Impressionism is a painting movement that emerged in 1870s Paris, devoted to capturing the sensation of light, color, and atmosphere in a fleeting moment — rendered through broken brushstrokes and vivid color, in radical departure from the polished realism of the time.
The name came from Claude Monet’s Impression, Sunrise (1872), shown at an independent exhibition in 1874 organized by Monet, Renoir, Degas, Morisot, Pissarro, and Cézanne, among others. The critic Louis Leroy used Monet’s title to mock what he saw as unfinished work — the name stuck.
Everything about how they worked broke from academic tradition. They painted outdoors. They left brushstrokes visible. They built form through color instead of tonal modeling. And they chose everyday subjects — riverbanks, cafés, train stations — over the mythological scenes the Salon rewarded.
It was the first Western movement to push painting beyond narrative and representation, toward sensation and the felt experience of a moment. That shift opened the door for nearly every modern movement that followed.
Impressionism Highlight
Claude Monet, Impression, Sunrise (1872). A hazy view of Le Havre harbor at dawn, painted with loose, sketch-like strokes that barely distinguish water from sky. The small red-orange sun and its reflection do most of the work, anchoring the composition while everything else dissolves into atmosphere.
At the time, this was radical—a painting that prioritized the sensation of a moment over any finished rendering of the scene. A critic used the title to mock what he saw as an unfinished sketch. Monet took it as a compliment.

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