6 books
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1 voter
Impressionism Books
Showing 1-50 of 214

by (shelved 19 times as impressionism)
avg rating 3.58 — 35,345 ratings — published 2010

by (shelved 16 times as impressionism)
avg rating 3.85 — 14,519 ratings — published 2006

by (shelved 15 times as impressionism)
avg rating 3.72 — 8,340 ratings — published 2007

by (shelved 12 times as impressionism)
avg rating 3.85 — 5,781 ratings — published 2010

by (shelved 9 times as impressionism)
avg rating 3.98 — 2,861 ratings — published 2006

by (shelved 6 times as impressionism)
avg rating 4.35 — 347 ratings — published 1992

by (shelved 5 times as impressionism)
avg rating 4.16 — 190 ratings — published 1988

by (shelved 5 times as impressionism)
avg rating 3.61 — 36,240 ratings — published 2012

by (shelved 4 times as impressionism)
avg rating 4.19 — 3,626 ratings — published 1985

by (shelved 4 times as impressionism)
avg rating 3.74 — 2,232 ratings — published 2001

by (shelved 4 times as impressionism)
avg rating 4.06 — 804 ratings — published 1958

by (shelved 3 times as impressionism)
avg rating 4.14 — 1,103 ratings — published

by (shelved 3 times as impressionism)
avg rating 4.05 — 1,935 ratings — published 2016

by (shelved 3 times as impressionism)
avg rating 4.41 — 893 ratings — published 1996

by (shelved 3 times as impressionism)
avg rating 3.80 — 33,964 ratings — published 2012

by (shelved 3 times as impressionism)
avg rating 3.98 — 5,296 ratings — published

by (shelved 3 times as impressionism)
avg rating 3.78 — 346,697 ratings — published 1923

by (shelved 3 times as impressionism)
avg rating 3.72 — 2,380 ratings — published 2009

by (shelved 3 times as impressionism)
avg rating 3.76 — 1,171 ratings — published 2004

by (shelved 3 times as impressionism)
avg rating 4.07 — 641 ratings — published 1984

by (shelved 2 times as impressionism)
avg rating 4.17 — 528 ratings — published 2003

by (shelved 2 times as impressionism)
avg rating 3.84 — 183 ratings — published 2012

by (shelved 2 times as impressionism)
avg rating 3.98 — 6,822 ratings — published 2006

by (shelved 2 times as impressionism)
avg rating 3.61 — 802 ratings — published 2005

by (shelved 2 times as impressionism)
avg rating 3.77 — 1,197 ratings — published 2005

by (shelved 2 times as impressionism)
avg rating 4.27 — 31,218 ratings — published 1934

by (shelved 2 times as impressionism)
avg rating 3.50 — 2 ratings — published 2002

by (shelved 2 times as impressionism)
avg rating 4.09 — 770 ratings — published 1985

by (shelved 2 times as impressionism)
avg rating 4.05 — 697 ratings — published 2011

by (shelved 2 times as impressionism)
avg rating 3.67 — 76 ratings — published 2005

by (shelved 1 time as impressionism)
avg rating 4.18 — 30,221 ratings — published 2011

by (shelved 1 time as impressionism)
avg rating 3.98 — 150 ratings — published

by (shelved 1 time as impressionism)
avg rating 3.92 — 52 ratings — published 1992

by (shelved 1 time as impressionism)
avg rating 4.36 — 56 ratings — published 2015

by (shelved 1 time as impressionism)
avg rating 3.67 — 9 ratings — published 1966

by (shelved 1 time as impressionism)
avg rating 4.08 — 146 ratings — published

by (shelved 1 time as impressionism)
avg rating 3.22 — 1,370 ratings — published 2025

by (shelved 1 time as impressionism)
avg rating 4.44 — 27 ratings — published

by (shelved 1 time as impressionism)
avg rating 4.31 — 26 ratings — published

by (shelved 1 time as impressionism)
avg rating 4.00 — 2 ratings — published

by (shelved 1 time as impressionism)
avg rating 4.36 — 540 ratings — published 2024

by (shelved 1 time as impressionism)
avg rating 3.43 — 549,423 ratings — published 1899

by (shelved 1 time as impressionism)
avg rating 4.15 — 98 ratings — published

by (shelved 1 time as impressionism)
avg rating 4.09 — 108,887 ratings — published 1914

by (shelved 1 time as impressionism)
avg rating 3.93 — 1,948 ratings — published 2016

by (shelved 1 time as impressionism)
avg rating 3.76 — 79 ratings — published 1903

by (shelved 1 time as impressionism)
avg rating 3.97 — 37 ratings — published 1987

by (shelved 1 time as impressionism)
avg rating 3.76 — 441 ratings — published 2021

by (shelved 1 time as impressionism)
avg rating 4.27 — 11,592 ratings — published 1920

by (shelved 1 time as impressionism)
avg rating 4.32 — 135 ratings — published

“With these innovations, however, the succession of reductions employed by the impressionist method is by no means exhausted. The very colours which impressionism uses alter and distort those of our everyday experience. We think, for example, of a piece of ‘white’ paper as white in every lighting, despite the coloured reflexes which it shows in ordinary daylight. In other words: the ‘remembered colour’ which we associate with an object, and which is the result of long experience and habit, displaces the concrete impression gained from immediate perception; impressionism now goes back behind the remembered, theoretically established colour to the real sensation, which is, incidentally, in no sense a spontaneous act, but represents a supremely artificial and extremely complicated psychological process.”
― The Social History of Art: Volume 4: Naturalism, Impressionism, The Film Age
― The Social History of Art: Volume 4: Naturalism, Impressionism, The Film Age

“The most striking phenomenon connected with the progress of technology is the development of cultural centres into large cities in the modern sense; these form the soil in which the new art is rooted. Impressionism is an urban art, and not only because it discovers the landscape quality of the city and brings painting back from the country into the town, but because it sees the world through the eyes of the townsman and reacts to external impressions with the overstrained nerves of modern technical man. It is an urban style, because it describes the changeability, the nervous rhythm, the sudden, sharp but always ephemeral impressions of city life. And precisely as such, it implies an enormous expansion of sensual perception, a new sharpening of sensibility, a new irritability, and, with the Gothic and romanticism, it signifies one of the most important turning points in the history of Western art. In the dialectical process represented by the history of painting, the alternation of the static and the dynamic, of design and colour, abstract order and organic life, impressionism forms the climax of the development in which recognition is given to the dynamic and organic elements of experience and which completely dissolves the static world-view of the Middle Ages. A continuous line can be traced from the Gothic to impressionism comparable to the line leading from late medieval economy to high capitalism, and modern man, who regards his whole existence as a struggle and a competition, who translates all being into motion and change, for whom experience of the world increasingly becomes experience of time, is the product of this bilateral, but fundamentally uniform development.”
― The Social History of Art: Volume 4: Naturalism, Impressionism, The Film Age
― The Social History of Art: Volume 4: Naturalism, Impressionism, The Film Age