HW #4_TIMELINE 3 (REAL, IMP)

  • Period: to

    Realism

    The art movement of Realism is considered the beginning of Modern Art. Realism is characterized by realistic depictions of the world, including modernity- a departure from classicism and academic art. Realism shows us the non-utopian reality of society in an industrializing world. There is now an open critique of society, and an anti-institutional sentiment among artists, and thus there was an intentionality of controversy in the work of Realism.
  • Ploughing in the Nivernais by Rosa Bonder

    Ploughing in the Nivernais by Rosa Bonder

    Rosa Bonheur
    1849
    Oil on canvas
    133 cm × 260 cm (52 in × 100 in)
    Location Musée d'Orsay, Paris
    French Realism A hyper-realistic portrayal of agrarian labor, at a scale of 100x52 inches we see an inversion of the traditional size typically reserved for upper ranking history paintings. Knowing this was commissioned by the French government, I wonder if there tri-colored cows are a reference to the French flag...
  • The Painter's Studio by Gustave Courbet

    The Painter's Studio by Gustave Courbet

    Gustave Courbet
    The Painter’s Studio: A Real Allegory Summing Up Seven Years of My Life as an Artist
    1855
    O/C, 142” x 235”
    Musée d'Orsay
    French Realism After being rejected from the 1855 World's Fair in Paris, Courbet showed this gigantic work at his own event. Subjected Courbet is painting at the cente, dividing a cast of historical and contemporary figures. One is a mocking personification of the French ruler. Abstract brush strokes cover the walls of the artists studio.
  • The gleaners by Jean-Francois Millet

    The gleaners by Jean-Francois Millet

    Jean-François Millet
    The Gleaners
    1857
    O/C, 33” x 44
    Musée d'Orsay, Paris
    French Realism Agrarian workers bend into the fields as they gather the harvest, showing the realism of labor in France. This is a non-idealized portrayal.
  • Period: to

    Impressionism

    Impressionism is visually identified by its sketch-like images, or impressions created through loose choppy brush strokes. Space is flattened in a move away from a structural linear perspective. New art supply technologies brought the artist out of the studio and into nature (plein air) with foldable easily and portable resealable paint tubes. This portability allowed the artist to capture light in new ways over time, capturing the fleeting ephemera of nature.
  • Olympia by Edouard Manet

    Olympia by Edouard Manet

    Edouard Manet
    Olympia
    1863, oil on canvas
    51.4” x 74.8”
    Musée d'Orsay, Paris
    French Realism Causing a stir in the art world, Manet's controversial Olympia features a nude odalisque woman with a cat at her feet. In an anti-academic move, Manet has not veiled the woman in any type of mythology. This is a real nude. The cat at her feet represent sexuality. as opposed to the loyal academic dog representing fidelity.
  • First Class Carriage by Honore Daumier

    First Class Carriage by Honore Daumier

    Honore Daumier
    First Class Carriage, 1864,
    watercolor charcoal on woven paper,
    8” x 11.8”
    Walters Art Museum, Baltimore
    Realism Contrasted with it's sister painting Third Class Carriage, he we see the (industrial) train experience between two different classes. The rich here have room, light, and provided food, in contrast to the poorer class in the third class carriage.
  • Third Class Carriage by Honore Daumier

    Third Class Carriage by Honore Daumier

    Honore Daumier
    Third Class Carriage
    1863-65
    O/C 25.7” x 35.5”
    National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa
    Realism In contrast to Daumier's First Class Carriage, here we see the realism of the lower class, in darker, more crowded and far less accommodating conditions despite riding the same train, an image of industrialization. These works are a commentary on modern day class disparities.
  • The Mother and Sister of the Artist aka The Reading by Berthe Morisot

    The Mother and Sister of the Artist aka The Reading by Berthe Morisot

    Berthe Morisot
    1869–1870
    Oil on canvas
    101 cm × 81 cm (40 in × 32 in)
    National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
    Impressionist Here we see a depiction of two generations of upperclass women, the older woman in black reading a book, and the younger woman in white gazing on to her mother's access to new knowledge. This is a depiction of the idea of The New Woman, a contemporary photo-feminist style upper class woman who pursued independence and education.
  • Impression, Sunrise by Claude Monet

    Impression, Sunrise by Claude Monet

    Claude Monet
    Impression, Sunrise,
    1872
    O/C,
    18.9” x 24.8”
    Musée Marmottan
    Monet, Paris
    Impressionist iconic Impressionist sketch-like storokes and flattened perspective. We see a beautiful depiction of the vastness of nature, with an abstracted image style. The industrial world on the other side of the haze.
  • A woman & Child on the Balcony by Berthe Morisot

    A woman & Child on the Balcony by Berthe Morisot

    Berthe Morisot
    A Woman Child on the Balcony
    O/C
    1872
    24” x 19.7”
    Arizona Museum, Tokyo Japan
    Impresionist Echoing the sentiment of the Proper New Woman, the artist shows two generations of women, the older overlooking the bars of the balcony, while the younger holds the bars in front of here. This could represent an infantilizing past for women where they were restricted to the domestic sphere, while the modern new woman looks out over the potential new liberated horizons.
  • The Star by Edgar Degas

    The Star by Edgar Degas

    Edgar Degas
    The Star
    1878
    pastel on canvas
    24” x 32”
    Musée d'Orsay, Paris
    Impressionist The artist's hand is visible in Degas' loose and choppy brush strokes. Lower class orphan girls would be sent to ballet academies to perform for the upper class. Directionaly, the light is coming from below, showing the dancer on the stage is a nod to the spectacle of the leisure available to the upper class, at the expense of the lower class.