19th and 20th entury Art - Bristol Museum and Art Gallery
The paintings in this post show how French artists broke with academic tradition and found new ways to paint nature and the modern human-made world around them.
The Impressionists were reacting to a changed, industrialised and increasingly globalised era, which was chronicled by writers such as Charles Baudelaine and Emile Zola, and round a radically different aesthetic and scientific approach to depict the visible world. They were interested in the role of light, its changing qualities and the part the human eye plays in the perception of colour. They painted outdoors using brighter colours and visible brushstrokes to capture movement. They also used cropped compositions, which illustrate the influence of photography and the new experience of Japanese prints in Europe.
The British paintings in this post show the lasting international influence of French 19th century art and how artists adopted the radical changes in style and subject matter in their own work.
Lucien Pissarro, The Turkeys, 1893, (oil on canvas)
The recreation of the dappled light shows the artist's interest in (Neo-) Impressionist techniques and their views of the roles of light and the human eye. Lucien Pissarro was taught to paint by his father, Camille Pissarro, and both artists were interested in Seurat's theory of the optical mixing of colour. Here, the brushstrokes keep each colour separate, achieving a vibrant effect in the lush foliage.
Lucien Pissarro, La Frette, 1924, (oil on canvas)
Edouard Vuillard, Interior with Madame Hessel and her Dog, 1910, (oil on cardboard on panel)
Vuillard's harmonious colour scheme was achieved by his choice of materials. The picture was painted directly onto unprimed cardboard, its warm mid-tone often left untouched by any pigment. The surface of the cardboard is visible in all areas of the painting, particularly in the sofa and floor.

Eva Gonzales, The Donkey Ride, 1880, (oil on canvas)
Here, Gonzales chose a scene of contemporary life, but deliberately made a narrative reading of this painting impossible. After Gonzales' sudden death aged thirty four, the unfinished painting was found in the artist's studio. The area around the man's jacket is unresolved. Donkey Ride is the only work by Gonzales, who is one of a number of female Impressionists, in a public collection in the UK.

Stanhope Alexander Forbes, Beach Scene, St Ives, 1886, (oil on canvas)
The influence of Forbes' time in Paris can be seen here in his practice of painting outdoors (en plein air), his focus on modern life and the daring composition, which was influenced by Japanese art and contemporary photography.

Alfred Sisley, The Entrance to the Village, 1870, (oil on canvas)
Sisley was born in Paris of English parents and lived in France all his life.
Edward Lear, The Mouuntains of Thermopylae, 1852, (oil on canvas)
The intense colours Lear used show the influence of the Pre-Raphaelites.
looking closerEdward Lear, The Tiber near the Ponte Molle, Rome, 1878, (oil on canvas)
William Janes Muller, The Carpet Bazaar, Cairo, 1843, (oil on canvas)Jean Marchand, The Aspidistra, 1912, (oil on canvas)
The Aspidistra is a still life, interior and city scape all in one. The leaves of the pot plant seem to sway rythmically, while the folds of the curtain have a solid, sculpted appearance. The rooftops outside are heavy geometric blocks of colour and form.
Winifred Bourne Medway, Portrait of Miss Annie Kenney, 1910, (oil on canvas)
Annie Kenney was a Suffragette and member of the Women's Social and Political Union, a militant wing of the women's suffrage campaign, led by Emmelline Pankhurst.
Kenney worked in a cotton mill from the age of 10. After hearing Christabel Pankhurst speak she led women factory workers in the campaign in Lancashire. Between 1907 and 1911 she was based in Bristol leading the South West branch of the WSPU. She was arrested 13 times and endured force-feeding, which possibly shortened her life. When she recalled the day women won the vote in 1918, she said 'though I had no money I had reaped a rich harvest of joy, laughter, romance, companionship and experience that no money can buy'.
Medway and her sisters grew up in Bristol and were also involved in the campaign. Medway's portrait shows Kenney five years into her activism.
Laura Knight, Epsom Downs, 1936, (oil on canvas)
'Even today [1965] a female artist is considered more or less a freak and may be undervalued or overpraised by sole virtue of her rarity and her sex'. Laura Knight.Knight borrowed a Rolls Royce to travel to Epsom where she painted these Romani fortune-tellers in the fairground by the racecourse.
Knight was taught to draw by her mother before entering Nottingham School of Art, aged 13. She and her husband lived in Newlyn from 1907 to 1919 where they knew Dod Procter and Stanhope Forbes. Sometimes seen as part of the art establishment, Knight was the first woman to become a member of the Royal Academy since Angelica Kauffman in 1768. She often chose marginalised people for her subjects: dancers, the Black patients and nurses in a racially-segregated hospital in 1920s Baltimore, women munitions workers, and travellers at Epsom, which had had a Roma community from the 16th century.
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Dod Procter, Winter Scene from the Artist's House, (oil on canvas)
'Dod' Procter was born Doris Margaret Shaw in Hampstead. She attended Stanhope Forbes' school in Cornwall aged 15 when her family moved to Newlyn. She was considered the most talented student and she travelled to France, meeting Cezanne and Renoir. Procter experimented early on with the geometric pre-Cubist style of Cezanne and this undated wintery view is possibly a later work from whe had settled in Zennor. Procter was friends with Laura Knight, Alfred Munnings and Alethea Garstin.
Henry Scott Tuke, Boys Bathing, 1898, (oil on canvas)Tuke felt that painting outdoors was the best way to capture 'the truth and beauty of flesh in sunlight by the sea'.
Harry Watson, Holidays, 1920, (oil on canvas)