| |
| |
This epic documentary does a wonderful
job of recapturing the revolutionary impact the impressionists made
while providing a historical and artistic context for this extraordinary
group of painters. The work of Monet, Degas, Morisot, and their fellow
impressionists has now become so familiar that its power to shock
has all but disappeared.
Young and resolutely modern, these artists threw off the shackles
of academic art to capture everyday life in paintings that were iconoclastic
in both style and subject. At first they struggled to survive because
their work was rejected by the conservative Paris Salon, but those
with independent means helped those without (Monet in particular was
frequently rescued from poverty by his friends), and gradually they
became impossible to ignore. Bruce Alfred's script thoroughly explains
the development of the impressionists' approach to art and reveals
fascinating aspects of their individual personalities, while a combination
of dramatic reconstructions, period photographs, and the paintings
themselves creates a rich and informative visual tapestry. Anyone
with an interest in the history of art will find much to enjoy.
|
|
|