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Nadar, Felix. Silver Gelatin Print. 1868
"Paris from a Balloon" |
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Nadar, Felix. Albumen Print. 1855
"Eugene Delacroix" |
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Talbot, W.H. Fox. Salt Print. 1841
"Soliloquy of the Broom"
-never claimed he was an artist, he was a scientist
-experimented with different salt mixtures
-regular paper dipped into silver nitrate becomes photo sensitive
-creates a negative
-used wax
-can create multiple copies |
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Daguerre, Louis-Jacques-Mande. Daguerreotypes. 1837
"The Artist's Studio"
-an artistic study |
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Durieu, Eugene and Delacroix, Eugene. Albumen Print. 1854
"Draped Model: Back View"
-Delacroix was the first to embrace painting tubes |
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Rejlander, Oscar. Combination Albumen Print. 1857
"The Two Paths of Life"
-argued that photography was art
-made a composite of negatives |
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Manet, Edouard. 1863
"Dejeneur sur l'herbe (Luncheon on the Grass)"
-was presented and rejected to the academic salon based on subject matter
-his intentions weren't to challange the acadey but to become part of them
-responding to Raphael's painting of the same thing
-brother (left) and soon to be brother-in-law
-rejected because of the nude woman
-she's not a nymph, muse, or idealized
-lack of perspective
-she's making eye contact
-they're all recognizable
-he's making a comment on the subjects that the academy accepts
-very traditional in forms of composition (copies Raphael's poses) |
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Manet, Edouard. 1863
"Olympia"
-same model as in "Dejeneur sur l'herbe"
-he has social graces on the mind (this makes him a realist)
-presented in 1865 and was accepted
-black cat = availability |
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Cassatt, Mary. Oil on canvas. 1892
"The Bath"
-flattened color
-attention to detail |
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Manet, Edouard. 1881-1882
"Bar at the Folies-Bergere"
-related to "Olympia" because it's about women working
-the bar was very popular
-some girls outside would practice prostitution (needed liscenses)
-same jewelry and flowers as "Olympia"
-perspective is wrong
-there were no free standing bars so we know that it has to be a reflection
-time and space fragmentation
-broek brush strokes not because he's an impressionist but beecause he wants us to know that the people are moving around |
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Monet, Claude. 1872
"Impression: Sunrise"
-gave the movement it's name
-was shown in Nadar's studio
-public responded very negatively
-unfinished by the standards of the academy
-trying to convey a sense of atmosphere
-no definition by line but by color
-saturation is very even overall
-was responding to Rococo paintings |
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Monet, Claude. 1890-1891
"Haystacks (series)"
-painting things that are quickily loosing importance
-becomes melancholy because nature is being encrouched upon |
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Monet, Claude. 1873-1874
"Boulevard des Capucines, Paris"
-painting a street scene from a window in Nadar's studio
-shifted perspective point
- continuously shifting points of view
-open space |
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Renoir, Pierre August. Oil on canvas. 1882-1883
"Dance in the City"
-upper class couple dancing
-more formal than "Dance in the Country"
-the female figure is something he struggled with but keeps showing up in his work |
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Renoir, Pierre August. Oil on canvas. 1883
"Dance in the Country" |
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Renoir, Pierre August. Oil on canvas. 1876
"Ball at the Moulin de la Galette"
-a place where class boundaries can be blurred
-all people in painting are his friends but they have no individual features
-they become the faceless crowd
-black isn't used to create lights and shadows |
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Degas, Edgar. N/D
"At the Theatre: Dancers in the Wings"
-the bar is visually in our way
-unified by continious flow
-calling attention to what is entertainment for some is labour for others |
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Degas, Edgar. Oil on canvas. 1876
"Glass of Absinthe"
-subject we normally find in Impressionism
-focus on city life
-women are finding new places of enterprise
-new perspective
-tilted set up
-uses photographic cropping
-also deals with Realist subjects |
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Degas, Edgar. Pastel on paper. 1886
"Tub"
-in the act of bathing
-in a way it should feel like we are spying on her
-said he wanted things to appear as if he was looking through a keyhole
-inspired by Japanese prints |
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Morisot, Berthe. Oil on canvas. 1879
"Nursing"
-brushstroke
-outside
-wetnurse is feeding the baby |
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Morisot, Berthe. Oil on canvas. 1875
"Laundresses Hanging Out the Wash"
-she knew how to paint because that just something ladies knew
-was a central agent of the movement (Impressionism)
-very fast, loose brushstroke
-her subjects were different
-harsh whites draw our attention to the play of light
-her work always appears fragmented |
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Cassatt, Mary. Drypoint and aquatint. 1898
"Under the Horse Chestnut Tree"
-american artist
-only depicts what a women of status would know about
-influenced by Japenese prints |
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Seurat, Georges. 1900-1901
"The Circus"
-sinuous line of the whip hints at whats to come
-very limited palette but very vivid |
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Seurat, Georges. 1883
"Bathing Places, Asnieres"
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Signac, Paul. 1890
"Opus 217. Against the Enamel of a Background Rhythmic with Beats and Angles, Tones and Tints, Portrait of M. Felix Feneon in 1890"
-exploring the effects of decoration |
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Cezanne, Paul.
"Mont Sainte-Victoire" |
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Cezanne, Paul. 1879-1882
"Still Life with Compotier"
-after his father died he inherited a lot of moeny and could focus on just art and not on selling his work
-no longer has to please teachers
-looks unstable
-no consistent point of view |
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van Gogh, Vincent. 1888
"Night Cafe"
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