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While many have focused on Monet's Impression, Sunrise as a key Impressionist painting, another image was pivotal to the movement that launched 150 years ago.
Impressionism ended up on fridge magnets. It started with bloodshed. Political violence tore France apart. A group of painters hoped a radical visual language could patch life back together.
The National Gallery of Victoria’s new show, French Impressionism, celebrates the likes of Monet, Renoir, Degas, Morisot and Pissarro, who painted in the face of public outrage. Encounter inspiring ...
When Berthe Morisot organised the first Impressionist exhibition in 1874, along with Monet, Degas, Renoir and co, she’d already exhibited at the Paris Salon for a decade – since she was 23. That’s not ...
It’s in Berthe Morisot’s small painting “The Wet Nurse Angèle feeding Julie Manet” (1880), that the connection between art, work and money becomes most apparent.
In an excerpt from his new book “Paris in Ruins,” critic Sebastian Smee breaks down the charged, extravagantly expressive portraits between the painters Berthe Morisot and Édouard Manet.
The National Gallery of Victoria’s new show, French Impressionism, celebrates the likes of Monet, Renoir, Degas, Morisot and Pissarro, who painted in the face of public outrage. Encounter inspiring ...
Berthe Morisot, extraordinarily a footnote in Impressionist history until a decade ago, arrives at London’s Dulwich Picture Gallery for her first UK exhibition in 70 years.
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