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Impressionism
A Brief History
French/European
Impressionists
Monet,
Claude
Van Gogh,Vincent
Renoir, Pierre Auguste
Degas, Edgar
Cezanne, Paul
Seurat, Georges
Manet, Eduoard
Toulouse-Lautrec, Henri
Sisley, Alfred
Pissarro, Camille Jacob
Morisot, Berthe
Boudin, Eugene
Caillebotte, Gustave
Sorolla, Joaquin
Fantin-Latour, Henri
Bonnard, Pierre
Gauguin, Paul
Vuillard, Edouard
Martin, Henri
Redon, Odilon
Other Impressionists
American
Impressionists
Thompson,
Richard Earl
Cassatt, Mary
Sargent, John Singer
Whistler, James McNeill
Hassam, Childe
Benson, Frank Weston
Prendergast, Maurice
Twachtman, John Henry
Chase, William Merritt
Tarbell, Edward
Vonnoh, Robert
Reid, Robert
Metcalf, Willard
Beaux, Cecilia
Potthast, Edward
Chadwick, William
Hale, Philip Leslie
Curran, Charles Courtney
Graves, Abbott Fueller
Frieseke, Frederick
Glackens, William
Maley, Alan
Ruby,
Claire
Terelak, John C
Wallis, Kent
Schofield, Michael
Plisson, Henri
Romanello, Diane
Singley, Greg
Title, Christian
Horning, Elizabeth
Hatfield, Don
Aspevig, Clyde
Afsary, Cyrus
Hayslette, Max
Schmid, Richard
Dunlay, Thomas
Ellis, Ray
Gertenbach, Lynn
Zhan, Charles
Duncan, Robert
Hails, Barbara
Wood, Barbara
Behrens, Howard
Other Impressionists
Popular
Favorites
Dali,
Salvador
Michelangelo
Da Vinci, Leonardo
Picasso, Pablo
Rockwell, Norman
Matisse, Henri E
Klimt, Gustav
Escher, M.C.
Mucha, Alphonse
Potter, Beatrix
Geddes, Anne
Anderson, Kim
Vettriano, Jack
O'Keeffe, Georgia
Parrish, Maxfield
Homer, Winslow
Hopper, Edward
Wyeth, Andrew
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Edouard
Manet - Biography

Edouard Manet
French Impressionist
Edouard
Manet - 1832-1883. French painter, whose work inspired the impressionist
style, but who refused to so label his own work. His far-reaching
influence on French painting and the general development of modern
art was due to his portrayal of everyday subject matter; his use of
broad, simple color areas; and a vivid, summary brush technique. Manet
was born in Paris on January 23, 1832, the son of a high government
official. To avoid studying law, as his father wished, he went to
sea. He then studied in Paris under the academic French painter Thomas
Couture and visited Germany, Italy, and the Netherlands to study the
paintings of the old masters. The Dutch painter Frans Hals and the
Spanish artists Diego Velazquez, and Francisco Jose de Goya were the
principal influences on his art. Manet began to paint genre (everyday)
subjects, such as old beggars, street urchins, cafe characters, and
Spanish bullfight scenes. He adopted a direct, bold brush technique
in his treatment of realistic subject matter. In 1863 his famous Le
dČjeuner sur l'herbe (MusČe d'Orsay, Paris) was shown at the Salon
des RefusČs, a new exhibition place opened by Napoleon III following
the protests of artists rejected at the official Salon. Manet's canvas,
portraying a woodland picnic that included a seated female nude attended
by two fully dressed young men, attracted immediate and wide attention,
but was bitterly attacked by the critics. Hailed by young painters
as their leader, Manet became the central figure in the dispute between
the academic and rebellious art factions of his time. In 1864 the
official Salon accepted two of his paintings, and in 1865 he exhibited
his Olympia (1863, MusČe d'Orsay), a nude based on a Venus by Titian,
which aroused storms of protest in academic circles because of its
unorthodox realism. In 1866 the French novelist Emile Zola, who championed
the art of Manet in the newspaper Figaro, became a close friend of
the painter. He was soon joined by the young group of French impressionist
painters, Edgar Degas, Claude Monet, Auguste Renoir, Alfred Sisley,
Camille Pissarro, and Paul Cezanne, who were influenced by Manet's
art and who, in turn, influenced him, particularly in the use of lighter
colors and an emphasis on the effects of light. Manet served as an
officer in the French army from 1870 to 1871, during the Franco-Prussian
War. He did not gain recognition until late in life, when his portraits
became much sought after. In 1882 one of his finest pictures, The
Bar at the Folies-BergĖre (Courtauld Institute and Galleries, London),
was exhibited at the Salon, and an old friend, who was then minister
of fine arts, obtained the Legion of Honor for the artist. Manet died
in Paris on April 30, 1883. He left, besides many watercolors and
pastels, 420 oil paintings.
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