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Impressionism
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Impressionism is a style originating from France of the last third of the 19th and beginning of the 20th centuries, which made from a moment-related, natural impressionism of an object an own-valued content of the artistic embodiment, and which no longer understood the object mainly to be a conveyor of a superior message. The reason for the creation of the word Impressionism was Claude Monet's painting "Impression - soleil levant", which was exhibited in Paris in 1874.
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Cezanne, Paul
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Renoir, Pierre Auguste
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Pissarro, Camille
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Monet, Claude
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Degas, Edgar
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Gauguin, Paul
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Gogh, Vincent Willem van
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Sisley, Alfred
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Seurat, Georges
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Boudin, Eugene
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Peel, Paul
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Percy, Sidney Richard
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Cassatt, Mary
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Toulouse Lautrec, Henri de
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Whistler, James Abbot McNeill
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Corinth, Lovis
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Ziem, Felix
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Manet, Edouard
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Grigorescu, Nicolae
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Normann, Adelsteen
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Kroyer, Peder Severin
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Chase, William Merritt
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Sargent, John Singer
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Sorolla y Bastida, Joaquin
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Steele, Theodore Clement
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Boldini, Giovanni
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DeCamp, Joseph
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Caillebotte, Gustave
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Duveneck, Frank
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Impressionism |
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