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Post-Impressionism Art: History, Characteristics

<html> <head> <title>Post-Impressionism Art: History, Characteristics</title> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1"> <meta name="description" content="Post-Impressionism Art Movement (c.1880-1905): Development of Neo-Impressionism, Fauvism, Expressionism, and Art Nouveau"> <meta name="keywords" content="Post-Impressionism, Post-Impressionist Painting, Neo-Impressionism, Divisionism, Pointillism, Art Nouveau, Les Nabis, Fauvism, Expressionism, Synthetism, Cloisonism, Camden Town Group, Georges Seurat, Cezanne, Van Gogh, Matisse, Gauguin"> </head> <body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#000000"> <div id="fb-root"></div> <script>(function(d, s, id) { var js, fjs = d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0]; if (d.getElementById(id)) return; js = d.createElement(s); js.id = id; js.src = "//connect.facebook.net/en_GB/all.js#xfbml=1"; fjs.parentNode.insertBefore(js, fjs); }(document, 'script', 'facebook-jssdk'));</script> <table width="750" border="0" cellspacing="2" cellpadding="5" align="center"> <tr> <td> <p><font face="Verdana" size="5"><b>Post-Impressionism</b></font><br> <font face="Verdana" size="2">History, Characteristics of Neo-Impressionism, Fauvism, Expressionism.</font><br> <font face="Verdana" size="4"><b><a href="../site/search.htm">MAIN A-Z INDEX</a> - <a href="../site/art-styles.htm">A-Z of ART MOVEMENTS</a></b></font></p> <div class="fb-like" data-href="http://www.visual-arts-cork.com/history-of-art/post-impressionism.htm" data-width="450" data-show-faces="true" data-send="true"></div> <p><a href="http://pinterest.com/pin/create/button/" class="pin-it-button" count-layout="none"><img src="//assets.pinterest.com/images/PinExt.png" alt="Pin it" / ></a> <script type="text/javascript" src="http://assets.pinterest.com/js/pinit.js"></script></p> </td> </tr> </table> <hr width="750" size="1"> <table width="750" border="0" cellspacing="2" cellpadding="5" align="center"> <tr> <td align="left" valign="top"> <script type="text/javascript"><!-- google_ad_client = "ca-pub-8912804978085527"; /* 728x90, created 26/01/11 */ google_ad_slot = "9490858105"; google_ad_width = 728; google_ad_height = 90; //--> </script> <script type="text/javascript" src="http://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/show_ads.js"> </script> </td> </tr> </table> <table width="750" border="0" cellspacing="2" cellpadding="5" align="center"> <tr> <td width="200" valign="top"> <p><font face="Arial" size="1"><b><img src="../images-artistic/gaugin-red-flowers.jpg" width="190" height="190"><br> Two Tahitian Women with Red Flowers<br> (1899) Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY.<br> By Paul Gauguin.</b></font></p> <p><font face="Arial" size="1"><b><font color="#FF0000">PAINTING COLOURS/HUES</font><br> For colour pigments used by<br> Post-Impressionist painters, see:<br> <a href="../artist-paints/colour-palette-nineteenth-century.htm">Nineteenth Century Colour palette</a>.</b></font></p> </td> <td width="524" valign="top"> <h1><font face="Verdana" size="4">Post-Impressionism (c.1880-1905)</font></h1> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b>Contents</b></font></p> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">&#149; <a href="#postimpressionism">What is Post-Impressionism?</a><br> &#149; <a href="#pointillism">Neo-Impressionism (Georges Seurat)</a><br> &#149; <a href="#cezanne">Structure Not Imitation (Paul Cezanne)</a><br> &#149; <a href="#expressionism">Early Expressionism (Vincent Van Gogh)</a><br> &#149; <a href="#synthetism">Synthetism/Cloisonnism (Paul Gauguin)</a><br> &#149; <a href="#scandinavian">Scandinavian Post-Impressionism (Edvard Munch)</a><br> &#149; <a href="#posters">French Poster Art</a><br> &#149; <a href="#nabis">Les Nabis (1890s)</a><br> &#149; <a href="#vingt">Les Vingt (1883-93)</a><br> &#149; <a href="#divisionism">Italian Divisionism (1890-1907)</a><br> &#149; <a href="#fauvism">Fauvism (Henri Matisse)</a><br> &#149; <a href="#camden">British Post-Impressionists: Camden Town Group (1911-13)</a><br> &#149; <a href="#seven">Group of Seven (Canada) (1920s on)</a></font></p> </td> </tr> </table> <hr width="750" size="1"> <table width="750" border="0" cellspacing="2" cellpadding="5" align="center"> <tr> <td width="200" valign="top"> <p><font face="Arial" size="1"><img src="../images-artistic/cross-or.jpg" width="190" height="213"><br> <b>The Iles d'Or (The Iles d'Hyeres) (c.1892)<br> Musee d'Orsay, Paris.</b><b><br> By Henri-Edmond Cross, friend of<br> Henri Matisse and exponent of<br> Pointillism, one of the most<br> influential <a href="../modern-art-movements.htm">modern art movements</a><br> of the 1880s and 1890s.</b></font></p> <p><font face="Arial" size="1"><img src="../images-applied-art/grubicy-mist.jpg" width="200" height="199"><br> <b>Sea of Mist (Mare di nebbia) (1885)<br> Private Collection. A superb example<br> of Italian Divisionism, by<br> Vittore Grubicy de Dragon.</b></font></p> </td> <td width="524" valign="top"> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="postimpressionism"></a>What is Post-Impressionism?</b></font></p> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">In fine art, the term <b>Post-Impressionism</b> denotes the phase of <a href="../modern-art.htm">modern art</a> during which artists sought to progress beyond the narrow imitative style of <a href="impressionism.htm">Impressionism</a>, as practised by Claude Monet and his followers. (For more, see: <a href="impressionism-characteristics.htm">Characteristics of Impressionist Painting</a>.) The phase lasted roughly from 1880 to the late 1900s, although it endured longer outside France. Probably the most influential Post-Impressionist movements included <b>Neo-Impressionism</b>, early <b>Expressionism</b>, <b>Art Nouveau</b> and <b>Fauvism</b>, although the importance of the period lies essentially in the pioneering art of certain individual painters.</font></p> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">Although most famous <a href="post-impressionist-painters.htm">Post-Impressionist painters</a> were based in France, <a href="post-impressionist-painting.htm">Post Impressionist painting</a> spread throughout Europe, to include a wide variety of movements, including early <a href="expressionism.htm">Expressionism</a>, as well as Italian Divisionism, Jugendstil as well as avant-garde groups like <a href="les-vingt.htm">Les Vingt</a>, and others.</font></p> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">The most celebrated individual artists of the period include: <a href="../famous-artists/whistler.htm"><b>James Whistler</b></a> (1834-1903), the flamboyant American painter, noted for his tonal <i>Nocturnes</i>; <b>Paul Cezanne</b> (1839-1906), one of the most influential of <a href="../modern-artists.htm">modern artists</a>, whose formalistic approach to landscape paved the way for Cubism; the late developer <b>Paul Gauguin</b> (1848-1903), a colourist whose paintings of people and scenes from Tahiti had a huge influence on contemporary symbolism as well as styles of <i>Cloisonism</i> and <i>Primitivism</i>; <b>Van Gogh</b> (1853-1890) one of the pioneers of Expressionism, noted for his intensely personal pictures; <b><a href="../famous-artists/seurat-georges.htm">Georges Seurat</a></b> (1859-1891), one of the greatest exponents of drawing, who founded the Neo-Impressionist style of <i>Pointillism</i>, and is best-known for his masterpieces <i><a href="../paintings-analysis/bathers-at-asnieres.htm">Bathers at Asnieres</a></i> (National Gallery, London) and the complex <i><a href="../paintings-analysis/sunday-afternoon-on-grande-jatte.htm">A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte</a></i> (1884-6); the alcoholic <a href="../famous-artists/toulouse-lautrec.htm"><b>Toulouse-Lautrec</b></a> (1864-1901), whose lithographic poster art, and scenes of cafes and nightclubs, helped to create the popular image of Paris at the turn of the century; <b>Henri Matisse</b> (1869-1954) leader of the <i>Fauves</i>, and <a href="../famous-artists/maurice-utrillo.htm"><b>Maurice Utrillo</b></a> (1883-1955), best remembered for his picture postcard views of Paris streets.</font></p> </td> </tr> </table> <table width="750" border="0" cellspacing="2" cellpadding="5" align="center"> <tr> <td width="200" valign="top"> <p><font face="Arial" size="1"><img src="../images-artistic/matisse-nude.jpg" width="170" height="267"><br> <b><font face="Arial" size="1">Nude (Black and Gold) (1908)<br> Hermitage, St. Petersburg.<br> By Henri Matisse.</font></b></font></p> </td> <td width="524" valign="top"> <script type="text/javascript"><!-- google_ad_client = "ca-pub-8912804978085527"; /* 336x280, created 26/01/11 */ google_ad_slot = "3874842144"; google_ad_width = 336; google_ad_height = 280; //--> </script> <script type="text/javascript" src="http://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/show_ads.js"> </script> </td> </tr> </table> <table width="750" border="0" cellspacing="2" cellpadding="5" align="center"> <tr> <td width="200" valign="top"> <p><font face="Arial" size="1"><b><font color="#FF0000">BEST POST-IMPRESSIONIST ART</font><br> The best collection of Impressionist<br> and Post-Impressionist paintings<br> hangs in the <a href="../museums/musee-orsay.htm">Musee d'Orsay Paris</a>.</b></font></p> <p><font face="Arial" size="1"><b><font color="#FF0000">IMPRESSIONIST ARTISTS</font><br> For a list of the best, see:<br> <a href="impressionist-painters.htm">Impressionist Painters</a>.</b></font></p> <p><b><font face="Arial" size="1"><b><font color="#FF0000">FINEST MODERN PAINTING</font><br> For a list of great works<br> see: <a href="../modern-paintings.htm">Greatest Modern Paintings</a>.</b></font></b></p> <p><font face="Arial" size="1"><b><font color="#FF0000">WORLD'S GREATEST ARTWORKS</font><br> For a list of the Top 10 painters/<br> sculptors: <a href="../best-artists-of-all-time.htm">Best Artists of All Time</a>.</b></font></p> </td> <td width="524" valign="top"> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="pointillism"></a>Neo-Impressionism (Georges Seurat)</b></font></p> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><a href="../famous-artists/seurat-georges.htm">Georges Seurat</a> (1859-1891), along with his disciple <a href="../famous-artists/paul-signac.htm">Paul Signac</a> (1863-1935), was the founder of <a href="neo-impressionism.htm">Neo-Impressionism</a>, the name given to the Divisionist technique (also called <a href="pointillism.htm">pointillism</a>) which aimed to establish a scientific basis for Impressionism through the optical mixture of colours. <a href="divisionism.htm">Divisionism</a> adhered to the <a href="../colour-in-painting.htm">colour</a> theories of M Chevreul, as elaborated in his 1839 book <i>De La Loi du Contraste Simultan&eacute;e des Couleurs</i> (concerning the law of the simultaneous contrast of colours). See also: <a href="../famous-artists/cross.htm">Henri-Edmond Cross</a> (1856-1910).</font></p> <blockquote> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">Instead of mixing colour on the palette and then applying it to the canvas, a process believed to reduce luminosity, Divisionists added tiny dabs of pure colour directly to the canvas, side by side, thus allowing them to 'mix' in the viewer's eye. Among Seurat's famous Pointillist pictures are <i>Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grange Jatte</i> (1884) and <i>Bathers at Asnieres</i> (1884). Camille and Lucien Pissarro were also occasional practitioners of Divisionism.</font></p> </blockquote> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">For later Dutch 'luminists' (Divisionists), see: <a href="post-impressionism-holland.htm">Post-Impressionism in Holland</a> (1880-1920).</font></p> </td> </tr> </table> <table width="750" border="0" cellspacing="2" cellpadding="5" align="center"> <tr> <td width="200" valign="top"> <p>&nbsp;</p> </td> <td width="524" valign="top"> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="cezanne"></a>Structure Not Imitation (Paul Cezanne)</b></font></p> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><a href="../famous-artists/cezanne.htm">Paul Cezanne</a>, considered by some art historians to be the father of modern art for his influence over <a href="../famous-artists/picasso.htm">Picasso</a> and <a href="cubism.htm">Cubism</a>, became determined to take a classical approach to <a href="../plein-air-painting.htm">plein-air painting</a> as practised by the Impressionists. His carefully structured landscape compositions and still-lifes were built up in different chunks or planes at a painstakingly slow speed (the fruit in his still life paintings used to rot while he painted it!), so as to optimize the effects that each plane brought to the overall composition. This subjugation of natural content to form and structure, had a huge impact on several important <a href="twentieth-century-painters.htm">20th century painters</a> like Pablo Picasso, who developed it further into their Cubist philosophy of art.</font></p> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">Works by Cezanne include: <i><a href="../paintings-analysis/card-players-cezanne.htm">The Card Players</a></i> (1892), <i><a href="../paintings-analysis/montagne-sainte-victoire.htm">Mont Sainte-Victoire paintings</a></i> (1882-1906), <i><a href="../paintings-analysis/boy-in-the-red-vest.htm">The Boy in the Red Vest</a></i> (1890), <i><a href="../paintings-analysis/man-smoking-pipe-cezanne.htm">Man Smoking a Pipe</a></i> (1890-2), <i><a href="../paintings-analysis/woman-with-coffee-pot.htm">Woman with a Coffee Pot</a></i> (1890-5), <i><a href="../paintings-analysis/lady-in-blue-cezanne.htm">Lady in Blue</a></i> (1900), and <i><a href="../paintings-analysis/large-bathers-cezanne.htm">The Large Bathers (Les Grandes Baigneuses)</a></i> (1894-1906). Cezanne was one of several Post-Impressionists to be supported by the Parisian <a href="../collectors/ambroise-vollard.htm">Ambroise Vollard</a> (1866-1939) and the wealthy Russian collector <a href="../collectors/ivan-morozov.htm">Ivan Morozov</a>. For details of a champion of Post-Impressionism who wrote an important monograph on Cezanne, see: <a href="../critics/roger-fry.htm">Roger Fry</a> (1866-1934).</font></p> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="expressionism"></a>Early Expressionism (Vincent Van Gogh)</b></font></p> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">A key figure in the <a href="expressionist-painting-origins.htm">history of Expressionist painting</a>, the short-lived Dutchman <a href="../famous-artists/van-gogh.htm">Vincent Van Gogh</a> only painted for the last ten years of his life, but in total contrast to the snail-like Cezanne, once he started he couldn't stop, painting nearly 900 pictures at an average of one every four days. Most are autobiographical, inadvertently charting his emotional decline and ultimate collapse. His <a href="../fine-art-painting.htm">painting</a> demonstrates an emotional intensity of colour and brushstroke, as he attempted to convey his personal feelings of what he saw.</font></p> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">All his life is in his paintings, (especially his self-portraits) from the dark and enclosed coarseness of <i>The Potato Eaters</i> (1885), to the soaringly optimistic yellows of his Sunflowers series, followed by the gnarled twisted branches of <i>The Olive Pickers</i> (1889), and the threatening black birds in <i>Wheatfield with Crows</i> (1890). Not surprisingly, Van Gogh became an icon for following generations of <a href="expressionist-painters.htm">expressionist painters</a> whose art purposefully distorted form and colour in order to express feelings.</font></p> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">Another forerunner of the main <a href="expressionist-movement.htm">Expressionist movement</a> was the art produced in the rural village of Worpswede in Lower Saxony, near Bremen. During the early 1890s it was colonized by a group of young artists - including Fritz Mackensen, Otto Modersohn and Hans am Ende. The most famous Worpswede expressionist was <a href="../famous-artists/paula-modersohn-becker.htm">Paula Modersohn-Becker</a> (1876-1907), who is best known for her remarkable <a href="../genres/expressionist-portraits.htm">expressionist portraits</a> of peasants. Other Worpswede artists included Carl Vinnen, Fritz Overbeck, and Heinrich Vogeler. For more information about German art at the end of the nineteenth century, see: <a href="post-impressionism-germany.htm">Post-Impressionism in Germany</a> (c.1880-1910).</font></p> </td> </tr> </table> <table width="750" border="0" cellspacing="2" cellpadding="5" align="center"> <tr> <td width="200" valign="top"> </td> <td width="524" valign="top"> <script type="text/javascript"><!-- google_ad_client = "ca-pub-8912804978085527"; /* 336x280, created 26/01/11 */ google_ad_slot = "3874842144"; google_ad_width = 336; google_ad_height = 280; //--> </script> <script type="text/javascript" src="http://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/show_ads.js"> </script> </td> </tr> </table> <table width="750" border="0" cellspacing="2" cellpadding="5" align="center"> <tr> <td width="200" valign="top">&nbsp;</td> <td width="524" valign="top"> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="synthetism"></a>Synthetism/Cloisonnism (Paul Gauguin)</b></font></p> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">The enigmatic but highly influential French painter, <a href="../famous-artists/gauguin-paul.htm">Paul Gauguin</a> developed a simplified non-naturalistic style of painting - known as <a href="synthetism.htm">Synthetism</a> - characterized by decorative line, flat patches of bold colour and esoteric <a href="symbolism.htm">symbolism</a> (see also the <a href="cloisonnism.htm"><i>cloisonnism</i></a> of <a href="../famous-artists/emile-bernard.htm">Emile Bernard</a> and Louis Anquetin). The acknowledged leader of the <a href="pont-aven.htm">Pont-Aven school</a>, Gauguin was also a key promoter of <a href="primitivism.htm">primitivism</a>. Sadly, his paintings failed to achieve the popularity he hoped for and he died a pauper in the South Pacific.</font></p> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="scandinavian"></a>Scandinavian Post-Impressionism</b></font></p> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">Arguably the three most important figures in Scandinavia during the Post-Impressionist era were the Norwegian painters <a href="../famous-artists/munch-edvard.htm">Edvard Munch</a> (1863-1944) and <a href="../famous-artists/kroyer.htm">P.S. Kroyer</a> (1851-1909), and the Danish artist <a href="../famous-artists/hammershoi-vilhelm.htm">Vilhelm Hammershoi</a> (1864-1916). Munch, whose painting <i>The Scream</i> (1895) was sold by Petter Olsen at Sotheby's New York for a record-breaking $119.9 million, was highly influential in Scandinavia and Germany, and is seen - along with Van Gogh - as one of the main original sources of expressionism. The Norwegian-born, classically trained painter Peder Severin Kroyer is primarily associated with the Skagen artist colony, a group known as the 'painters of light'. Although inspired by French Impressionism, the group adopted a more realist style of brushwork. Other Skagen members included Holger Drachmann and Carl Locher. One of Kroyer's pupils was the Danish painter Vilhelm Hammershoi (1864-1916), best known for his interior genre-painting. Although suffused with symbolism, his quiet interiors have a mystical, timeless quality about them. Influenced by Jan Vermeer, as well as the American Post-Impressionist James Whistler.</font></p> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="posters"></a>French Poster Art</b></font></p> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">If Cubism represented the extreme 'intellectual' response to Impressionism, <a href="../poster-art.htm">poster art</a> was its antithesis - the ultimate form of <a href="../definitions/decorative-art.htm">decorative art</a>, albeit with functional characteristics. The <a href="../poster-art-history.htm">history of poster art</a> properly begins with the technical innovations of lithographer Jules Cheret (1836-1932), and was influenced by <a href="japonism.htm">Japonism</a> (notably <a href="../east-asian-art/ukiyo.htm">Ukiyo-e woodblock prints</a>) notably by artists like Hokusai (1760-1849) and Hiroshige (1797-1858). O</font><font face="Verdana" size="2">ther famous poster painters included Edvard Munch, Pierre Bonnard, the American illustrator Maxfield Parrish, and the Czech graphic artist <a href="../famous-artists/alphonse-mucha.htm">Alphonse Mucha</a> (1860-1939). Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec was also outstanding. Posters were given a huge boost during the 1890s with the emergence of <a href="art-nouveau.htm">Art Nouveau</a>, (in Germany and Austria, <a href="jugendstil.htm"><i>Jugendstil</i></a>) of which idiom <a href="../famous-artists/aubrey-beardsley.htm">Aubrey Beardsley</a>, the English illustrator, was an acknowledged master.</font></p> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nabis"></a>Les Nabis</b> (1891-1899)</font></p> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">The late nineteenth century school known as <a href="nabis.htm">Les Nabis</a>, was a group of Post-Impressionist artists and illustrators based in Paris, who became highly influential in the area of <a href="../graphic-art.htm">graphic art</a>. Their focus on design was echoed in the parallel Art Nouveau movement. Members of Les Nabis included <a href="../famous-artists/paul-serusier.htm">Paul Serusier</a> (1864-1927), noted for <i>The Talisman</i>; <a href="../famous-artists/pierre-bonnard.htm">Pierre Bonnard</a> (1867-1947), Ker Xavier Roussel (1867-1944), Felix Vallotton (1865-1925), Maurice Denis (1870-1943) and <a href="../famous-artists/vuillard-jean-edouard.htm">Edouard Vuillard</a> (1868-1940).</font></p> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> Vuillard was one of the most gifted and innovative contributors to modern <a href="french-painting.htm">French painting</a>, best known for his magical 'intimist' style of pattened flickering colour. His masterpieces include the genre paintings: <i>In the Garden</i> (1894-5) and <i>Women Sewing Before a Garden</i> (1895). A pioneer of simple design and tonal sympathy. One of the most underrated artists, although his works are in prestigious collections such as the <a href="../museums/pushkin-museum-of-fine-arts.htm">Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts</a>, the National Gallery in Washington DC and the Art Institute of Chicago.</font></p> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="vingt"></a>Les Vingt (1883-93)</b></font></p> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><i>Les Vingt</i> (The Twenty, or XX) was a Belgian group of progressive painters, sculptors and writers based in Brussels, who combined - under the influence of the lawyer Octave Maus (1856-1919) - to discuss, create and showcase <a href="../definitions/avant-garde-art.htm">avant-garde art</a>, both Belgian and foreign, and to promote the latest international developments in decorative <a href="../design.htm">design</a>. Founder members included <a href="../famous-artists/james-ensor.htm">James Ensor</a> (1860-1949), Fernand Khnopff (1858-1921), Theo van Rysselberghe (1862-1926), and Alfred Finch (1854-1930).</font></p> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="divisionism"></a>Italian Divisionism (1890-1907)</b></font></p> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">Inspired by the Pointillism of Georges Seurat, which they absorbed mostly through the pages of French and Belgian journals such as <i>L'Art Moderne</i>), <a href="italian-divisionism.htm">Italian Divisionism</a> was strongly influenced by the critic, gallerist, and painter Vittore Grubicy De Dragon (1851-1920), who was the driving force behind the movement, not least because of his progressive articles and reviews in the Roman newspaper <i>La Riforma</i>. Important exponents of Divisionism in Italy included: Angelo Morbelli (1853-1919), Giuseppe Pellizza da Volpedo (1868-1907), Giovanni Segantini (1858-1899), Plinio Nomellini (1866-1943), Emilio Longoni (1859-1932), Gaetano Previati (1852-1920), and Giovanni Sottocornola (1855-1917).</font></p> </td> </tr> </table> <table width="750" border="0" cellspacing="2" cellpadding="5" align="center"> <tr> <td width="200" valign="top"> <p>&nbsp;</p> </td> <td width="524" valign="top"> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="fauvism"></a>Fauvism (Henri Matisse)</b></font></p> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><a href="../famous-artists/matisse.htm">Henri Matisse</a> the leader of <a href="fauvism.htm">Fauvism</a>, succeeded in freeing colour from its traditional uses, and in the process changed how painters worked, for ever. His contribution to Post-Impressionism cannot be over-estimated. He was the central figure at the scandalous Fauvist exhibition at the <i><a href="salon-dautomne.htm">Salon d'Automne</a></i> in 1905. One of his richest patrons was the Russian textile tycoon and Post-Impressionist devotee <a href="../collectors/sergei-shchukin.htm">Sergei Shchukin</a>. Other important <a href="fauvist-painters.htm">Fauvist painters</a> included Matisse's friend </font><font face="Verdana" size="2"><a href="../famous-artists/andre-derain.htm">Andre Derain</a> (1880-1954), who had studied with him at the <i>Ecole des Beaux-Arts</i> under Moreau, Derain's friend <a href="../famous-artists/maurice-de-vlaminck.htm">Maurice de Vlaminck</a> (1876-1958), the Dutch-born painter <a href="../famous-artists/kees-van-dongen.htm">Kees van Dongen</a> (1877-1968), the expressionist <a href="../famous-artists/georges-rouault.htm">Georges Rouault</a> (1871-1958), <a href="../famous-artists/albert-marquet.htm">Albert Marquet</a> (1875-1947) who specialized in painting the waterways of Paris, the colourist <a href="../famous-artists/raoul-dufy.htm">Raoul Dufy</a> (1877-1953), the Cubist-in-waiting <a href="../famous-artists/braque-georges.htm">Georges Braque</a> (1882-1963), the Le Havre artist <a href="../famous-artists/othon-friesz.htm">Othon Friesz</a> (1879-1949), the Impressionist style artist <a href="../famous-artists/manguin.htm">Henri-Charles Manguin</a> (1874-1949), <a href="../famous-artists/charles-camoin.htm">Charles Camoin</a> (1879-1964) another friend of the colourist Louis Valtat (1869-1952), and Jean Puy (1876-1960) a participant at the original 1905 <i>Salon d'Automne</i> show.</font></p> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="camden"></a>British Post-Impressionists: The Camden Town Group</b> </font></p> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">Founded in 1911 in London by <a href="../famous-artists/walter-sickert.htm">Walter Sickert</a> (1860-1942), the <a href="camden-town-group.htm">Camden Town Group</a> (named after Sickert's down-at-heel home district in North London) specialized in realist scenes of city life executed in a range of Post-Impressionist styles and held three exhibitions at the Carfax Gallery in 1911 and 1912. Group members included: Robert Bevan (1865-1925), Spencer Gore (1878-1914), Harold Gilman (1876-1919), and Charles Isaac Ginner (1878-1952). The Camden Town Group emerged after the (arguably more successful) <a href="glasgow-school.htm">Glasgow School of Painting</a> (1880-1915), led by James Guthrie and John Lavery, who pursued a similar style of naturalism to the Hague School in Holland and the &quot;Impressionist&quot; school in Germany. Another noteworthy loose-knit group of Post-Impressionist painters were the <a href="scottish-colourists.htm">Scottish Colourists</a>, comprising Samuel Peploe, Francis Cadell, John Fergusson, and Leslie Hunter, who were strongly influenced by Matisse and the <i>Fauves</i>.</font></p> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="seven"></a>The Group of Seven</b> (1920-1960s)</font></p> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">Strongly influenced by Post-Impressionism, the Group of Seven were Canadian landscape artists who created bold, highly-coloured paintings, often infusing their compositions with symbolic meanings. The members of the group included Tom Thomson, as well as Franklin Carmichael (1890-1945), AJ Casson (1898-1992), Lionel Fitzgerald (1890-1956), Arthur Lismer (1885-1969), Lawren Harris (1885-1970), Edwin Holgate (1892-1977), AY Jackson (1882-1974), JEH MacDonald (1873-1932), and FH Varley (1881-1969).</font></p> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">Post-Impressionist paintings can be seen in all the world's <a href="../art-museums.htm">best art museums</a>, notably: the Musee d'Orsay, Paris; the National Museum of Modern Art, Paris; the Tate Gallery, London; the Hermitage Gallery, St Petersburg; and the Museum of Modern Art, New York.</font></p> </td> </tr> </table> <table width="750" border="0" cellspacing="2" cellpadding="5" align="center"> <tr> <td> <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">&#149; For other late-19th century art movements, see: <a href="../history-of-art.htm">History of Art</a>.<br> &#149; For more about early-20th century painting, see: <a href="../index.htm">Homepage</a>.</font></p> <hr size="1"> <p align="center"><a rel="author" href="https://profiles.google.com/115076279462378566554#115076279462378566554"> <img src="http://www.google.com/images/icons/ui/gprofile_button-16.png" width="16" height="16"></a></p> <p align="center"><font face="Arial" size="1"><b>ENCYCLOPEDIA OF ART HISTORY<br> &copy; visual-arts-cork.com. 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