Bibliographic Information

Gauguin and Impressionism

Richard R. Brettell and Anne-Birgitte Fonsmark

Yale University Press, 2005

  • : hard
  • : [softcover]

Available at  / 16 libraries

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Note

Catalog of the exhibition held at Ordrupgaard, Copenhagen, Aug. 30-Nov. 20, 2005 and Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth, Dec. 18, 2005-Mar. 26, 2006

"Published in conjunction with the exhibition organized by the Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth and Ordrupgaard, Copenhagen"--P. [ii]

Bibliography: p. 357-359

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Volume

: hard ISBN 9780300110036

Description

Paul Gauguin was introduced into the Impressionist circle by Camille Pissarro and contributed major works to five of the eight Impressionist exhibitions between 1879 and 1886. During these years he transformed himself from a banker-stockbroker to a professional artist and from a family man into a solitary searcher for artistic, moral, and spiritual truths. Yet this vital period of Gauguin's life has usually been dismissed as an awkward prelude to his brilliant career as an anti-Impressionist. This handsomely illustrated book reconsiders Gauguin's apprenticeship as an Impressionist and reassesses his contributions to the movement through the extraordinarily subtle and beautiful paintings, sculpture, and ceramic works he created during the years before 1887. Richard R. Brettell and Anne-Birgitte Fonsmark argue that Gauguin's Impressionist paintings compare in quality to those of Sisley, Morisot, or Cassatt and that as a sculptor he was second only to Degas. His sculptures and ceramics were even more searching and radical than his early paintings and are crucial to the understanding of his development. Gauguin grappled with the thorniest issues debated by the French avant-garde, the authors contend, and no member of the Impressionist group created works as enigmatic or as wide-ranging, both artistically and emotionally. Exhibition schedule: Ordrupgaard Museum, Copenhagen, August 25 - November 20, 2005. Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth, Texas, December 11, 2005 - March 26, 2006
Volume

: [softcover] ISBN 9780300134346

Description

Paul Gauguin was introduced into the Impressionist circle by Camille Pissarro and contributed major works to five of the eight Impressionist exhibitions between 1879 and 1886. During these years, he transformed himself from a banker-stockbroker into a professional artist and from a family man into a solitary searcher for artistic, moral, and spiritual truths. Yet this vital period of Gauguin's life has usually been dismissed as an awkward prelude to his brilliant career as an anti-Impressionist. This handsomely illustrated book reconsiders Gauguin's apprenticeship as an Impressionist and reassesses his contributions to the movement through the extraordinarily subtle and beautiful paintings, sculpture, and ceramic works he created during the years before 1887.

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