Impressionism and Impressionist Artists in Normandy
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Le Havre: the Birth Place of Impressionism

The birth of Impressionism in Le Havre, Normandy: 'Impression, soleil levant' by Claude Monet, 1872, Musée Marmottan, Paris.

These would-be artists call themselves revolutionaries, “Impressionists”. They take a piece of canvas, colour and brush, daub a few patches of paint on it at random, and sign the whole thing with their name. It is a delusion of the same kind as if the inmates of Bedlam picked up stones from the wayside and imagined they had found diamonds.” Anonymous 1876

Anyone with a passing interest in Western art and its history knows what ‘Impressionism’ is: it is a movement that originated in France in the 1860s where artists were no longer concerned with giving a factual image of a scene but rather they wished to capture the visual impression made by a scene. Artists like Edouard Manet and Claude Monet began by suggesting that painters should be painting their subjects as they see them, not in the confines of their studios with limited or monotonous sources of light. [Read more →]

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January 28, 2010   No Comments