The end of the 19th-century tradition
Until Seurat no painter had expressly founded a style on the intrinsic        reactions of colour to colour and a codified vocabulary of expressive        forms. The consistent granulation of colour in Seurat's work from 1885        onward was specific to the picture, not to the sensation or the subject.        The coherent images of space and light that he made out of this        granulation ended with him. Seurat's followers, grouped as        Neo-Impressionists under the leadership of Paul Signac, developed his        technique rather than his vision. Seurat's influence was nonetheless        widespread and fertile; his system in itself supplied a clarity that        painters needed. It was Neo-Impressionism that was in the ascendant when        the Dutch painter Vincent van Gogh arrived in Paris in 1886. The emotional        travail evident in van Gogh's early work was marvelously lightened in the        new aesthetic climate. But in his hands the dashes of pure colour turned        and twisted, trading invisible and unstable lines of force. They werewoven        into rhythmical and convulsive patterns reflecting themounting intensity        of his own feelings. Such patterns converted the Neo-Impressionist style        into something quite different—a forerunner of what was to be known as        Expressionism. Other painters were less radical in their approach.        Pissarro assimilated the Neo-Impressionist method to the vision of the        older generation; Henri-Edmond Cross and Maximilien Luce gave it the        characteristic economy of the age that followed. Henri Matisse's repeated        experiments with it, culminating in his contact with Signac and Cross in        1904, finally converted the pure colour of Impressionism to the special        purposes of 20th-century art.
In the meantime, the older Impressionists were producing the broadly        conceived works that crowned their artistic achievement and formed, as it        seems in retrospect, the great traditional masterpieces of modern art.        Degas's lifelong absorption in the human body as a subject led him to        produce a series of bathing scenes and drawings from the nude in which the        form expanded to an amplitude that filled the picture. Fullness of form        was an effect that Renoir also achieved. Cézanne announced a determination        “to do Poussin over again from nature” and was reckoned to have fulfilled        that aim with his “Great Bathers” and the series of landscapes of Mont        Sainte-Victoire (see ). In the pictures of Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, the        style and standpoint derived from Degas, but his graphic work reflected        the aims of the Symbolist generation (see ). The most original        contribution of Édouard Vuillard lay in the evocative patterning of the        little pictures that he painted before 1900. The art of Pierre Bonnard, on        the other hand, developed throughout his life. His subjects and his method        remained, on the surface, those of the Impressionist tradition, but they        were re-created from memory and imagination; Bonnard's pictures have the        quality of a cherished private order of experience.
Developments outside France were not of comparable importance. In Britain        in the 1880s, Philip Wilson Steer painted a small group of landscapes with        figures that were among the earliest and loveliest examples of the fin de        siècle style. The work of Walter Sickert revolved around an idiosyncratic        fascination with the actual touch of a brush on canvas. His affinities        remained essentially with the tonal Impressionism of the earliest stages        of the modern movement rather than with the art of colour that developed        from it, though he eventually made the transition in old age. In Germany        the artists of the Postimpressionist generation, such as Lovis Corinth and        Max Slevogt, working with the peculiar recklessness that is endemic to        German painting, laid the technical foundations of Expressionism.        Ferdinand Hodler in Switzerland developed a painterly Symbolist style in        the 1890s. The Belgian painter James Ensor abandoned Impressionism at the        end of the 1880s for a bitter and fantastic style that was a pioneer        example of extreme expressive alienation.
The most remarkable painter of the fin de siècle outside France, however,        was the Norwegian Edvard Munch. “The Cry” (Nasjonalgalleriet, Oslo), the        famous picture in which the rhythms of Art Nouveau were given a hysterical        expressive force with hardly a vestige of the Impressionist description of        nature, was painted in 1893. For many years before a breakdown interrupted        his development in 1907, he worked abroad. He was particularly influential        in Germany.
In the United States, Maurice Prendergast transformed Impressionism into        pattern. In Russia the fin de siècle styles of Léon Bakst and the Mir        Iskusstva (“World of Art”) group, aswell as a vivid revival of folk        decoration, flourished, later becoming known internationally through their        connection with the Russian ballet.
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