SYMBOL ART WOMEN
Woman in art: erotic and simbolic paintings by Miquel Pla; Watercolor and Acrilic artworks. Peintures erotiques et simboliques au femenin. music: Evanescence;
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http://www.picassomio.es/miguel-pla-beneyto/exposicion.html
http://www.artwansongallery.es/galeria-de-artistas/artistas-promocionados/pintores/miguel-pla-id809
http://www.youtube.com/user/Miquelpla;
Associates and influenced artists
Among the close associates of the Impressionists were several painters who adopted their methods to some degree. These include Giuseppe De Nittis, an Italian artist living in Paris who participated in the first Impressionist exhibit at the invitation of Degas, although the other Impressionists disparaged his work.[18] Federico Zandomeneghi was another Italian friend of Degas who showed with the Impressionists. Eva Gonzalès was a follower of Manet who did not exhibit with the group. James Abbott McNeill Whistler was an American-born painter who played a part in Impressionism although he did not join the group and preferred grayed colours. Walter Sickert, an English artist, was initially a follower of Whistler, and later an important disciple of Degas; he did not exhibit with the Impressionists. In 1904 the artist and writer Wynford Dewhurst wrote the first important study of the French painters to be published in English, Impressionist Painting: its genesis and development, which did much to popularize Impressionism in Great Britain.
By the early 1880s, Impressionist methods were affecting, at least superficially, the art of the Salon. Fashionable painters such as Jean Beraud and Henri Gervex found critical and financial success by brightening their palettes while retaining the smooth finish expected of Salon art. Works by these artists are sometimes casually referred to as Impressionism, despite their remoteness from Impressionist practice.
Beyond France
Mary Cassatt, The Child’s Bath (The Bath), 1893, oil on canvas, Art Institute of Chicago
As the influence of Impressionism spread beyond France, artists, too numerous to list, became identified as practitioners of the new style. Some of the more important examples are:
The American Impressionists, including Mary Cassatt, William Merritt Chase, Frederick Carl Frieseke, Childe Hassam, Willard Metcalf, Lilla Cabot Perry, Theodore Robinson, Edmund Charles Tarbell, John Henry Twachtman, and J. Alden Weir.
Walter Richard Sickert and Philip Wilson Steer were well known Impressionist painters from the United Kingdom.
The Australian Impressionists, including Frederick McCubbin and Tom Roberts who were prominent members of the Heidelberg School and John Peter Russell a friend of Van Gogh, Rodin, Monet and Matisse as well as Rupert Bunny, Agnes Goodsir and Hugh Ramsay.
Lovis Corinth, Max Liebermann, and Max Slevogt in Germany
Post-Impressionism
Camille Pissarro, Children on a Farm, 1887
Post-Impressionism developed from Impressionism. From the 1880s several artists began to develop different precepts for the use of colour, pattern, form, and line, derived from the Impressionist example: Vincent van Gogh, Paul Gauguin, Georges Seurat, and Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec. These artists were slightly younger than the Impressionists, and their work is known as post-Impressionism. Some of the original Impressionist artists also ventured into this new territory; Camille Pissarro briefly painted in a pointillist manner, and even Monet abandoned strict plein air painting. Paul Cézanne, who participated in the first and third Impressionist exhibitions, developed a highly individual vision emphasising pictorial structure, and he is more often called a post-Impressionist. Although these cases illustrate the difficulty of assigning labels, the work of the original Impressionist painters may, by definition, be categorised as Impressionism.
http://www.picassomio.es/miguel-pla-beneyto/exposicion.html
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May 1st, 2010 at 11:28 am
thanks you Mr Tiro, …
thanks you Mr Tiro, de corazon!
May 1st, 2010 at 11:28 am
condivido, i like …
condivido, i like too!
May 1st, 2010 at 11:28 am
very good work, I …
very good work, I liked