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Sunday, August 6, 2017

You Can Decorate Your Home With Impressionist Prints And Still Support American Artists

By Michelle Powell


If you are decorating a new house or redecorating one you already own, deciding what to put on the walls is important. You may be concerned that original artwork is too expensive. If this is the case, you can always decorate with interesting and attractive reproductions, like Impressionist prints. It is also possible to display work done by Americans during this period. Your guests may be surprised to learn that there was an American Impressionist movement.

The works you choose will be much more special if you learn something about the period which they represent. Impressionism, for instance, is considered to have been introduced to America by John Breck. After visiting France, he opened his first Boston exhibit at the end of the nineteenth century. Frank Benson painted in the French open air style as did William Chase. Chase established what is today Parsons School of Design.

Childe Hassam is generally considered the most famous of the American Impressionists. He is most well known for his street scenes and depictions of flags flying in New York during World War Two. He painted in both oil and watercolor. His style probably most closely resembles the French painters, Pissarro and Monet. Vivid colors and broken brush strokes characterize his work.

When you think about famous female artists of this time period, Mary Cassett is the name most people come up with. Cassett was born in Pennsylvania and went to Europe in her early twenties. She studied and painted in Paris eventually catching the eye of famed artist, Edgar Degas. She is most known for her depictions of women in everyday life. They might be shopping, eating lunch with friends or playing with their children.

James Whistler's mother is the subject of one of the most famous paintings in the world. Whistler traveled to France early in his career and formed a lasting relationship with Claude Monet. He was never a slavish devotee of French Impressionists, but sought instead to create his own style and more muted color palette. He did share the Impressionists' love of depicting daily life with attention on effect rather than detail.

Both the French and American Impressionists were fascinated with landscapes and close interiors. The coastline of New England was of special interest to a lot of the Americans painting at the time. Their work is very distinctive and can be easily identified, even when it is hung in the midst of French works of this same time period.

Although artists all over the country were members of this movement, it was concentrated in the northeast section of the United States. A number of painters, including Childe Hassam and John Singer Sargent, worked on Ironbound Island, Maine. The Blaney family, great art patrons, owned the land and made artists from everywhere welcome there.

Once you decide which artists, subject matter, color palettes, and styles you like the best, looking for reproductions that reflect them becomes a lot of fun, even though it can be challenging. You don't have to choose the most famous paintings by individual artists. You may find you like the lesser known works the best.




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