence here that a camera was used? Try it! Create a series of quick gesture drawings in which you and your classmates take turns posing and drawing one another. Pose for no more then one minute, focusing first on the basic proportions of the body in each pose. Then add more detail defining the shape of the body before your minute is up. When your series is complete, reflect on the process of gesture drawing. For a greater challenge try observing and sketching people on the go, as they move naturally without posing for you.
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The Beach at Trouville (La plage de Trouville), 1865 Oil on paperboard, 10 3/8 x 16 in. RMN (Muse dOrsay), Herv Lewandowski
As the new railway system made travel throughout France easier and cheaper, resorts developed along the coasts. The most glamorous holiday spots were in Normandy, Trouville, and neighboring Deauville. Boudin would often take the train to these places, where he would paint seascapes and beach scenes en plein air. A direct precursor of the Impressionists, Boudin used quick, economical brushstrokes to capture the essential forms and outlines of figures interacting on the beach. In this work, one can see Boudins influence on the young Monet, who once wrote If I became a painter, I owe it all to Boudin. Investigate and Create: Touch on Technique Look closely at the brush technique that Boudin used to paint his figures. The figures may seem blurred and indistinct, yet we are able to distinguish one individual from the rest. Think about what this scene would look like as a photograph. Imagine if you could take a picture of the exact same moment in time with a digital camera. How would the digital photograph and Boudin's painting differ? Consider how the figures, the sand, and the sky would look. How would the time of day and weather conditions be revealed in a photograph versus a painting? Try it! Create a painting study of an outdoor recreational activity. As you observe people moving about, try to capture their movements using quick brushtrokes. After you complete the sketch, take a photograph of the scene and compare the two. Which image do you prefer and why?
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Classic Impressionism
Starting in 1874 and lasting until 1886, Claude Monet, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Camille Pissarro, Alfred Sisley, Edgar Degas, and others staged eight group exhibitions independent of the official Salon. After the first of these, those who participated became labeled Impressionists, from a critics witticism regarding Monets famous painting of Le Havre harbor titled Impression: Sunrise (1873). Louis Leroy wrote about the work and its title: ImpressionI was certain of it. I was just telling myself that, since I was impressed, there had to be some impression in it and what freedom, what ease of workmanship! Wallpaper in its embryonic state is more finished than that seascape. Despite the cutting tone, the name Impressionism found favor among many of the artists associated with the new movement. Delighting in the appearances of the physical world, the Impressionists sought to capture transitory atmospheric effects in rural, suburban, or urban settings, and occasionally in figure paintings and still lifes. To approximate their optical impressions of light playing across natures surfaces, the Impressionists employed assertive brushwork and intense colors. The combination of modern subject, brilliant lighting effects, and animated brushwork produced the shimmering canvases exhibited here.
Boats: The Regatta at Argenteuil (Les barques: Rgates Argenteuil), ca. 1874 Oil on canvas, 25 5/8 x 39 3/8 in. RMN (Muse dOrsay), Herv Lewandowski
One of Monets many paintings of the river at Argenteuil, this view of a regatta is a sign of the increase in disposable income and leisure time among the rising middle class. Activities such as yachting were quite popular, and boating clubs organized races to attract tourists. The Impressionists made these novel activities subjects for their modern histories. Investigate and Create: An Impressionist Sky Look closely at Monets Boats: The Regatta at Argenteuil. Notice how he used short, rapid brushstrokes to capture fleeting effects of rolling water and changing times of day. Try it! Look closely at the sky at different times of dayin the morning when you wake, on your bus ride or car ride home from school, and in the evening as the last light fades. Notice variations in the skys color and brightness from sunrise to sunset. For each stage of your observations, select sheets of construction paper and a few chalk pastels (or other drawing media) that correspond with the sky at that particular time of day. Then experiment with mark making. Try short, rapid strokes like the kind Monet used to create atmospheric conditions. After filling an entire sheet of paper with marks, repeat the process for each additional stage of your observations. Complete a series of atmospheric drawings and compare your impressions of the sky over the course of one or more days. How would you generally characterize the sky and its light at different times a day? What type of colors and marks did you use to capture the skys variations-at sunrise versus sunset, for instance?
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Classic Impressionism
The First Impressionist Exhibition Following the model of the Salon des Refuss, the group of painters surrounding douard Manet (though not Manet himself, who preferred to try his chances with the Salon) decided to stage an exhibition of their paintings at the photographer Nadars studio in 1874. Without having a formal name, the group called itself the Societe Anonyme des artistes, peintres, sculpteurs, graveurs, etc. (Societe Anonyme is the French term meaning incorporated). Of the many works in this inaugural exhibition, three are on view in The Birth of ImpressionismBerthe Morisots The Cradle (1872), Camille Pissarros Hoarfrost (1873), and Paul Czannes The Hanged Mans House (1873). Berthe Morisot (French, 18411895)
The Cradle (Le berceau), 1872 Oil on canvas, 22 x 18 1/8 in. First Impressionist Exhibition, Paris, 1874 RMN (Muse dOrsay), Herv Lewandowski
The Cradle shows one of Berthe Morisots sisters, Edma, watching over her sleeping daughter, Blanche. It is the first image of motherhoodlater one of her favorite subjectsto appear in the artists work. Morisot became the first woman to exhibit with the Impressionists when she showed The Cradle at the 1874 exhibition. The painting was scarcely noticed although important critics commented on its grace and elegance. After unsuccessful attempts to sell it, Morisot withdrew it from display and The Cradle stayed in the models family until it was bought by the Louvre in 1930. Investigate: An Impressionist Portrait Look closely at Morisots The Cradle. How do you feel when seeing the mother watch her sleeping baby? How did Morisot use elements of art (line, shape, color, etc.) to create a mood in the painting? Would the feeling of the painting change if the woman were not gazing at her child? What if the cradle did not have the drapery? Look back at James Abbott McNeill Whistlers portrait of his mother, Arrangement in Gray and Black, No. 1, on page nine, and compare it with Morisots The Cradle. What differences do you immediately recognize? Notice not only the colors, but also the texture of the brushwork, how the figures are posed, and where the figures are located. Which do you prefer and why?
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Red Roofs, Village Corner, Winter Effect (Les toits rouges, coin de village, effet dhiver), 1877 Oil on canvas, 21 1/2 x 25 7/8 in. Third Impressionist Exhibition, Paris, 1877 RMN (Muse dOrsay), Herv Lewandowski
The Maincy Bridge (Pont de Maincy), ca. 1879 Oil on canvas, 23 x 28 1/2 in. RMN (Muse dOrsay), Herv Lewandowski
The gap between Czanne and the Impressionists continued to widen following his participation in the third Impressionist exhibition in 1873. Though hurt by the scathing reaction of critics, he continued to seek official approval by submitting his work to the annual Salons, where it was regularly rejected. In landscapes such as this one, Czanne continued to strive for balance with rigidly defined geometric compositions. Short, choppy brushstrokes describe planes and volumes. This work exemplifies the artists stylistic dialogue with Pissarro, with whom he often worked at this time. Investigate and Create: Step into the landscape Look closely at Pissarros Red Roofs, Village Corner, Winter Effect and Czannes The Maincy Bridge. These works reveal the artists departure from the Impressionists. In what ways are Pissarros and Czannes styles similar to one another? In what ways do their styles differ from their contemporaries? Take The Maincy Bridge, for example. Look carefully at the brushwork and notice how the marks describe geometric planes and volumes. How do the direction, weight, and length of the strokes change to represent particular aspects of the landscape? Describe differences in the marks that make up the bridge, water, trees, and leaves. Which elements of the landscape appear more real and which are more abstract? Create a narrative. Imagine you could visit the places depicted in Pissarros and Czannes paintings. What would you: See? Hear? Feel? Smell? Learn? Wonder?
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Henri Rochefort founded the controversial political journal La Lanterne and was actively opposed to the imperial regime of Emperor Napolon III. This led to his involvement in the Paris Commune, for which he was sent to the French prison colony at the South Pacific island of New Caledonia. Manet depicts Rocheforts daring escape in a tiny dinghy, rowing with fellow fugitives toward a ship on the horizon. Painted in an Impressionist style, but six years after the actual event, the work transforms the reality of the recent past into modern history. Investigate and Create: Narrative in Art In The Escape of Rochefort, Manet depicts the daring escape of Rochefort, a French politician, from a French prison colony in New Caledonia. Manets painting is similar to a scene from a movie. Look closely at the painting and create your own narrative about the work. As you begin your story, consider why Rochefort and the others are escaping from a prison. Why are they taking a boat? Who is in the second boat in the far distance? Do you think they are following Rocheforts boat? Next, describe how the elements around them may affect their journey. Finally, think about where they are heading. Will they make it to their location safely or will they be caught and taken back to prison? Present your story to the class and see how many variations of the story you and your classmates come up with.
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This exhibition is organized by the Frist Center for the Visual Arts with gratitude for exceptional loans from the collection of the Muse dOrsay. This exhibition is supported by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts and Humanities.
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Adolphe-William Bouguereau (French, 18251905) Birth of Venus (Naissance de Vnus), 1879 Oil on canvas, 118 1/8 X 84 5/8 in. Salon, Paris, 1879 RMN (Muse d'Orsay), Herv Lewandowski
Jules Adolphe Aim Louis Breton (French, 18271906) The Harvester (La glaneuse), 1877 Oil on canvas, 90 3/4 X 49 1/4 in. Salon, Paris, 1877 Musee des Beaux-Arts, Arras, France / Giraudon / The Bridgeman Art Library International
Henri Regnault (French, 18431871) Juan Prim, October 8, 1868 (Juan Prim, 8 Octobre 1868), 1869 Oil on canvas, 124 x 101 5/8 in. Salon, Paris, 1869 RMN (Muse dOrsay), Herv Lewandowski
douard Manet (French, 18321883) mile Zola, 1868 Oil on canvas, 57 5/8 x 44 7/8 in. RMN (Muse dOrsay), Herv Lewandowski
Berthe Morisot (French, 18411895) The Cradle (Le berceau), 1872 Oil on canvas, 22 x 18 1/8 in. First Impressionist Exhibition, Paris, 1874 RMN (Muse dOrsay), Herv Lewandowski
douard Manet (French, 18321883) The Escape of Rochefort (Lvasion de Rochefort), ca. 1881 Oil on canvas, 31 1/2 x 28 3/4 in. RMN (Muse dOrsay), Herv Lewandowski
Gustave Dor (French, 18321883) The Enigma (Lnigme), 1871 Oil on canvas, 51 1/8 X 77 in. RMN (Muse dOrsay), Herv Lewandowski
James Abbott McNeill Whistler (American, 18341903) Arrangement in Gray and Black, No. 1: Portrait of the Painters Mother (Arrangement en gris et noir, no. 1), 1871. Oil on canvas, 56 3/4 x 64 in. Royal Academy, London, 1872 RMN (Muse dOrsay), Jean-Gilles Berizzi
Frdric Bazille (French, 18411870) Bazilles Studio (Latelier de Bazille), 1870 Oil on canvas, 38 5/8 x 50 5/8 in. RMN (Muse dOrsay), Herv Lewandowski
Gustave Caillebotte (French, 18481894) The Floor Scrapers (Raboteurs de parquet), 1875 Oil on canvas, 40 1/8 x 57 5/8 in. RMN (Muse dOrsay), Herv Lewandowski
Edgar Degas (French, 18341917) The Dance Foyer at the Opera on Rue Le Peletier (Le Foyer de la Danse de lOpera de la rue Le Peletier), 1872 Oil on canvas, 12 5/8 x 18 1/2 in. RMN (Muse dOrsay), Herv Lewandowski
Eugne Louis Boudin (French, 18241898) The Beach at Trouville (La plage de Trouville), 1865 Oil on paperboard, 10 3/8 x 16 in. RMN (Muse dOrsay), Herv Lewandowski
Claude Monet (French, 18401926) Boats: The Regatta at Argenteuil (Les barques: Rgates Argenteuil), ca. 1874 Oil on canvas, 25 5/8 x 39 3/8 in. RMN (Muse dOrsay), Herv Lewandowski
Camille Pissarro (French, 18301903) Red Roofs, Village Corner, Winter Effect (Les toits rouges, coin de village, effet dhiver), 1877 Oil on canvas, 21 1/2 x 25 7/8 in. Third Impressionist Exhibition, Paris, 1877 RMN (Muse dOrsay), Herv Lewandowski
Paul Czanne (French, 18391906) The Maincy Bridge (Pont de Maincy), ca. 1879 Oil on canvas, 23 x 28 1/2 in. RMN (Muse dOrsay), Herv Lewandowski
ImpressionisM
Masterpieces Masterpieces
from from the the
The Birth of of
throughout the galleries. To begin your scavenger hunt, first find the gallery indicated on the map to the right; then use the provided clues to locate the designated artwork. Look closely at the artwork and carefully consider the questions that are posed.You never know what you might discover when you take a closer look!
8 ENTRANCE
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In this gallery, look for the painting called The Enigma (Lnigme). Why do you think the artist chose ranges of gray as the dominant colors in this painting? What feeling is created by the grays in the painting? How might your reaction to the artwork change if the colors were more lively and vivid?
Jules Adolphe Aim Louis Breton. The Harvester (detail), 1877. Oil on canvas, 90 3/4 X 49 1/4 in. Musee des Beaux-Arts, Arras, France / Giraudon / The Bridgeman Art Library International
Find Jules Bretons painting of a hardworking young woman in a field of grain. Despite her social status, the young woman is shown standing tall. Even though she has a tired expression on her face, she manages to effortlessly carry the grain. What might this pose suggest about her? Why do you think Breton would choose to convey a commoner in such a stance?
Gustave Dor. The Enigma (detail), 1871. Oil on canvas, 51 1/8 X 77 in. RMN (Muse dOrsay), Herv Lewandowski
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The Spanish General Juan Prim commissioned artist Henri Regnault to paint his portrait. Look closely at Prims portrait in this gallery. What do you think Regnault intended to communicate about the generals position in society? Identify at least three visual clues that support your conclusions.
Henri Regnault. Juan Prim, October 8, 1868 (detail), 1869. Oil on canvas, 124 x 101 5/8 in. RMN (Muse dOrsay), Herv Lewandowski
Look closely at douard Manets portrait of mile Zola. Notice the works of art and literature that are included in the scene. What do these items tell you about Manet and Zola? If an artist were to create your portrait, what objects would you like to have included in the painting? Think about your individual style as well as your favorite music, art, sports, etc.
douard Manet. mile Zola (detail), 1868. Oil on canvas, 57 5/8 x 44 7/8 in. RMN (Muse dOrsay), Herv Lewandowski
Edgar Degas was a master at capturing figures in motion. Find the artists painting that shows dancers in rehearsal and look closely at the variety of positions in which they are posed. Professional ballerinas would pose for Degas in his studio, and the resulting drawings were often used to construct scenes such as this one. How many different positions can you identify and describe? What do you think it would feel like to hold some of these poses for long periods of time? Degas sometimes used photography to capture his models poses. Is there any evidence here that a camera was used?
Edgar Degas.The Dance Foyer at the Opera on Rue Le Peletier (detail),1872. Oil on canvas, 12 5/8 x 18 1/2 in. RMN (Muse dOrsay), Herv Lewandowski
Eugne Louis Boudin often traveled to popular vacation spots where he would paint beach scenes en plein air (in the open air). Look for Boudins painting that shows a large gathering of people on the beach. Notice how he used quick marks to capture the basic forms and outlines of figures. How does his technique compare with brushwork youve seen in paintings so far? Boudin was an important influence on Monet and other Impressionists. Travel to the next gallery to see this for yourself.
Eugne Louis Boudin.The Beach at Trouville (detail), 1865. Oil on paperboard, 10 3/8 x 16 in. RMN (Muse dOrsay), Herv Lewandowski
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Claude Monet once wrote If I become a painter, I owe it all to Boudin. Find one of Monets painting of sailboats on water. Notice the way Monet used rapid brushstrokes to capture the fleeting effects of rolling water and changing times of day. How does his brushwork compare to the surface you observed in the painting by Boudin? What time of day do you think it was when Monet painted these boats?Why do you think that? How might Monet have changed his color palette if he were painting at other times during the day?
Claude Monet. Boats:The Regatta at Argenteuil (detail), ca. 1874. Oil on canvas, 25 5/8 x 39 3/8 in. RMN (Muse dOrsay), Herv Lewandowski
In the next gallery, find Paul Cezannes The Maincy Bridge (Pont de Maincy). This work reveals Cezannes departure from the Impressionists. In what ways does his style differ from his contemporaries? Look closely at his brushwork and notice how the marks describe geometric planes and volumes. How do the direction, weight, and length of the strokes change to represent particular aspects of the landscape? Describe differences in the marks that make up the bridge, water, trees, and leaves. Which elements of the landscape appear more real and which are more abstract?
Paul Czanne.The Maincy Bridge (detail), ca. 1879. Oil on canvas, 23 x 28 1/2 in. RMN (Muse dOrsay), Herv Lewandowski
Visit the Martin ArtQuest Gallery to learn more about Impressionism through hands-on artmaking activities.
ImpressionisM
Masterpieces Masterpieces
from from the the
The Birth of of
The Frist Center for the Visual Arts is supported in part by:
This exhibition is organized by the Frist Center for the Visual Arts with gratitude for exceptional loans from the collection of the Muse dOrsay. This exhibition is supported by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts and Humanities.