Title: Post Impressionism
1Post Impressionism
- Many Small Movements,
- 1880-1920
2Post Impressionism
3Post Impressionism c. 1880-1920
4Influence on Modern Art
5Artists associated to movements
Cloisonnism (1888) School of Pont-Aven (c.1888) Nabis (1888) Synthetism (1889)
Anquetin Bernard (Gauguin) Gauguin Bernard Denis Vuillard Bonnard Sérusier Roussel Vallotton Gauguin Schuffenecker Bernard Serusier Ranson
6(No Transcript)
7Paul CézanneHouse of the Hanged Man 1873
8Paul CézanneLandscape, Auvers, 1873
9PissarroGelée blanche, 1873
10Paul Cézanne The Bathers Resting, 1875-76
11Paul Cézanne The Bathers, 1900-5
12Adolphe-William Bouguereau, The Bathers, 1884
13Comparison
14Paul CézanneStill Life with Compotier 1879-1882
15Cézannes Still Lives
- He was fascinated by the relation of colour to
modelling - Brightly coloured, round solids
(e.g. Apple) was ideal - He was interested in achieving a balanced design,
therefore he stretched the bowl to the left to
fill a void. - As he wanted to study all the shapes on the table
and their relationship, he simply tilted it
forward to make them come into view. - Everything (apart from the bowl glass) has been
reduced to its essential form either spherical
or rectangular enforcing a great sense of
weight and mass. - Curves echo round the canvas.
- To achieve a sense of depth without sacrificing
the brightness of colours. - To achieve an orderly arrangement without
sacrificing the sense of depth all sacrifices
EXCEPT for maintaining the conventional
correctness of outline. - He was not out to distort nature but he did not
mind much if it became distorted in some minor
detail if it helped obtain the desired effect.
16Paul CézanneStill Life with Plaster Cupid
c.1895
17Paul Cézanne Table, Napkin, and Fruit,
1895-1900
18Paul Cézanne Apples and Oranges, c. 1899
19Paul Cézanne 'Mont Sainte-Victoire seen from
Bellvue, c. 1882-1885
20Paul Cézanne Mont Sainte-Victoire, 1902-4
21Georges SeuratThe Bathers, Asnières, 1883-4
22- Students text book of Colour or, Modern
Chromatics with Applications to Art Industry,
1881 by Ogden Rood, American Physicist - Principle of Harmony Contrast of Colours and
their application to the Arts, 1839 by
Michel-Eugène Cheureul
23George Seurat Sunday Afternoon on the Island of
La Grande Jatte, 1883-1886
24Georges SeuratThe Lighthouse at Honfleur, 1886
25Paul SignacBreakfast (The Dining Room)c.
1886/87
26Paul SignacPortrait of Félix Fénéon, 1890
27George SeuratCircus, 1890-91
28Paul SignacRed Buoy, Saint Tropez, 1895
29Paul GauguinLa Bergère bretonne, 1886
30Louis AnquetinEvening Avenue de Clichy 1887
31Emile BernardView from the Bridge at Asnières,
1887
32Louis AnquetinGirl Reading a Newspaper, 1890
33Emile BernardBuckwheat Harvesters at
Pont-Aven, 1888
34Emile Bernard Women on a Prairie, 1888
35Paul GauguinThe Vision after the Sermon (Jacob
and the Angel), 1888
36Emile Bernard Self-Portrait with Portrait of
Gauguin, 1888
37Paul GauguinSelf Portrait Les Misérables, 1888
38Vincent Van GoghThe Bridge in the Rain (After
Hiroshige), 1887
39Hokusai
40Paul GauguinPortrait of Van Gogh painting,
1888
41Vincent Van GoghSunflowers, 1888
42Paul GauguinLe Christ jaune (The Yellow
Christ) 1889
43Emile BernardPaysannes Bretonnes, c1889
44Vincent Van GoghThe Bridge in the Rain (After
Hiroshige), 1887
45Hokusai
46Paul GauguinPortrait of Van Gogh painting,
1888
47Vincent Van GoghSunflowers, 1888
48Vincent van GoghVincents Chair with his Pipe,
1888-9
49Vincent Van GoghRoom at Arles, 1889
50Vincent Van GoghSelf Portrait, 1889
51Vincent van GoghA Corner of the Garden of St
Paul's Hospital at St Rémy, 1889
52Vincent van GoghA Cornfield with Cypresses,
1889
53Vincent Van GoghPortrait of Dr Gachet, 1890
54Vincent van GoghFarms near Auvers, 1890
55Vincent van GoghWheatfield with Crows, 1890
56Paul GauguinHarvest Le Pouldu, 1890
57Émile BernardSortie d'église à Médréac, 1891
58Paul SérusierLes Lavandières de
Bellangenet,ca. 1892
59Paul GauguinSpirit of the Dead Watching, 1892
60Henri Toulouse-LautrecDivan Japonaise, 1893
61Henri Toulouse-LautrecJane Avril au Jardin de
Paris, 1893
62Paul GauguinBreton Peasant Women, 1894
63Paul GauguinWhere do we come from? What are we?
Where are we going? 1897
64Paul SerusierLandscape in the Bois dAmour (The
Talisman), 1888
65Gauguin said How do you see these trees? They
are yellow. Well then, put down yellow. And
that shadow blue. Render it with pure
ultramarine. Those red leaves? Use vermilion
66Paul SérusierRoof Tops in Paris, c. 1891
67Pierre BonnardThe Two Poodles, 1891
68Pierre BonnardIntimité, 1891
69Maurice DenisJuly, 1892
70Edouard Vuillard Les coulisses du Théâtre de
l'Oeuvre, c.1894
71Maurice DenisHomage to Cezanne, 1900
72Remember that a picture before being a battle
horse, a nude, or some anecdote is essentially a
flat surface covered in colours assembled in a
certain order. Denis
73Cézanne
- Cézanne realised that the eye takes in a scene
both consecutively and simultaneously and in
his work, the single perspective gives way to a
shifting view, acknowledging that perspective
changes as the eyes and head move.
74Cézanne
- Here, as with Cézannes other landscapes, he
renders depth and space with COLOUR, rather than
traditional forms of linear perspective and tonal
modelling. - Colour must reveal every interval in depth.
75Cézanne
- The image shows the recession of cool colours and
advance of warm colours (and variations in
intensity).
76Cézanne
- The image has a restricted colour palette of pale
greens, earth colours and a wide range of blues.
77Cézanne
- Cézannes work stood apart from the
Impressionists, as he was still concerned with
maintaining form, rather than purely focusing on
the effects of light.
78Cézanne
- Cézanne uses directional brushstrokes, with the
different planes of the landscape being placed in
parallel lines equal and separate brushstrokes.
79Cézanne
- He is painting from a high viewpoint which tips
the landscape up, flattening it closer to the
picture plane and cuts down the sky area.