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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
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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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Alphonse
Mucha
.
Les Saisons by Alphonse Mucha
Alphonse
Mucha Biography
Alphonse
Mucha (1860 - 1939) Alphonse Mucha was born in 1860 in Ivancice, Moravia,
which is near the city of Brno in the modern Czech Republic. It was
a small town, and for all intents and purposes life was closer to
the 18th than the 19th century. Though Mucha is supposed to have started
drawing before he was walking, his early years were spent as a choirboy
and amateur musician. It wasn't until he finished high school (needing
two extra years to accomplish that onerous task) that he came to realize
that living people were responsible for some of the art he admired
in the local churches. That epiphany made him determined to become
a painter, despite his father's efforts in securing him "respectable"
employment as a clerk in the local court. Like every aspiring artist
of the day, Mucha ended up in Paris in 1887. He was a little older
than many of his fellows, but he had come further in both distance
and time. A chance encounter in Moravia had provided him with a patron
who was willing to fund his studies. After two years in Munich and
some time devoted to painting murals for his patron, he was sent off
to Paris where he studied at the Academie Julian. After two years
the supporting funds were discontinued and Alphonse Mucha was set
adrift in a Paris that he would soon transform. At the time, however,
he was a 27 year old with no money and no prospects - the proverbial
starving artist. For five years he played the part to perfection.
Living above a Cremerie that catered to art students, drawing illustrations
for popular (ie. low-paying) magazines, getting deathly ill and living
on lentils and borrowed money, Mucha met all the criteria. It was
everything an artist's life was supposed to be. Some success, some
failure. Friends abounded and art flourished. It was the height of
Impressionism and the beginnings of the Symbolists and Decadents.
He shared a studio with Gauguin for a bit after his first trip to
the south seas. Mucha gave impromptu art lessons in the Cremerie and
helped start a traditional artists ball, Bal des Quat'z Arts. All
the while he was formulating his own theories and precepts of what
he wanted his art to be. On January 1, 1895, he presented his new
style to the citizens of Paris. Called upon over the Christmas holidays
to created a poster for Sarah Bernhardt's play, Gismonda, he put his
precepts to the test. The poster, at left, was the declaration of
his new art. Spurning the bright colors and the more squarish shape
of the more popular poster artists, the near life-size design was
a sensation. Art Nouveau ("New Art" in French) can trace it's beginnings
to about this time. Based on precepts akin to William Morris' Arts
and Crafts movement in England, the attempt was to eradicate the dividing
line between art and audience. Everything could and should be art.
Burne-Jones designed wallpaper, Hector Guimard designed metro stations,
and Mucha designed champagne advertising (at right) and stage sets.
Each country had its own name for the new approach and artists of
incredible skill and vision flocked to the movement. . Overnight,
Mucha's name became a household word and, though his name is often
used synonymously with the new movement in art, he disavowed the connection.
Like Sinatra, he merely did it "my way." His way was based on a strong
composition, sensuous curves derived from nature, refined decorative
elements and natural colors. The Art Nouveau precepts were used, too,
but never at the expense of his vision. Bernhardt signed him to a
six year contract to design her posters and sets and costumes for
her plays. Mucha was an overnight success at the age of 34, after
seven years of hard work in Paris. Commissions poured in. By 1898,
he had moved to a new studio, illustrated Ilsee, Princess de Tripoli
(see image at left), had his first one-man show and had begun publishing
graphics with Champenois, a new printer anxious to promote his work
with postcards and panneaux - sets of four large images around a central
theme (four seasons, four times of day, four flowers, etc. - see below
for Stars). Most of these sets were created for the collector market
and printed on silk. There was a World's Fair in Paris in 1900 and
Mucha designed the Bosnia-Hercegovina Pavilion. He partnered with
goldsmith Georges Fouquet in the creation of jewelry based on his
designs. The bronze, Nature (at right) is from this time period. He
also published Documents Decoratifs and announced Figures Decoratives.
Documents Decoratifs was his attempt to pass his artistic theories
on to the next generation. In actuality, it provided a set of blueprints
to Mucha's style and his imitators wasted no time in applying them.
His fame spread around the world and several trips to American resulted
in covers and illustrations in a variety of U.S. magazines. Portraiture
is also commissioned from U.S. patrons. At the end of the decade he
is prepared to begin what he considered his life's work. Mucha was
always a patriot of his Czech homeland and considered his success
a triumph for the Czech people as much as for himself. In 1909 he
was commissioned to paint a series of murals for the Lord Mayor's
Hall in Prague. He also began to plan out "The Slav Epic" - a series
of great paintings chronicling major events in the Slav nation. Financing
was provided by Charles Crane, a Chicago millionaire. Mucha had hoped
to complete the task in five or six years, but instead it embraced
18 years of his life. Twenty massive (about 24 x 30 feet) canvasses
were created and presented to the city of Prague in 1928. Covering
the history of the Slavic people from prehistory to the nineteenth
century, they represented Mucha's hopes and dreams for his homeland.
In 1919 the first eleven canvases were completed and exhibited in
Prague, and America where they received a much warmer welcome. History
hasn't been kind to either Mucha or to the Czechs - as the current
unrest in the area at the turn of this century shows. Mucha's bequest
to his country was received with unkindly cold shoulders. The geopolitical
world ten years after World War I was very different from the one
in which Mucha had begun his project. Moravia was now a part of a
new nation, Czechoslovakia (Mucha offered to help the new country
by designing its postage stamps and bank notes). The art world was
just as changed. And just as the proponents of "Modern Art" cast their
slings and arrows at the oh-so 19th century style, varying political
groups brought out their personal arsenals of vitriolic prejudice
in damning one aspect or other of Mucha's work. The public seemed
to appreciate them, but political agendas seldom give much weight
to public opinion. To this day, they have never found a permanent
display site and languish, rolled up in various storerooms. The rest
of Mucha's life was spent almost as an anachronism. His work was still
beautiful and popular, it just was no longer "new" - a heinous crime
in the eyes of the critics. When the Germans invaded Czechoslovakia,
he was still influential enough to be one of the first people they
arrested. He returned home after a Gestapo questioning session and
died shortly thereafter on July 14, 1939.
MUCHA
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