The story of art is not one of linear progress but one of change, imitation, and reaction.
So to understand Impressionism, which emerged in the middle of the 19th century in France, you've got to know what it was reacting to: the Académie des Beaux-Arts.
The Académie des Beaux-Arts was a French fine arts school which not only taught young artists but also set the aesthetic standards of the age.
And they prioritised a very particular style of painting based on the ideas of the Renaissance, usually called Academicism.
Academicism as a style was about strong outlines, clear composition, accurate shading, modelling... it was both realistic and idealised.
So, picture yourself in the middle of the 19th century. This is the sort of work being taught, promoted, and celebrated by the Academy:
There had already been some rebels against this neoclassical, Academic style.
One of them was Gustave Courbet, who portrayed ordinary people with an uncompromising and wholly unidealised realism.
But the greatest rebellion started in the 1860s, among a group of young artists who had met while studying at the Academy together.
They were Claude Monet, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Alfred Sisley, and Frederic Bazille; and their leader was the slightly older Edouard Manet...
The first and most striking thing about them was their preference for colour over outline. Rather than making a perfect sketch and filling it with colour later, colour always came first.
Their paintings were much brighter and more vivid than those of the Academic style.
In this way, Monet and his contemporaries weren't quite revolutionaries.
Rather, their preference for colour over drawing was directly inspired by a similar divergence in 16th century Italy, during the Renaissance.
Whereas the great Florentine artists — Leonardo, Michelangelo, Raphael — had prioritised lines, contours, and forms, the Venetian painters of the same era — foremost among them Titian — had placed far more importance on colour:
It is somehow fitting that the Impressionists later came to paint Venice with such brilliance, as the ancestral home of their artistic modus operandi.
As in these two paintings of the Grand Canal, by Monet and Manet respectively:
The Impressionists were also inspired by Japanese ukiyo-e prints, which had recently started coming into Europe.
These highly stylised prints featured ordinary subjects, bold colours, unusual angles, and compositions that would have been heresy in the Academy:
However, the Impressionists — like the Academy — were still trying to depict things in a realistic way; there's nothing abstract about their work.
But Academicism was all about *studio* painting, with carefully orchestrated lighting and placement of models.
The Impressionists knew that *real life* rarely looks like it does in a studio.
Constant movement; we glimpse things briefly; there is mist, smoke, and haze; perspective is sometimes flattened; brightness, shadows.. the light is literally always changing, and so are the colours.
There is nothing "unrealistic" about Monet's famous paintings of the lilies and the bridge at his garden in Giverny.
Rather, they somehow feel *more real* than a photorealistic painting or an actual photograph ever could.
And so the Impressionists started painting on the fly, outdoors, out and about, with their easels and bundles of brushes.
This explains the brightness of their work; they painted what they saw, including bright blue skies and sunlight reflected on water or dappled by leaves...
The practice of painting outside, in uncontrolled conditions, and with emphasis on movement and colour and the *real* impression of light, naturally brought with it different techniques.
Their brushstrokes became much looser, and were often clearly visible.
And so the methods and appearance of Impressionist art was totally at odds with that of the Academy, where outlines were clear, strokes carefully concealed, and colours separated.
You can see why the Impressionists caused such a stir when this is what people had come to expect:
But it wasn't only a difference of method and style — it was also a difference of subject matter.
Academicism had been all about Classical and Biblical themes, and scenes drawn from Judeo-Christian history or Greco-Roman mythology.
The Impressionists, meanwhile, were far more interested in every day subjects, whether the hustle and bustle of Pissarro's Boulevard Montmartre or the steam and soot-stained glass of Monet's Gare Saint-Lazare:
Where does the term "Impressionism" come from?
Just like Gothic, Mannerist, and Baroque, it was originally intended to be a criticism. When Monet's "Impression, Sunrise" was exhibited in Paris in 1874, an art critic called Louis Leroy coined the term pejoratively.
Monet and his friends adopted this name, despite the mockery and criticism of the artistic establishment.
Little could Leroy have known that, within a few decades, these silly Impressionists would have far eclipsed the Academy in popularity and influence...
Impressionism in the strictest sense soon evolved and splintered into several different artistic movements.
But it had triumphed over the Academy and thrown open the doors of possibility... and young artists all over the world had started painting like the Impressionists.
Post-Impressionism moved further away from realism: vivid colours, flat perspective, strange shapes, distortion, and abstraction. It was more about *feeling* than *seeing*.
From the Synthetism of Gaugin to the proto-Cubism of Cezanne and the swirls of Van Gogh:
And that, with many details elided, is a brief introduction to Impressionism — one of the most successful artistic revolutions in history.
Why has their art remained so profoundly popular and beloved?
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
So here's why she might just be the most important artist of the 20th century...
Magdalena Carmen Frieda Kahlo y Calderón was born on 6th July 1907 in Coyoacán, Mexico City, to a German father and a mother of mixed European and Indigenous ancestry.
The family home, now the Frida Kahlo Museum, is known as the Casa Azul because of its bright blue walls.
She was drawn to art from a young age — her father was a professional photographer, after all — and was encouraged by her family to pursue it.
Still, science was her main interest, and in 1922 she started preparing for entry to medical school.
Well, he was only 26 when he carved it. And it's much bigger than you realise...
The first thing to mention is that David was immediately considered a masterpiece.
Giorgio Vasari, the 16th century art historian & biographer, said that it "surpassed all ancient and modern statues, whether Greek or Roman, that have ever existed."
But the story of David is complicated.
It was originally commissioned in 1464 as one of twelve statues representing figures from the Old Testament to adorn the recently completed Florence Cathedral.
Gothic was dead in Florence; the Renaissance was rising.
The Dancing House, inspired by Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers, was built in 1996.
And it has divided opinion ever since: modern masterpiece or architectural disaster?
Well, here's the fascinating story behind Prague's most controversial building...
The Dancing House is on a plot which had been vacant since 1945, when American bombs destroyed the building that had originally stood there.
Václav Havel, the writer and statesman who served as the first President of the post-Communist Czech Republic, later lived nearby.
Havel suggested to his friend and fellow resident of the area, a local architect called Vladimir Milunić, that they should convert this empty plot into a place of cultural significance.
It would be a monument to the fall of Communism and the start of a new, free era.
From Medieval monks and Henry VIII to the French Revolution and Wimbledon:
Although there is evidence that a game similar to tennis was played in Ancient Egypt and Greece, the direct ancestor of modern tennis has its origins in 11th century France.
Monks started playing a game in monastery yards where they hit a ball back and forth.
This game was known as "Jeu de Paume", meaning Game of the Hand, because they hit the ball with... their hands.
It was controversial — the monks should have been contemplating God, not playing ball games — but it caught on quickly and spread around Europe.
It's a village in the Netherlands called Bourtange (population: 430) built in and around an 18th century star fort.
How and why does it exist? That's where things get interesting...
Cannons, like gunpowder, were invented in China. They soon spread to Europe and, by the 16th century, had become incredibly advanced.
Picture a typical Medieval castle, with its knights and archers; those huge walls and towers were made redundant by the power of cannon.
In response the star fort was invented.
It had low, angled walls (to deflect cannon balls) and they were made from earth and faced with bricks or rubble (so that, unlike masonry, they wouldn't shatter when hit by cannon fire).
Communication — language, & what we use it for — is the foundation of human civilisation.
Everything we do, from organising society to interacting on a daily basis, relies on it.
So any inventions or technology relating to communication must be the most important of all.
The story begins with spoken language.
Though no precise date will ever be ascertained, it is believed that complex vocal communication — language — first emerged somewhere between 150,000 and 50,000 BC among prehistoric humans.