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| | Impressionist music - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Impressionist composers also made extensive use of whole tone scales to create a dreamy, "hazy" effect in their works, much like the blurred paintings of Renoir and Monet. |  | | Like its precursor in the visual arts, musical impressionism was based in France, and the French composers Claude Debussy and Maurice Ravel are generally considered to be the two "great" impressionists (although Debussy renounced the term, and Ravel composed many other pieces that can't possibly be identified as "Impressionist"). |  | | Technically, the impressionists invented or began using a great number of new compositional techniques: multi-modality, planing (the use of voices moving in parallel motion; Debussy's prelude La cathédrale engloutie provides an example), extended tertian harmonies, and intentionally ambiguous musical forms. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impressionist_music
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| | Impressionism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Impressionism was a 19th century art movement, that began as a loose association of Paris-based artists who began publicly exhibiting their art in the 1860s. |  | | For years art critics rebuked the Salon des Refusés, and in 1874 the impressionists (though not yet known by the name) organized their own exhibition. |  | | The influence of Impressionist thought spread beyond the art world, leading to Impressionist music and Impressionist literature. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impressionism
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| | Gustave Caillebotte - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | At the time of Caillebotte's death, the Impressionists were still largely condemned by the art establishment in France, which was dominated by Academic art and specifically the Académie des beaux-arts. |  | | Caillebotte inherited a sizable fortune, including the estate in Yerres, after his father's death in 1874, which funded his patronage of the arts. |  | | His painting style appears to belong to the school of realism, although he helped organize the first impressionist exhibition and enthusiastically collected impressionist works. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gustave_Caillebotte
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| | Impressionist artists: Monet, Renoir, Pissarro, Sisley, Cezanne, Degas and Gauguin, |
 | | One of the most famous of all Impressionist works is Renoir's Le Bal au Moulin de la Galette (1876, Musée d'Orsay, Paris), an open-air scene of a café, in which his mastery of figure painting and in representing light is evident. |  | | Impressionist artists: Monet, Renoir, Pissarro, Sisley, Cezanne, Degas and Gauguin, |  | | Unlike other Impressionists, he was as much interested in painting the human figure or portraits as he was in landscapes; unlike them, too, he did not subordinate composition and form to a fascination with rendering the effect of light. |
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http://www.art-and-artist.co.uk/impressionist
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| | Impressionism and Impressionist Painters |
 | | If the Impressionist movement certainly is a group of painters having in common artistic ideas and researches, it also is on a more basic level a movement of painters refused at the Salon and trying to exhibit their works. |  | | Impressionist painting remains the most attractive period in the history of modern art and the most appreciated by the public. |  | | If Impressionist masters are now at the firmament of painting, it is important to recall to which extent their painting was misunderstood and rejected at their time. |
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http://www.impressionniste.net/impressionism_history.htm
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| | Online Gallery: Contemporary Impressionism |
 | | The impressionist movement is considered the beginning of the modern art period. |  | | Impressionism is an art and music movement that developed in 19th-century France in reaction to the formalism and sentimentality that characterized academic art of the time. |  | | Artist Chriss Pagani is a kind of new classical impressionist, creating traditional-style paintings, using traditional subjects, but in the artist's own unique style which the artist calls "raw experience" or "abstract impressionism." [ Find out more] |
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http://roadside.survivorart.com/impressionist.html
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| | Impressionist Art - framed art prints |
 | | Many of the Impressionists were deeply influenced by the work of Edouard Manet (1832-1883), whom they thought of as the first great modern painter. |  | | The Impressionist artists were drawn together by a desire to bring a new kind of realism to painting, an approach to both technique and subject matter that broke dramatically with the entrenched style of the French Academy. |  | | Along with the artists directly associated with the Impressionist movement's exhibitions in Paris, Impressionist painting inspired the work of many contemporary painters such as Vincent Van Gogh (1853-1890), Paul Gauguin (1848-1903), Georges Seurat (1859-1891), and Henri Matisse (1869-1954). |
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http://www.chooseart.net/impressionism.html
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| | The Impressionists |
 | | She participated in all of the Impressionist exhibitions save one, in 1877, when she was pregnant with her daughter, Julie, born in 1878. |  | | In doing so, she went against the advice of Édouard Manet, who refused to exhibit with the Impressionists and was determined to make his name at the Salon. |  | | Beginning in 1874, Morisot refused to show her work at the Salon, choosing to join a fledgling group of Impressionist painters that included Degas, who would become Morisot's lifelong friend, as well as Camille Pissarro, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Claude Monet, and Alfred Sisley. |
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http://www.biography.com/impressionists/artists_morisot.html
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| | Impressionism -- Encyclopædia Britannica |
 | | Impressionist painting comprises the work produced between about 1867 and 1886 by a group of artists who shared a set of related approaches and techniques. |  | | His landscape paintings, done in a distinctive impressionist style, are typically glowing and realistic interpretations of nature. |  | | The term Post-Impressionism was coined by the English art critic Roger Fry for the work of such late 19th-century painters as Paul Cézanne, Georges Seurat, Paul Gauguin, Vincent van Gogh, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, and others. |
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http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9042220?tocId=9042220
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| | Mary Cassatt Biography |
 | | Quite a few of the great Impressionist art collections in the USA were established as a result of her activities. |  | | Then she got to know Edgar Degas, an artist from the group of Impressionists who were refused by the Salon and had established their own show, the Salon des Refuses. |  | | Under the influence of Edgar Degas and the other Impressionists the artist Mary Cassatt changed her painting style. |
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http://www.artelino.com/articles/mary_cassatt.asp
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| | Mary Cassatt, american impressionist |
 | | Mary Cassatt was the one of the few female Impressionistic painters and one of the few Americans to break into this group. |  | | Edgar Degas became her most intimate friend, and it was he who invited her to join the group of Impressionists. |  | | Mary Cassatt proved to be an important voice among the Impressionists in ways beyond her art. |
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http://wvwv.essortment.com/marycassatt_rcgh.htm
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| | WebMuseum: Impressionism |
 | | Impressionist painting comprises the work produced between about 1867 and 1886 by a group of artists who shared a set of related approaches and techniques. |  | | If, at this stage, Impressionists were becoming appreciated, their situation was still harsh; the Salon was still refusing their paintings, and in 1894, 25 out of 65 artworks donated by Caillebotte to the Luxembourg museum were rejected. |  | | Yet, when Camille Pissarro, the Impressionist patriarch, died in 1903, everybody agreed that this movement was the main XIXth century artistic revolution, and that all its members were among the finest painters. |
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http://www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/glo/impressionism
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| | THE IMPRESSIONISTS |
 | | After the exhibit the painters adopted this term and became known to the art world as "The Impressionists." Today the works of these artists and many of their contemporaries are among the most popular and valued in the world. |  | | National Gallery of Art is a good site for viewing paintings of the Impressionists. |  | | One critic used the term "impressionistic" to mockingly describe all of the exhibited work. |
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http://www.manteno.k12.il.us/webquest/high/FineArts/Impressionists/impressionists.htm
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| | Impressionism Art - Impressionist Paintings |
 | | Impressionist painting incorporates the use of a variety of brush strokes and bright colors, allowing the artist to be responsive to both the material character and the texture of the object in nature. |  | | Impressionist art and paintings, history of impressionism art. |  | | Peruse criticism and images of the first Impressionist exhibition and learn about the careers of great artists. |
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http://www.buzzle.com/chapters/arts-and-literature_history-and-the-human-experience_impressionism-art-and-impressionist-painting.asp
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| | The Impressionists |
 | | Of the artists who exhibited at the first Impressionist exhibition in 1874, it was Alfred Sisley who was the purest landscape painter. |  | | In this Sisley was not unusual; other members of the Impressionist group such as Monet, Pissarro, and Renoir were looking to recent precedents in their desire for an art which reflected landscape in as naturalistic a way as possible. |  | | Sisley exhibited at the second and third Impressionists exhibitions but met with little critical acclaim until he received a mention in Georges Rivière's L'Impressioniste, which was sympathetic to the Impressionist cause. |
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http://www.biography.com/impressionists/artists_sisley.html
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| | Mark Harden's Artchive: The First Impressionist Exhibition, 1874 |
 | | In the former studio of the photographer Nadar at 35 boulevard des Capucines, Paris, April 15, 1874, a group of artists, rejected by the juries of the Salon, offer their work for public view. |  | | The work of the "Impressionists" will eventually lead to what is now recognized as Modern Art. |  | | Although some critics appreciate the "new painting", most subject the artists to ridicule. |
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http://www.artchive.com/74nadar.htm
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| | Impressionist artists |
 | | Most Impressionists were born in the bourgeoisie class, and this was the world they painted. |  | | The Impressionists, or “Independents,” as they preferred to be called, brought together a wide variety of these influences, beliefs, and styles when they first exhibited and met in Paris cafés to discuss art. |  | | Romantic artists J.M.W.Turner, Delacroix and Constable, Famous Impressionist artist; Monet, Pissarro, Renoir, Cézanne, Sisley, Degas. |
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http://www.art-and-artist.co.uk/impressionist-index.htm
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| | The Impressionist Garden Screensaver and Wallpaper - from CD-ROM Access |
 | | Rejecting the stylistic and critical conceits of the day, Impressionist artists staged an independent exhibition in 1874 that collected one hundred sixty-five works from thirty artists. |  | | More than a hundred years after that first difficult exhibition, Impressionist paintings are drawing record crowds and critical accolades around the world. |  | | Famous for their seemingly haphazard, scattered brushwork, Impressionist artists laid the groundwork for abstract artists who would come later. |
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http://www.cdaccess.com/html/pc/imprgss.htm
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| | Mark Harden's Artchive: "Impressionism" |
 | | Impressionist painters like Monet and Renoir recorded each sensation of light with a touch of paint in a little stroke like a comma. |  | | Painting of Modern Life: Paris in the Art of Manet and His Followers, T.J. Clark's masterpiece looks at the Impressionist movement from the social context of Paris in the 1870s. |  | | The public back then was upset that Impressionist paintings looked like a sketch and did not have the polish and finish that more fashionable paintings had. |
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http://artchive.com/artchive/impressionism.html
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| | Impressionism |
 | | Impressionist painting comprises the work produced between about 1867 and 1886 by a group of artists who shared a set of related approaches and techniques. |  | | Keep in mind that the Impressionists style of painting was their concentration on the general impression produced by a scene or object. |  | | Students will look at examples of similarities and differences among the artists listed and will decide whether impressionism was a movement of various and different styles or were the artists devoted to a particular painting. |
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http://www.spa3.k12.sc.us/WebQuests/Impressionism
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| | Impressionist Camille Pissarro by art historian Dr. Lori |
 | | Pissarro became one of the most influential members of the French Impressionist movement, not only as an artist, but also as a teacher becoming the only artist to participate in all eight Impressionist exhibitions. |  | | An innovative painter of the Impressionist circle, Pissarro was among the first to divide colors, as in his painting, The Garden of Les Mathurins at Pontoise, 1876 (Nelson Atkins Collection, Kansas City, MO). |  | | The painters in Pissarro's circle became discouraged by their attempts to pass the critical scrutiny of the Salon juries and, in 1874, Pissarro joined Monet in the organization of the Independent Exhibitions. |
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http://www.drloriv.com/lectures/pissarro.asp
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| | Search Tuna Report for post impressionist |
 | | The term Post Impressionist itself was first coined only in 1910 when English critic Roger Fry named his exhibition at the Grafton Galleries, which presented French art of the previous three decades - featuring works by C zanne, Van Gogh and Gauguin - Manet and the Post Impressionists.... |  | | The drawing is on the level of that of an untaught child of seven or eight years old, the sense of colour that of a tea-tray painter, the method that of a schoolboy who wipes his fingers on a slate after spitting on them.... |  | | In the late 19th century, the Impressionists defied academic tradition in French art with their emphasis on modern subjects, sketchlike technique, and practice of painting in the open air with pure, high-keyed color.... |
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http://searchtuna.com/ftlive2/729.html
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| | Galleries - The New Georgia Encyclopedia |
 | | The Telfair Museum of Art was founded in 1875 through the bequest of Mary Telfair, who willed her home to be transformed into the South's first public "academy of arts and sciences," as it was originally known. |  | | The Telfair's permanent collection contains nearly 4,500 objects from America, Europe, and Asia and is particularly strong in American Impressionist and Ashcan School paintings, and early 19th-century decorative arts. |
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http://www.newgeorgiaencyclopedia.org/nge/Galleries.jsp
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| | Monet, Renoir, and the Impressionist Landscape - National Gallery of Canada - Absolutearts.com |
 | | The Impressionists' profound influence on French landscape painting is examined as the exhibition concludes with a look at works by other artists in the 1880s and 1890s, including Post-Impressionist artists Gauguin, Signac, and van Gogh. |  | | The exhibition begins with the origins of the Impressionist landscape in the 1850s and 1860s, including early work by Claude Monet in the spirit of the Realist landscape style. |  | | Also featured are astonishing paintings by artists whose fame in the late twentieth century has been overshadowed by that of the Impressionist generation. |
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http://www.absolutearts.com/cgi-bin/news/arts-news-elaborate.cgi?output_number=20&find=1630
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| | WebMuseum: Monet, Claude |
 | | He is regarded as the archetypal Impressionist in that his devotion to the ideals of the movement was unwavering throughout his long career, and it is fitting that one of his pictures-- |  | | From 1871 to 1878 Monet lived at Argenteuil, a village on the Seine near Paris, and here were painted some of the most joyous and famous works of the Impressionist movement, not only by Monet, but by his visitors Manet, Renoir and Sisley. |  | | He then, in 1862, entered the studio of Gleyre in Paris and there met Renoir, Sisley, and Bazille, with whom he was to form the nucleus of the Impressionist group. |
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http://www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/auth/monet
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| | Claude Monet Impressionist Painter |
 | | Monet was the leader of a group of French artists called the "Impressionists," which included such painters as Pierre-Auguste Renoir and Camille Pissarro. |  | | Monet exhibited a painting called "Impression: Sunrise." His painting gave the group its name, coined in derision by critic Louis Leroy referring to the entire exhibition as "Impressionistic." Despite the financial failure of this first exhibit, the Impressionist continued to exhibit together until 1886. |  | | They gave a public exhibition of their work at the studio of a Paris photographer. |
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http://www2.lucidcafe.com/lucidcafe/library/95nov/monet.html
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| | Paul Gauguin Post-Impressionist Artist |
 | | He attended the Impressionist's first exhibition in 1874, and was captivated by the impressionist style. |  | | Much of his work during this period was influenced by the Impressionists, especially Pissarro. |  | | Gauguin's break with the Impressionists came when he painted "Vision after the Sermon," where he tried to depict the inner feelings of his subjects. |
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http://www2.lucidcafe.com/lucidcafe/library/96jun/gauguin.html
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| | The Impressionist Era |
 | | You and your colleagues are planning a presentation on the impressionist era of music and art. |  | | You will be working with a few of your colleagues researching Impressionist art and music. |  | | Finally you will select an impressionist picture and using various instruments of an orchestra, illustrate the mood you would feel when viewing this artwork. |
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http://www.beaufort.k12.nc.us/nes/ImpressionistErawq/impressionist_era.htm
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| | Renoir (1841 -1919) - French Impressionist |
 | | Although the first impressionist exhibition was held in 1874, of which Renoir was a part of, the impressionists still struggled for acceptance from the establishment and consequently times were difficult financially for Renoir. |  | | In 1871 Renoir returned to Paris, the impressionist group reformed and he met Paul Durand-Ruel, the first art dealer to support the impressionists. |  | | The concepts of impressionism developed from the times this group spent together in the cafes of Paris. |
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http://www.theartgallery.com.au/ArtEducation/greatartists/Renoir/about
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| | NPR : Impressionist Berthe Morisot, Rediscovered |
 | | Berthe Morisot: An Impressionist and Her Circle is on exhibit at the National Museum of Women in the Arts in Washington, D.C., until May 8. |  | | Berthe Morisot is a less familiar name, yet she was one of the painters whose works were included in that first, revolutionary burst of Impressionist art in 1870s Paris. |  | | Now new attention is being focused on Marisot's work and life, and her works are currently on exhibit at the National Museum of Women in the Arts. |
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http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4473058
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| | Bookreporter.com - THE IMPRESSIONIST by Hari Kunzru |
 | | As he uses people, so people use him, and you somehow feel that his foibles and stumblings are as deserved as the success born out of his cunning. |  | | The story could be considered a series of vignettes of different characters, all loosely connected together by the Impressionist's will to survive and meld into whatever world he finds himself in --- whether that's the stifling academia of Oxford or the decadence of a jazz club in Paris. |  | | Kunzru is an immensely talented writer, spinning a story with rich language and exotic locales, and this noteworthy debut secures his place among the UK's best new writers. |
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http://www.bookreporter.com/reviews/0452283973.asp
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| | Contemporary impressionist artist Lena Kurovska. Original oil paintings, landscapes, still lifes |
 | | Impressionist still lifes, plein air landscapes, impressionist landscapes, impressionist flower painting, contemporary impressionist painter, contemporary impressionist artist, contemporary impressionist artist, impressionist painter, original impressionist paintings, oil paintings for sale, oil painting nature, original oil paintings for sale, Russian art, Russian impressionism, ukrainian art. |  | | Impressionist artist offer oil landscapes: village landscapes, field landscapes, lake landscapes, river landscapes, houses landscapes, cityscapes paintings, Kiev cityscapes, summer landscapes, small landscapes, outdoor landscapes. |  | | Original impressionist paintings by Plein Air artist Lena Kurovska. |
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http://www.lenakurovska.com
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| | Impressionism |
 | | At first Impressionistic art and music shocked the world, but now it is loved and accepted. |  | | Look at an Impressionistic painting up close, then step back. |  | | The sounds were "painted" using richly colored harmonies. |
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http://www.empire.k12.ca.us/capistrano/Mike/capmusic/impressionism/impressi.htm
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| | Roger Fry & the Post-Impressionist |
 | | In November of 1910 Roger Fry, art historian and critic, put together a show of impressionist painters that had remained rather obscure from the public eye. |  | | He felt that contemporary art had grown stale and wanted to show artists that had a vibrancy he wanted to draw attention to. |  | | Philadelphia Museum of Art Philadelphia, PA Watercolor and pencil on paper |
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http://www.jssgallery.org/Essay/Fall_and_Rise_of_Sargent/Fall_and_Rise.htm
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| | Impressionist Painters - Impressionism Artists |
 | | Selection of post impressionist paintings and works on paper by a Hungarian artist. |  | | + The Impressionist Painters category includes artists working in an impressionist manner. |  | | Plein-air and studio landscapes of gardens, architecture, sea and land from the United States and Europe by an American artist in acrylic, oil and soft pastel. |
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http://www.linkism.com/visual_artists/painting/impressionist-artists.htm
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| | Impressionist Art-Original Oil Paintings by Impressionist Maureen Bannon |
 | | are contemporary,her Impressionist Art is showcased throughout her site focusing on her "life's Journey" through fine works art. |  | | Impressionist Art-Original Oil Paintings by Impressionist Maureen Bannon |  | | She reveals on canvas the importance of one's immediate environment through color impressions, evoking a timeless atmosphere of serenity and loose brush work.. |
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http://www.bannonfineart.com
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| | Modern American Impressionist, J. Clayton Crouch |
 | | Often likened to the famed American Impressionist Childe Hassam, Crouch also instills his paintings with a sense of great exuberance and warmth. |  | | The American Impressionist paintings of J. Clayton Crouch are held in private collections worldwide. |  | | The majority of American artists who adopted Impressionism in the last decades of the nineteenth century had either studied formally in Paris, or Barbizon, or Giverny, or they had spent sufficient time there to absorb the movement's aesthetic principles. |
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http://www.summitdevco.com/jcc/Artists.htm
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| | Impressionism |
 | | Impressionism: Paintings collected by European Museums was an art exhibition co-organized by the High Museum of Art, Atlanta, the Seattle Art Museum, and the Denver Art Museum, touring from May through December of 1999. |  | | The exhibition included works by the reeminent artists associated with the Impressionist movement, including Paul Cézanne, Edgar Degas, Paul Gauguin, Édouard Manet, Claude Monet, Berthe Morisot, Camille Pissarro, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Alfred Sisley and Vincent van Gogh. |
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http://www.impressionism.org
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| | Amazon.com: Books: Sister Wendy's Impressionist Masterpieces: Sister Wendy Beckett's Selection of the Greatest ... |
 | | Also represented are Singer Sarget, and Whistler, American artists who trained in Paris and knew and worked alongside the Impressionists. |  | | One of the world's best-loved art historians, Sister Wendy Beckett combines her deep knowledge of art history with her unique powers of observation to create a personal anthology of over 50 Impressionist masterpieces. |  | | Sister Wendy invites us to immerse ourselves in the colorful, energizing, and revolutionary paintings of this late 19th-century movement. |
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http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0789463067?v=glance
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| | Ojars.com: Gallery - Fine art gallery of impressionism and realism original oil on canvas by Ojars Lasmanis including, ... |
 | | Impressionist portraits, painters, impressionistic, artists, flowers, purchased, buy, for sale, web site, realistic, arts, masterpieces, 100+ paintings. |  | | Ojars.com: Gallery - Fine art gallery of impressionism and realism original oil on canvas by Ojars Lasmanis including, Rendition of old masters, Cityscapes, Landscapes, Still-life, People, Floral and rendition of the great masters. |
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http://www.ojars.com
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