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Impression
Painting quickly in France 18601890
National Gallery, Sainsbury Wing
1 November 2000 28 January 2001
This exhibition adroitly focuses on a key thirty-year
period when the technological progress experienced in later 19th
Century Europe brought revisions in the way artists perceived movement
and light. Such Impressionists as Van Gogh and Manet chose ordinarily,
daily incidents, such as reading a magazine, or newspaper, or sporting
activity, to convey the sense of the moment, of the ephemeral, of
the inkling of an eye.
Late Pissarro is here deployed tactically to demonstrate "Boulevard
Montmartre at Night", for example. Degas was a master at capturing
the vital moment, or split second, of drama or sudden significance.
This new awareness and connoisseurship of the fleeting moment in
paint sent shock tremor through the traditional academic and institutional
cohorts of the art and museum world of the 1860s and 1870s.
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Camille Pissarro. The Boulevard Montmartre
at Night
Detail of a lamp and carriages |
Behind all this loomed the growing importance
of the camera as a means of communication and hence of artistic
expression. The shutter speed became a metaphor for painting, which
could encapsulate essentials, and eliminate others, beyond the resource
of the camera. This was the survival of painting, nothing less,
that was at stake, and secured against all odds, by the Impressionist
wave of this period, successfully conveyed in this exhibition.
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