Modern
The term modern art has come to denote the innovating and even        revolutionary developments in Western painting and the other visual arts        since the second half of the 19th century. It embraces a wide variety of        movements, styles, theories, and attitudes, the modernity of which resides        in a common tendency to repudiate past conventions and precedents in        subject matter, mode of depiction, and painting technique alike. Not all        the painting of this period has made such a departure; representational        work, for example, has continued to appear, particularly in connection with        official exhibiting societies. Nevertheless, the idea that some current        types of painting are more properly of their time than are others, and for        that reason are more interesting or important, applies with particular        force to the painting of the last 150 years.
By the mid-19th century, painting was no longer basically in service to        either the church or the court but rather was patronized by the upper and        middle classes of an increasingly materialistic and secularized Western        society. This society was undergoing rapid change because of the growth of        science and technology, industrialization, urbanization, and the        fundamental questioning of received religious dogmas. Painters were thus        confronted with the need to reject traditional, historical, or academic        forms and conventions in an effort to create an art that would better        reflect the changed social, material, and intellectual conditions of        emerging modern life. Another important, if indirect, stimulus to change        was the development from the early 19th century on of photography and        other photomechanical techniques, which freed (or deprived) painting and        drawing of their hitherto cardinal roles as the only available means of        accurately depicting the visual world. These manually executed arts were        thus no longer obliged to serve as the means of recording and        disseminating information as they once had been and were eventually freed        to explore aesthetically the basic visual elements of line, colour, tone,        and composition in a nonrepresentational context. Indeed, an important        trend in modern painting has been that of abstraction—i.e., painting in        which little or no attempt is made to accurately depict the appearance or        form of objects in the realm of nature or the existing physical world. The        door of the objective world was thus closed, but the inner world of the        imagination offered seemingly infinite possibilities for exploration, as        did the manipulation of pigments on a flat surface for their purely        intrinsic visual or aesthetic appeal.
The beginnings of modern painting cannot be clearly demarcated, but it is        generally agreed that it started in mid-19th-century France. The paintings        of Gustav Courbet, Edouard Manet, and the Impressionists represent a        deepening rejection of the prevailing academic traditions of Neoclassicism        and Romanticism and a quest for a more truthful naturalistic        representation of the visual world. The sepainters' Postimpressionist        successors—notably Paul Cézanne, Vincent van Gogh, Edgar Degas, and Paul        Gauguin—can be viewed as more clearly modern in their repudiation of        traditional subject matter and techniques and in their assumption of a        more subjective and personal vision.From about the 1890s a succession of        varied styles and movements arose that are the core of modern painting and        are also one of the high points of the history of the Western visual arts        in general. 
These modern movements include Neo-Impressionism, Symbolism,        the Nabis, Fauvism, Cubism, Expressionism, Futurism, the        Ashcan School, Suprematism, Constructivism, Orphism,        Metaphysical painting, de Stijl,        Purism, Dada, Surrealism, Social Realism, Abstract Expressionism,        Pop Art,        Op Art, Minimalism, and Neo-Expressionism.
Francis William Wentworth-Sheilds        
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Origins in the 19th century
As long ago as 1846 the qualities proper to a specifically modern art were        discussed by the French writer Charles Baudelaire in an essay on the        French Salon. He argued that colour would be foremost among these modern        qualities (a prediction that subsequent events confirmed), but he still        saw the new art in the context of the Romantic movement. Subsequent        modernity came to be seen as necessitating not only a new style but also        contemporary subject matter, and in 1863 Baudelaire praised the draftsman        Constantin Guys as “le peintre de la vie moderne” (“the painter of modern        life”). In 1862, with Baudelaire's support, the French painter Édouard        Manet brought together a subject from contemporary social life and an        unconventional style in “Concert in the Tuileries Gardens” (National        Gallery, London). This painting, though rather isolated in his work of the        time, was influential in establishing a new outlook. Another literary        figure whose critical writings were influential was the French novelist        Émile Zola, though Zola had limited sympathy for what he called the “new        manner in painting” of Manet; nevertheless he contributed from 1866 onward        to the emergence of the Impressionist group. The first appearance of the        phrase “modern art” in the relatively permanent form of a book title was        in 1883, when it was used by the French writer Joris-Karl Huysmans, a        friend of Zola's, to describe the theme of various reviews of painters'        work he had collected. Other books on the subject followed, such as the        Anglo-Irish novelist George Moore's Modern Painting (1893). It was about        this time that the term avant-garde was introduced by the critic Théodore        Duret, who used it of certain young painters. From then on, modernity was        to be a recurrent concern of artists and critics. Public acceptance of        the new standpoint was slow, however. The first museums dedicated        specifically to modern art grew out of the fervour of individual        collectors—for example, the Folkwang Museum at Essen, Ger., and the        Kröller-Müller State Museum at Otterlo, Neth., both largely consisting of        collections built up before 1914. The Museum of Modern Art in New York        City, the outstanding public collection in the field, was founded in 1929,        and the Western capital that lacks a museum explicitly devoted to modern        art is rare.
The conflict between the new forces and the established academic tradition        in France came into the open in 1863. The jury of the official Salon,        which had long exercised great despotism in matters to do with painting,        rejected more than 4,000 canvases—an unusually high figure. The resulting        outcry prompted the emperor Napoleon III to order that the rejected works,        if the painters agreed, be shown in a special exhibition known as the        Salon des Refusés. The exhibition included works by Manet; Johan Barthold        Jongkind, an older Dutch painter who was working in a tonal and summary        style from nature; Camille Pissarro and Paul Cézanne, who had met two        years before at the Académie Suisse; Armand Guillaumin; James McNeill        Whistler; and others. One of the greatest scandals was caused by Manet's        painting “The Luncheon on the Grass” (Louvre, Paris), which was considered        an affront to decency as well as taste. The younger painters became aware        of their common aims. Claude Monet, whose landscape style had been        influenced from the outset by the atmospheric sketches of the Channel        coast of Eugène Boudin, as well as by Jongkind (whom he described to        Boudin as “quite mad”), had met Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Alfred Sisley, and        Jean-Frédéric Bazille studying in the studio of Charles Gleyre. Abandoning        academic study, they worked together outdoors in the forest of        Fontainebleau, where contacts with the Barbizon painters Narcisse-Virgile        Diaz de La Peña and Charles-François Daubigny strengthened their        direction.
The implicit acceptance of the visual scene on which the new style was        based owed something to the example of Courbet, who influenced Renoir in        particular in the next few years. The plein air (“open-air”) paintings of        the Barbizon painters also had an effect, but the suggestion of an art        based on the notation of pure colour was suggested by several sources. The        example of Eugène Delacroix had a deep significance for the 19th century        in France, and the reliance on separate, undisguised touches of the brush        in the form that became characteristic of Impressionism is perhaps first        apparent in sketches of the sea at Dieppe painted by Delacroix in 1852.        The economy of Manet's touch in the 1860s was affected by Spanish and        Dutch examples as well as by Delacroix, but his seascapes and racecourse        pictures of 1864 are also important. The full Impressionistic style did        not develop until the end of the 1860s.
Though the figurative aims of Impressionism can be regarded as the        conclusion of 19th-century Realism, the method, which made no attempt to        hide even the most basic means of preparing a finished painting, was an        original one. Brushstrokes did not pretend to be anything but dashes of        paint, thus conveying their coloured message without any disguise or        effect at individual illusion. It was in this respect and in the        all-embracing unity of colour and handling that resulted, rather than its        realism, that Impressionism founded modern painting. Other developments in        the 1860s had no immediate sequels in Impressionism. The presentation of        some of Manet's figures, such as “The Fifer” (Louvre) of 1866, as        vignettes or decorative designs shading into virtually blank backgrounds        was a radical departure from the coherent pictorial construction of        Western tradition since the Renaissance; it is the first sign of the form        built outward from a central nucleus without reference to the classic        frame that has appeared repeatedly in modern art. Honoré Daumier is        supposed to have said that “The Fifer” reduced painting “to faces on        playing cards,” and in 1865 Courbet compared Manet's “Olympia” (1863;        Louvre) to “the Queen of Spades after a bath.” The possibility of making        an image out of the bare, almost heraldic juxtaposition of flat colours        was neglected while the complex notation of Impressionism held sway, but        it came to be regarded with interest as Impressionism receded. Other        unconventional principles of design—suggested equally by Japanese prints,        such as those that Manet placed in the background of his portrait of Zola        (Louvre) in 1868, andby the chance arrangements of photography—appeared in        the work of Edgar Degas, who sympathized with the aims of the new group,        associating himself with them in seven of their eight exhibitions, which        he largely helped to organize.
Other qualities that Baudelaire in 1846 had specified as the qualities of        modern art—spirituality and aspiration toward the infinite—evolved quite        apart from Impressionism. The visionary implications of Romantic painting        were explored by Gustave Moreau, whose elaborate biblical and mythological        scenes, weighed down with sumptuous detail, gave colour an imaginative and        symbolic richness. His example had a special value to the next generation.        The imagination of Pierre Puvis de Chavannes was of the opposite order,        preserving the large-scale clarity of mural painting, a policy that made        him appreciated when a reaction against Impressionism set in.
Another possibility of Romanticism was pursued in isolation by the        Marseille painter Adolphe Monticelli. The richness of his colour is        thought to have contributed something crucial to Cézanne's development.        The counterpart of Moreau in Britain was Sir Edward Burne-Jones. The        intricate and perverse linear formulations that he developed from the        Pre-Raphaelites greatly influenced the international Symbolist style of        the last decades of the century.
The influence of the trend in the direction of the modern in France,        together with its controversial element, was introduced to Britain by        Whistler, whose concern was narrowly aesthetic rather than analytic. The        harmonies he developed were close to being monochromatic; his use of        Spanish and Japanese elements had little of the radical originality of        Manet and Degas. His influence dominated and also limited the development        of avant-garde painting in Britain for many years. John Singer Sargent,        like Whistler an American who came to live in Britain, popularized a        less-discriminating version of the Impressionistic style.
In Germany a Romantic strain coexisted with a Realistic style that        remained unaffected by the most advanced French painting. Anselm Feuerbach,        one of the Romantics, was influenced by Delacroix. In 1855 he went to        Italy where the effect of the 16th century came to predominate in his        work. The landscapes of Hans von Marées were also essentially Romantic. He        had visited France but spent most of his working life in Italy; the        frescoes he executed in Naples echo Puvis de Chavannes in their style.        Realism found exponents in Wilhelm Leibl and Hans Thoma. In Italy the        reaction against the academies was centred in Florence, where a group        known as the Macchiaioli (from macchia, “patch”) worked from 1855,        producing landscapes, genre paintings, and Romantic costume pieces        executed in the highly visible brushstrokes that gave the group its name.
In the United States, Thomas Eakins developed a broadly handled, powerful        Realist style that became almost Expressionistic in his later years. He        had visited Paris in 1866, and the influence of Manet can be detected in        his paintings. His interest in anatomy and perspective gave him a role        analogous to that of Degas. The early development of Winslow Homer, who        was in France a year later, ran parallel to Monet's style in the 1860s.        The work of Albert Pinkham Ryder was, by contrast, introverted and        visionary. He was among the artists who adapted the Romantic vocabulary to        the symbolic purposes of modern art.
In France in the mid-1860s Monet produced a series of large-scale open-air        conversation pieces in which elements derived from Courbet and Manet were        fused with a wholly original expression of dappled light in solid paint.        The approach of Pissarro, who had arrived in Paris from the West Indies in        1855, was more delicate; influenced by Camille Corot as well as Courbet,        he recorded pure landscape motives in a limited range of tones, though        with a natural lyricism of feeling. The starting pointof Cézanne was, by        contrast, vigorous to the point of violence. In 1866 he evolved a style in        which paint was applied in thick dabs with a palette knife; this combined        a handling (a technical term in painting meaning the individual's        manipulation of materials in the execution of a work; it has been likened        to a person's signature in handwriting) derived from Courbet with the gray        tonality of Manet; its rough-hewn crudity has a consistency that was        essentially new. His alternative style in the 1860s, with curling        brushstrokes related to Daumier, is equally virile and was often applied        tosubjects of violent eroticism. The unbridled force of Cézanne's early        work gave the first sign of qualities that were to become characteristic        of modern painting. Though exceptional, it was not unique; in Italy during        the 1860s the Russian painter of historical and scriptural themes, Nikolay        Nikolayevich Ge, produced sketches with loose, expressive brushwork        sometimes resembling Cézanne's.
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