Impressionism: Art, Leisure, and Parisian Society"Long-awaited, this full-scale revision of Impressionism immediately supersedes all other studies in the field. Herbert rejuvenates even the most famous paintings by seeing them in a dense and flexible context touching on everything from the hierarchy of theater boxes to the role of beer-hall waitresses. His mind and eye are as supple as his lucid prose, and his command of sociological data is staggering. In this classic of art history, both art and history are triumphantly reborn."--Robert Rosenblum, New York University This remarkable book will transform the way we look at Impressionist art. The culmination of twenty years of research by a preeminent scholar in the field, it fundamentally revises the conventional view of the Impressionist movement and shows for the first time how it was fully integrated into the social and cultural life of the times. Robert L. Herbert explores the themes of leisure and entertainment that dominated the great years of Impressionist painting between 1865 and 1885. Cafes, opera houses, dance halls, theaters, racetracks, and vacations by the sea were the central subjects of the majority of these paintings, and Herbert relates these pursuits to the transformation of Paris under the Second Empire. Sumptuously illustrated with many of the most beautiful Impressionist images, both familiar and unfamiliar, this book presents provocative new interpretations of a wide range of famous masterpieces. Artists are seen to be active participants in, as well as objective witnesses to, contemporary life, and there are many profound insights into the social and cultural upheaval of the times. "A social history of Impressionist art that is truly about the art, informed by a penetrating analysis of the ways in which its pictorial structure and qualities communicate its social content. Herbert brings that society to life, but above all he makes some of the most familiar and frequently discussed works in the history of art come wonderfully and vividly to life again."--Theodore Reff, Columbia University Robert L. Herbert is Robert Lehman Professor of the History of Art at Yale University. He is the author or editor of numerous books and articles on nineteenth-century French art. |
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Argenteuil artists Asnières ballet beach boats Bois de Boulogne Boudin Bougival boulevard bridge brushwork café-concert cafés Caillebotte canvas Cassatt century Chatou color composition contemporary contrast costume Courbet crowd dance dancers Degas Degas's Déjeuner detachment dressed edge Etretat Eugène exhibition fashion figures flâneur foliage Folies-Bergère foreground France French friends garden Gare Saint-Lazare Goncourt Goncourt brothers Grenouillère Halévy Haussmann Havre horses images Impressionism impressionists industry Jockey landscape Lathuille Le Havre leisure light loge Longchamp look Louis Napoleon male Manet middle-class modern Monet Monet's painting Montmartre Morisot Morny Musée d'Orsay Museum of Art National Gallery nature nearby Offenbach Opéra painters Paris Parisian Pastel picture Pissarro pose Private collection promenades racing railroad Reff Renoir river sailboats Sainte-Adresse Salon seated Second Empire shows Simmel social society streets studio suburbs terrace theater tion traditional trees Trouville Tuckerman urban vacationers viewer village visitors woman women