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Post-Impressionism

Post-Impressionism (also spelled Postimpressionism) was 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. Its broad emphasis on abstract qualities or symbolic content means Post-Impressionism encompasses Les Nabis, Neo-Impressionism, Symbolism, Cloisonnism, the Pont-Aven School, and Synthetism, along with some later Impressionists' work. The movement's principal artists were Paul Cézanne (known as the father of Post-Impressionism), Paul Gauguin, Vincent van Gogh and Georges Seurat.[1]

Henri Rousseau, The Centenary of Independence, 1892, Getty Center, Los Angeles
Paul Cézanne, Les Jouers de cartes, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

The term Post-Impressionism was first used by art critic Roger Fry in 1906.[2][3] Critic Frank Rutter in a review of the Salon d'Automne published in Art News, 15 October 1910, described Othon Friesz as a "post-impressionist leader"; there was also an advert for the show The Post-Impressionists of France.[4] Three weeks later, Roger Fry used the term again when he organised the 1910 exhibition Manet and the Post-Impressionists, defining it as the development of French art since Manet.

Post-Impressionists extended Impressionism while rejecting its limitations: they continued using vivid colours, sometimes using impasto (thick application of paint) and painting from life, but were more inclined to emphasize geometric forms, distort form for expressive effect, and use unnatural or modified colour.

Overview

The Post-Impressionists were dissatisfied with what they felt was the triviality of subject matter and the loss of structure in Impressionist paintings, though they did not agree on the way forward. Georges Seurat and his followers concerned themselves with pointillism, the systematic use of tiny dots of colour. Paul Cézanne set out to restore a sense of order and structure to painting, to "make of Impressionism something solid and durable, like the art of the museums".[5] He achieved this by reducing objects to their basic shapes while retaining the saturated colours of Impressionism. The Impressionist Camille Pissarro experimented with Neo-Impressionist ideas between the mid-1880s and the early 1890s. Discontented with what he referred to as romantic Impressionism, he investigated pointillism, which he called scientific Impressionism, before returning to a purer Impressionism in the last decade of his life.[6] Vincent van Gogh often used vibrant colour and conspicuous brushstrokes to convey his feelings and his state of mind.

Although they often exhibited together, Post-Impressionist artists were not in agreement concerning a cohesive movement. Yet, the abstract concerns of harmony and structural arrangement, in the work of all these artists, took precedence over naturalism. Artists such as Seurat adopted a meticulously scientific approach to colour and composition.[7]

Defining Post-Impressionism

 
Poster of the 1889 Exhibition of Paintings by the Impressionist and Synthetist Group, at Café des Arts, known as The Volpini Exhibition, 1889

The term was used in 1906,[2][3] and again in 1910 by Roger Fry in the title of an exhibition of modern French painters: Manet and the Post-Impressionists, organized by Fry for the Grafton Galleries in London.[7][8] Three weeks before Fry's show, art critic Frank Rutter had put the term Post-Impressionist in print in Art News of 15 October 1910, during a review of the Salon d'Automne, where he described Othon Friesz as a "post-impressionist leader"; there was also an advert in the journal for the show The Post-Impressionists of France.[4]

Most of the artists in Fry's exhibition were younger than the Impressionists. Fry later explained: "For purposes of convenience, it was necessary to give these artists a name, and I chose, as being the vaguest and most non-committal, the name of Post-Impressionism. This merely stated their position in time relatively to the Impressionist movement."[9] John Rewald limited the scope to the years between 1886 and 1892 in his pioneering publication on Post-Impressionism: From Van Gogh to Gauguin (1956). Rewald considered this a continuation of his 1946 study, History of Impressionism, and pointed out that a "subsequent volume dedicated to the second half of the post-impressionist period":[10] Post-Impressionism: From Gauguin to Matisse, was to follow. This volume would extend the period covered to other artistic movements derived from Impressionism, though confined to the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Rewald focused on such outstanding early Post-Impressionists active in France as van Gogh, Gauguin, Seurat, and Redon. He explored their relationships as well as the artistic circles they frequented (or were in opposition to), including:

  • Neo-Impressionism: ridiculed by contemporary art critics as well as artists as Pointillism; Seurat and Signac would have preferred other terms: Divisionism for example
  • Cloisonnism: a short-lived term introduced in 1888 by the art critic Édouard Dujardin, was to promote the work of Louis Anquetin, and was later also applied to contemporary works of his friend Émile Bernard
  • Synthetism: another short-lived term coined in 1889 to distinguish recent works of Gauguin and Bernard from that of more traditional Impressionists exhibiting with them at the Café Volpini.
  • Pont-Aven School: implying little more than that the artists involved had been working for a while in Pont-Aven or elsewhere in Brittany.
  • Symbolism: a term highly welcomed by vanguard critics in 1891, when Gauguin dropped Synthetism as soon as he was acclaimed to be the leader of Symbolism in painting.

Furthermore, in his introduction to Post-Impressionism, Rewald opted for a second volume featuring Toulouse-Lautrec, Henri Rousseau "le Douanier", Les Nabis and Cézanne as well as the Fauves, the young Picasso and Gauguin's last trip to the South Seas; it was to expand the period covered at least into the first decade of the 20th century—yet this second volume remained unfinished.

 
Camille Pissarro, Haying at Eragny, 1889, Private Collection

Reviews and adjustments

Rewald wrote that "the term 'Post-Impressionism' is not a very precise one, though a very convenient one"; convenient, when the term is by definition limited to French visual arts derived from Impressionism since 1886. Rewald's approach to historical data was narrative rather than analytic, and beyond this point he believed it would be sufficient to "let the sources speak for themselves."[10]

Rival terms like Modernism or Symbolism were never as easy to handle, for they covered literature, architecture and other arts as well, and they expanded to other countries.

  • Modernism, thus, is now considered to be the central movement within international western civilization with its original roots in France, going back beyond the French Revolution to the Age of Enlightenment.
  • Symbolism, however, is considered to be a concept which emerged a century later in France, and implied an individual approach. Local national traditions as well as individual settings therefore could stand side by side, and from the very beginning a broad variety of artists practicing some kind of symbolic imagery, ranged between extreme positions: The Nabis for example united to find synthesis of tradition and brand new form, while others kept to traditional, more or less academic forms, when they were looking for fresh contents: Symbolism is therefore often linked to fantastic, esoteric, erotic and other non-realist subject matter.

To meet the recent discussion, the connotations of the term 'Post-Impressionism' were challenged again: Alan Bowness and his collaborators expanded the period covered forward to 1914 and the beginning of World War I, but limited their approach widely on the 1890s to France. Other European countries are pushed back to standard connotations, and Eastern Europe is completely excluded.

So, while a split may be seen between classical 'Impressionism' and 'Post-Impressionism' in 1886, the end and the extent of 'Post-Impressionism' remains under discussion. For Bowness and his contributors as well as for Rewald, 'Cubism' was an absolutely fresh start, and so Cubism has been seen in France since the beginning, and later in England. Meanwhile, Eastern European artists, however, did not care so much for western traditions, and proceeded to manners of painting called abstract and suprematic—terms expanding far into the 20th century.

According to the present state of discussion, Post-Impressionism is a term best used within Rewald's definition in a strictly historical manner, concentrating on French art between 1886 and 1914, and re-considering the altered positions of impressionist painters like Claude Monet, Camille Pissarro, Auguste Renoir, and others—as well as all new schools and movements at the turn of the century: from Cloisonnism to Cubism. The declarations of war, in July/August 1914, indicate probably far more than the beginning of a World War—they signal a major break in European cultural history, too.

Along with general art history information given about "Post-Impressionism" works, there are many museums that offer additional history, information and gallery works, both online and in house, that can help viewers understand a deeper meaning of "Post-Impressionism" in terms of fine art and traditional art applications.

Post-Impression in specific countries

The Advent of Modernism: Post-impressionism and North American Art, 1900-1918 by Peter Morrin, Judith Zilczer, and William C. Agee, the catalogue for an exhibition at the High Museum of Art, Atlanta in 1986, gave a major overview of Post-Impressionism in North America.

Canada

Canadian Post-Impressionism is an offshoot of Post-Impressionism.[11] In 1913, the Art Association of Montreal's Spring show included the work of Randolph Hewton, A. Y. Jackson and John Lyman: it was reviewed with sharp criticism by the Montreal Daily Witness and the Montreal Daily Star.[12] Post-Impressionism was extended to include a painting by Lyman, who had studied with Matisse.[13][14] Lyman wrote in defence of the term and defined it. He referred to the British show which he described as a great exhibition of modern art.[15]

Canadian artists and exhibitions

A wide and diverse variety of artists are called by this name in Canada. Among them are James Wilson Morrice,[16] John Lyman,[17] David Milne,[18] and Tom Thomson,[19] members of the Group of Seven,[20] and Emily Carr.[21] In 2001, the Robert McLaughlin Gallery in Oshawa organized the travelling exhibition The Birth of the Modern: Post-Impressionism in Canada, 1900-1920.

Gallery of major Post-Impressionist artists

See also

References and sources

References
  1. ^ Metropolitan Museum of Art Timeline, Post-Impressionism
  2. ^ a b Brettell, Richard R.; Brettell, Richard (March 31, 1999). Modern Art, 1851-1929: Capitalism and Representation. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780192842206 – via Google Books.
  3. ^ a b Peter Morrin, Judith Zilczer, William C. Agee, The Advent of Modernism. Post-Impressionism and North American Art, 1900-1918, High Museum of Art, 1986
  4. ^ a b Bullen, J. B. Post-impressionists in England, p.37. Routledge, 1988. ISBN 0-415-00216-8, ISBN 978-0-415-00216-5
  5. ^ Huyghe, Rene: Impressionism. (1973). Secaucus, N.J.: Chartwell Books Inc., p. 222. OCLC 153804642
  6. ^ Cogniat, Raymond (1975). Pissarro. New York: Crown, pp. 69–72. ISBN 0-517-52477-5.
  7. ^ a b "The Collection | MoMA". The Museum of Modern Art.
  8. ^ Grafton Galleries, London (March 31, 1910). "Manet and the post-impressionists; Nov. 8th to Jan. 15th, 1910-11... (under revision)". London : Ballantyne – via Internet Archive.
  9. ^ Gowing, Lawrence (2005). Facts on File Encyclopedia of Art: 5. New York: Facts on File, p. 804. ISBN 0-8160-5802-4
  10. ^ a b Rewald, John: Post-Impressionism: From Van Gogh to Gauguin, revised edition: Secker & Warburg, London, 1978, p. 9.
  11. ^ Murray, Joan (2001). The Birth of the Modern: Post-Impressionism in Canadian Art. Oshawa: Robert McLaughlin Gallery. p. 16. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  12. ^ Murray 2001, pp. 15–16.
  13. ^ Lyman, John. "Adieux, Matisse". Canadian Art. 12 (2 (Winter 1955)): 44–46. Retrieved 2021-01-29.
  14. ^ Murray 2001, p. 143-144.
  15. ^ Murray 2001, p. 16.
  16. ^ Murray 2001, p. 117ff.
  17. ^ Murray 2001, pp. 83–84, 143–144.
  18. ^ Murray 2001, p. 111ff.
  19. ^ Murray 2001, p. 133ff.
  20. ^ Murray 2001, p. 61ff, 78ff,81ff etc..
  21. ^ Murray 2001, p. 50ff.
Sources
  • Bowness, Alan, et alt.: Post-Impressionism. Cross-Currents in European Painting, Royal Academy of Arts & Weidenfeld and Nicolson, London 1979 ISBN 0-297-77713-0

Further reading

  • Manet and the Post-Impressionists (exh. cat. by R. Fry and D. MacCarthy, London, Grafton Gals, 1910–11)
  • The Second Post-Impressionist Exhibition (exh. cat. by R. Fry, London, Grafton Gals, 1912)
  • J. Rewald. Post-Impressionism: From Van Gogh to Gauguin (New York, 1956, rev. 3/1978)
  • F. Elgar. The Post-Impressionists (Oxford, 1977)
  • Post-Impressionism: Cross-currents in European Painting (exh. cat., ed. J. House and M. A. Stevens; London, RA, 1979–80)
  • B. Thomson. The Post-Impressionists (Oxford and New York, 1983, rev. 2/1990)
  • J. Rewald. Studies in Post-Impressionism (London, 1986)
  • Beyond Impressionism, exhibit at Columbus Museum of Art, October 21, 2017 – January 21, 2018 Beyond Impressionism Exhibition at Columbus Museum of Art

External links

  • "Post-Impressionists", Walter Sickert's review in The Fortnightly Review of the "Manet and the Post-Impressionists" exhibition at the Grafton Galleries
  • "Post-Impressionism", Roger Fry's lecture on the closing of the "Manet and the Post-Impressionists" exhibition at the Grafton Galleries, as published in The Fortnightly Review
  • Georges Seurat, 1859–1891, a full text exhibition catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art
  • Toulouse-Lautrec in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, a full text exhibition catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art
  • "Roger Fry, Walter Sickert and Post-Impressionism at the Grafton Galleries", a reflection by Marnin Young on the 1910–1911 exhibition

post, impressionism, also, spelled, postimpressionism, predominantly, french, movement, that, developed, roughly, between, 1886, 1905, from, last, impressionist, exhibition, birth, fauvism, emerged, reaction, against, impressionists, concern, naturalistic, dep. Post Impressionism also spelled Postimpressionism was 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 Its broad emphasis on abstract qualities or symbolic content means Post Impressionism encompasses Les Nabis Neo Impressionism Symbolism Cloisonnism the Pont Aven School and Synthetism along with some later Impressionists work The movement s principal artists were Paul Cezanne known as the father of Post Impressionism Paul Gauguin Vincent van Gogh and Georges Seurat 1 Henri Rousseau The Centenary of Independence 1892 Getty Center Los Angeles Paul Cezanne Les Jouers de cartes Metropolitan Museum of Art New York The term Post Impressionism was first used by art critic Roger Fry in 1906 2 3 Critic Frank Rutter in a review of the Salon d Automne published in Art News 15 October 1910 described Othon Friesz as a post impressionist leader there was also an advert for the show The Post Impressionists of France 4 Three weeks later Roger Fry used the term again when he organised the 1910 exhibition Manet and the Post Impressionists defining it as the development of French art since Manet Post Impressionists extended Impressionism while rejecting its limitations they continued using vivid colours sometimes using impasto thick application of paint and painting from life but were more inclined to emphasize geometric forms distort form for expressive effect and use unnatural or modified colour Contents 1 Overview 2 Defining Post Impressionism 2 1 Reviews and adjustments 3 Post Impression in specific countries 3 1 Canada 3 1 1 Canadian artists and exhibitions 4 Gallery of major Post Impressionist artists 5 See also 6 References and sources 7 Further reading 8 External linksOverview EditThe Post Impressionists were dissatisfied with what they felt was the triviality of subject matter and the loss of structure in Impressionist paintings though they did not agree on the way forward Georges Seurat and his followers concerned themselves with pointillism the systematic use of tiny dots of colour Paul Cezanne set out to restore a sense of order and structure to painting to make of Impressionism something solid and durable like the art of the museums 5 He achieved this by reducing objects to their basic shapes while retaining the saturated colours of Impressionism The Impressionist Camille Pissarro experimented with Neo Impressionist ideas between the mid 1880s and the early 1890s Discontented with what he referred to as romantic Impressionism he investigated pointillism which he called scientific Impressionism before returning to a purer Impressionism in the last decade of his life 6 Vincent van Gogh often used vibrant colour and conspicuous brushstrokes to convey his feelings and his state of mind Although they often exhibited together Post Impressionist artists were not in agreement concerning a cohesive movement Yet the abstract concerns of harmony and structural arrangement in the work of all these artists took precedence over naturalism Artists such as Seurat adopted a meticulously scientific approach to colour and composition 7 Defining Post Impressionism Edit Poster of the 1889 Exhibition of Paintings by the Impressionist and Synthetist Group at Cafe des Arts known as The Volpini Exhibition 1889 Henri de Toulouse Lautrec Portrait of Emile Bernard 1886 Tate Gallery London The term was used in 1906 2 3 and again in 1910 by Roger Fry in the title of an exhibition of modern French painters Manet and the Post Impressionists organized by Fry for the Grafton Galleries in London 7 8 Three weeks before Fry s show art critic Frank Rutter had put the term Post Impressionist in print in Art News of 15 October 1910 during a review of the Salon d Automne where he described Othon Friesz as a post impressionist leader there was also an advert in the journal for the show The Post Impressionists of France 4 Most of the artists in Fry s exhibition were younger than the Impressionists Fry later explained For purposes of convenience it was necessary to give these artists a name and I chose as being the vaguest and most non committal the name of Post Impressionism This merely stated their position in time relatively to the Impressionist movement 9 John Rewald limited the scope to the years between 1886 and 1892 in his pioneering publication on Post Impressionism From Van Gogh to Gauguin 1956 Rewald considered this a continuation of his 1946 study History of Impressionism and pointed out that a subsequent volume dedicated to the second half of the post impressionist period 10 Post Impressionism From Gauguin to Matisse was to follow This volume would extend the period covered to other artistic movements derived from Impressionism though confined to the late 19th and early 20th centuries Rewald focused on such outstanding early Post Impressionists active in France as van Gogh Gauguin Seurat and Redon He explored their relationships as well as the artistic circles they frequented or were in opposition to including Neo Impressionism ridiculed by contemporary art critics as well as artists as Pointillism Seurat and Signac would have preferred other terms Divisionism for example Cloisonnism a short lived term introduced in 1888 by the art critic Edouard Dujardin was to promote the work of Louis Anquetin and was later also applied to contemporary works of his friend Emile Bernard Synthetism another short lived term coined in 1889 to distinguish recent works of Gauguin and Bernard from that of more traditional Impressionists exhibiting with them at the Cafe Volpini Pont Aven School implying little more than that the artists involved had been working for a while in Pont Aven or elsewhere in Brittany Symbolism a term highly welcomed by vanguard critics in 1891 when Gauguin dropped Synthetism as soon as he was acclaimed to be the leader of Symbolism in painting Furthermore in his introduction to Post Impressionism Rewald opted for a second volume featuring Toulouse Lautrec Henri Rousseau le Douanier Les Nabis and Cezanne as well as the Fauves the young Picasso and Gauguin s last trip to the South Seas it was to expand the period covered at least into the first decade of the 20th century yet this second volume remained unfinished Camille Pissarro Haying at Eragny 1889 Private Collection Reviews and adjustments Edit Rewald wrote that the term Post Impressionism is not a very precise one though a very convenient one convenient when the term is by definition limited to French visual arts derived from Impressionism since 1886 Rewald s approach to historical data was narrative rather than analytic and beyond this point he believed it would be sufficient to let the sources speak for themselves 10 Rival terms like Modernism or Symbolism were never as easy to handle for they covered literature architecture and other arts as well and they expanded to other countries Modernism thus is now considered to be the central movement within international western civilization with its original roots in France going back beyond the French Revolution to the Age of Enlightenment Symbolism however is considered to be a concept which emerged a century later in France and implied an individual approach Local national traditions as well as individual settings therefore could stand side by side and from the very beginning a broad variety of artists practicing some kind of symbolic imagery ranged between extreme positions The Nabis for example united to find synthesis of tradition and brand new form while others kept to traditional more or less academic forms when they were looking for fresh contents Symbolism is therefore often linked to fantastic esoteric erotic and other non realist subject matter To meet the recent discussion the connotations of the term Post Impressionism were challenged again Alan Bowness and his collaborators expanded the period covered forward to 1914 and the beginning of World War I but limited their approach widely on the 1890s to France Other European countries are pushed back to standard connotations and Eastern Europe is completely excluded So while a split may be seen between classical Impressionism and Post Impressionism in 1886 the end and the extent of Post Impressionism remains under discussion For Bowness and his contributors as well as for Rewald Cubism was an absolutely fresh start and so Cubism has been seen in France since the beginning and later in England Meanwhile Eastern European artists however did not care so much for western traditions and proceeded to manners of painting called abstract and suprematic terms expanding far into the 20th century According to the present state of discussion Post Impressionism is a term best used within Rewald s definition in a strictly historical manner concentrating on French art between 1886 and 1914 and re considering the altered positions of impressionist painters like Claude Monet Camille Pissarro Auguste Renoir and others as well as all new schools and movements at the turn of the century from Cloisonnism to Cubism The declarations of war in July August 1914 indicate probably far more than the beginning of a World War they signal a major break in European cultural history too Along with general art history information given about Post Impressionism works there are many museums that offer additional history information and gallery works both online and in house that can help viewers understand a deeper meaning of Post Impressionism in terms of fine art and traditional art applications Post Impression in specific countries EditThe Advent of Modernism Post impressionism and North American Art 1900 1918 by Peter Morrin Judith Zilczer and William C Agee the catalogue for an exhibition at the High Museum of Art Atlanta in 1986 gave a major overview of Post Impressionism in North America Canada Edit Canadian Post Impressionism is an offshoot of Post Impressionism 11 In 1913 the Art Association of Montreal s Spring show included the work of Randolph Hewton A Y Jackson and John Lyman it was reviewed with sharp criticism by the Montreal Daily Witness and the Montreal Daily Star 12 Post Impressionism was extended to include a painting by Lyman who had studied with Matisse 13 14 Lyman wrote in defence of the term and defined it He referred to the British show which he described as a great exhibition of modern art 15 Canadian artists and exhibitions Edit A wide and diverse variety of artists are called by this name in Canada Among them are James Wilson Morrice 16 John Lyman 17 David Milne 18 and Tom Thomson 19 members of the Group of Seven 20 and Emily Carr 21 In 2001 the Robert McLaughlin Gallery in Oshawa organized the travelling exhibition The Birth of the Modern Post Impressionism in Canada 1900 1920 Gallery of major Post Impressionist artists Edit Odilon Redon 1840 1916 Henri Rousseau 1844 1910 Paul Gauguin 1848 1903 Vincent van Gogh 1853 1890 Charles Angrand 1854 1926 Henri Edmond Cross 1856 1910 Maximilien Luce 1858 1941 Georges Seurat 1859 1891 Eugene Chigot 1860 1923 Rene Schutzenberger 1860 1916 Marius Borgeaud 1861 1924 Charles Laval 1862 1894 Theo van Rysselberghe 1862 1926 Paul Signac 1863 1935 Henri de Toulouse Lautrec 1864 1901 Paul Serusier 1864 1927 Paul Ranson 1864 1909 Georges Lemmen 1865 1916 Felix Vallotton 1865 1925 Pierre Bonnard 1867 1947 Edouard Vuillard 1868 1940 Emile Bernard 1868 1941 Maurice Denis 1870 1943 Robert Antoine Pinchon 1886 1943 See also EditArt periods Cubism Kapists Neo impressionism Expressionism History of Painting Western PaintingReferences and sources EditReferences Metropolitan Museum of Art Timeline Post Impressionism a b Brettell Richard R Brettell Richard March 31 1999 Modern Art 1851 1929 Capitalism and Representation Oxford University Press ISBN 9780192842206 via Google Books a b Peter Morrin Judith Zilczer William C Agee The Advent of Modernism Post Impressionism and North American Art 1900 1918 High Museum of Art 1986 a b Bullen J B Post impressionists in England p 37 Routledge 1988 ISBN 0 415 00216 8 ISBN 978 0 415 00216 5 Huyghe Rene Impressionism 1973 Secaucus N J Chartwell Books Inc p 222 OCLC 153804642 Cogniat Raymond 1975 Pissarro New York Crown pp 69 72 ISBN 0 517 52477 5 a b The Collection MoMA The Museum of Modern Art Grafton Galleries London March 31 1910 Manet and the post impressionists Nov 8th to Jan 15th 1910 11 under revision London Ballantyne via Internet Archive Gowing Lawrence 2005 Facts on File Encyclopedia of Art 5 New York Facts on File p 804 ISBN 0 8160 5802 4 a b Rewald John Post Impressionism From Van Gogh to Gauguin revised edition Secker amp Warburg London 1978 p 9 Murray Joan 2001 The Birth of the Modern Post Impressionism in Canadian Art Oshawa Robert McLaughlin Gallery p 16 Retrieved 25 July 2022 Murray 2001 pp 15 16 Lyman John Adieux Matisse Canadian Art 12 2 Winter 1955 44 46 Retrieved 2021 01 29 Murray 2001 p 143 144 Murray 2001 p 16 Murray 2001 p 117ff Murray 2001 pp 83 84 143 144 Murray 2001 p 111ff Murray 2001 p 133ff Murray 2001 p 61ff 78ff 81ff etc Murray 2001 p 50ff SourcesBowness Alan et alt Post Impressionism Cross Currents in European Painting Royal Academy of Arts amp Weidenfeld and Nicolson London 1979 ISBN 0 297 77713 0Further reading EditManet and the Post Impressionists exh cat by R Fry and D MacCarthy London Grafton Gals 1910 11 The Second Post Impressionist Exhibition exh cat by R Fry London Grafton Gals 1912 J Rewald Post Impressionism From Van Gogh to Gauguin New York 1956 rev 3 1978 F Elgar The Post Impressionists Oxford 1977 Post Impressionism Cross currents in European Painting exh cat ed J House and M A Stevens London RA 1979 80 B Thomson The Post Impressionists Oxford and New York 1983 rev 2 1990 J Rewald Studies in Post Impressionism London 1986 Beyond Impressionism exhibit at Columbus Museum of Art October 21 2017 January 21 2018 Beyond Impressionism Exhibition at Columbus Museum of ArtExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Post Impressionism Post Impressionists Walter Sickert s review in The Fortnightly Review of the Manet and the Post Impressionists exhibition at the Grafton Galleries Post Impressionism Roger Fry s lecture on the closing of the Manet and the Post Impressionists exhibition at the Grafton Galleries as published in The Fortnightly Review Georges Seurat 1859 1891 a full text exhibition catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art Toulouse Lautrec in the Metropolitan Museum of Art a full text exhibition catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art Roger Fry Walter Sickert and Post Impressionism at the Grafton Galleries a reflection by Marnin Young on the 1910 1911 exhibition Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Post Impressionism amp oldid 1130509747, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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