Postimpressionism
Related Category: European Art, 1600 to the Present
term coined by Roger Fry to refer to the work of a number of French painters active at the end of the 19th cent. who, although they developed their varied styles quite independently, were united in their rejection of
impressionism. The foremost of these were
Cézanne,
Van Gogh,
Gauguin,
Matisse,
Picasso, and
Braque. The first major exhibitions of their works were held in London in 191011 and in 1912. The term embraces a far wider school of thought than the neoimpressionism of
Seurat and
Signac. In this more systematic and precise approach, also called divisionism or pointillism, small dabs of pure color on the canvas were meant to be mixed by the eye of the viewer to produce intense color effects.
See studies by J. Rewald (1962) and L. Nochlin (1966).