Synthetic impressionism
Style of painting
Synthetic Impressionism is style of painting that combines the carefully observed color and expressive paint handling of impressionist painters with the abstraction of space and multiple exaggerated viewpoints of cubist painters.[1] The forerunners of this style include Van Gogh, Cézanne, and Chaïm Soutine.[2]
Contemporary proponents of this style include the American artists James Michalopoulos and Charles Tersolo.
References
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Impressionism
- Frédéric Bazille
- Eugène Boudin
- Gustave Caillebotte
- Mary Cassatt
- Paul Cézanne
- Edgar Degas
- Armand Guillaumin
- Johan Jongkind
- Édouard Manet
- Claude Monet
- Berthe Morisot
- Camille Pissarro
- Pierre-Auguste Renoir
- Alfred Sisley
artists
artists
artists
artists
- Eugène Baudouin
- Olga Boznańska
- Marie Bracquemond
- Giovanni Battista Ciolina
- Lovis Corinth
- Eva Gonzalès
- Antoine Guillemet
- Nazmi Ziya Güran
- Dominique Lang
- Max Liebermann
- Konstantin Korovin
- Martín Malharro
- Henry Moret
- Francisco Oller
- Nadežda Petrović
- Władysław Podkowiński
- Valentin Serov
- Max Slevogt
- Joaquín Sorolla
- Philip Wilson Steer
- Eliseu Visconti
- Music
- Literature
- French impressionist cinema
- Amsterdam Impressionism
- Boston School
- California Impressionism
- Decorative Impressionism
- Neo-Impressionism
- Pennsylvania Impressionism
- Post-Impressionism
- Synthetic impressionism
- The Ten
- Wilfrid de Glehn
- The Impressionists (2006 TV series)
- Louis Leroy
- Nadar
- Pays des Impressionnistes
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