...Heinvariably got them hopelessly muddy in color, despite their resemblingthe color dreams of a young impressionist painter at the start...
Various 「Mother Earth, Vol. 1 No. 3, May 1906」
...Probably the first picture ever painted entirely from the visualor impressionist standpoint...
Harold Speed 「The Practice and Science Of Drawing」
...In the case of the Impressionist the mentalperception is arrived at from the visual impression, and in theolder point of view the visual impression is the result of themental perception...
Harold Speed 「The Practice and Science Of Drawing」
...The ultimate effect ofany picture, be it impressionist, post, anti, or otherwise—isits power to stimulate these mental perceptions within themind...
Harold Speed 「The Practice and Science Of Drawing」
...The Pre-Raphaelite movement in England andthe Impressionist movement in France were the results of thisimpulse...
Harold Speed 「The Practice and Science Of Drawing」
...Dagnan-Bouveret (1852-) isone of these men, a good draughtsman, and a finished clean painter whoby his recent use of high color finds himself occasionally looked uponas an impressionist...
John C. Van Dyke 「A Text-Book of the History of Painting」
... Impressionist School of France...
Dolores Bacon 「Pictures Every Child Should Know」
...He is an impressionist but alsoMonet--an artist with a method entirelydifferent from that of any other...
Dolores Bacon 「Pictures Every Child Should Know」
...The conventions of the impressionists, indeed, are particularly salient...
W. C. Brownell 「French Art」
...The remarkonce made of a typically literal person—that he cared so much for factsthat he disliked to think they had any relations—is intimatelyapplicable to the whole impressionist school...
W. C. Brownell 「French Art」
...And in this sense, I think, a certainsavagery is justly to be ascribed to the impressionist...
W. C. Brownell 「French Art」
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arresting funereal abstractions
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