1. NEO-IMPRESSIONISM AND
POST-IMPRESSIONISM
NEO-IMPRESSIONISM POST-IMPRESSIONISM
Isabel Naranjo Díaz-Ropero 4ºA
2. NEO-IMPRESSIONISM
Georges Seurat:
The Eiffel tower.
Neo-impressionism appeared in
France at the end of the 19th
century. In this period some
painters experienced with
compositions made with dots of
pure colour.
Some important painters of this
period were Paul Signac and
Georges Seurat.
Paul Signac: Pink Clouds.
3. Paul Signac: Grand Canal in Venice. Camille Pissarro: View From my Window.
Georges Seurat: A Sunday on La Grande Jatte Henri Matisse: Luxe, calme et volupté.
5. It is painted with the most characteristic technique in this period, pointillism.
This is oil on canvas. At present this portrait is located in The National
Gallery of Art in Washington DC
Félix Fénéon was an art dealer, collector, political activist, critic, and
Signac's friend who shared the artist's interests in science and Japanese
prints. On this painting Signac depicts this unconventional and enigmatic
personality with his characteristic chin, holding a top hat and a walking stick
in one hand and a flower in the other one. Combining figuration and
abstraction, he sets Fénéon's static profile against a swirling background, a
kaleidoscopic portrait of optical theorist Charles Henry's recently published
color wheel.
Maybe, the stars in the lower rigth corner, are connected to the interest that
Felix Fénéon had about the United States.
6. POST-IMPRESSIONISM
Post-impressionism is a term
used to express the artistic period
that appeared after Neo-
impressionism. It developed in the
last decades of the 19th century.
Post-impressionism was an
extension of impressionism and at
the same time it was a rejection of
its limitations. In this period they
still used very colorful paints,
peculiar brushwork and realistic
themes, but they tried to transmit
more emotions.
Some of the most famous
painters of this period were: Paul
Gauguin, Henry de Toulouse-
Lautrec, Vincent Van Gogh and
Paul Cézanne.
Vang Gogh: A road in Auvergs after the rain.
7. He was one of the representatives of Cloisonnism.
It is a style of post-impressionist painting with
bold and flat forms separated by dark contours.
Breton women in the meadow.
Taperaa Mahana
Where do we come from? What we are? Where are we going?
8. He was a painter and lithographer. His favourite
themes were cabaret dancers and prostitutes.
In bed the kiss Salon at the rue des Moulins.
9. He was a genius with a troubled life. He expressed his
personality on his paintings.
Café terrace at nigth.
The Nigth café.
Starry nigth.
10. PAUL CÉZANNE
He was the precursor of Cubism. He used colour to give
volume to objects and his paintings became geometrical
coloured shapes.
Boy in a red waistcoat.
Card players.
Sainte Victoire Mountain.
11. DANCING AT THE
MOULIN ROUGE.
This painting is oil on
canvas, it was painted by
Toulouse Lautrec around
1890.
12. It almost occupies 1.5 meters. Now it is located in the
Museum Of Art in Philadelphia. Some characters in the
background are looking at the dancers and speaking
between them. There are in the background too, a man
with the face of Death, and Lautrec´s muse, Jane Avril. In
the foreground there is an elegant woman with a pink
dress.