Realism
Realism is the section of painting that focuses on depicting a visually accurate image. Realist painters attempted to capture exactly what they saw in real life, rather than creating an idealized version like the classical artists of the Renaissance did.
Most early realistic paintings were portraits and landscapes (used for recording the appearance of nature) but later was expanded into the other areas of painting such as representation of homes, work and natural settings. To convey a sense of realism in their paintings, Realist painters often used color blending, perspective harmony and tone gradation to create the illusion that a viewer is actually looking at real life objects that are three-dimensional (3D). The correct depiction of volume was of high important and used techniques like shading to create the illusion of volume. Realist painters also often used chiaroscuro (contrast between light and dark) in their paintings to create focus on certain objects and isolate them from others.
Realism first appeared during the mid-19th Century as artists attempted to depict what they saw in the world around them. This was in contrast to the highly idealized images of the Renaissance and Baroque period and can be considered a part of Romanticism. During Realism, there was also an emphasis on individual experience rather than concepts like those based on religion or mythology, which Medieval and Early Renaissance artworks had used (this is referred to as a secularization of art). Realist painters are also called Naturalists, but Realism is more specific than that term. Realism became the dominant form of Western painting during the mid-to-late 19th century and was characterized by themes of everyday life. This contrasted with other movements at that time which were either formalist or romanticist. The realistic painters of the 19th century wanted to capture scenes as faithfully as possible, so that they could be used by other people to make a mental picture of common life in Europe and America. They especially focused on rural (countryside) and working class life which was generally ignored by Romantic artist. Many realist painter slike Gustave Courbet and Jean-François Millet painted scenes of farmers in the countryside, while Thomas Eakins and Édouard Manet depicted scenes of life in big cities. Realism can be seen as part of a desire towards naturalism that occurred during the Industrial Revolution. The industrial revolution turned rural living into an urban environment. This forced many peasants and small-town people into the cities, while also giving city workers more time to leisurely contemplate life.
Realist painters wished to be as accurate as possible in their portrayal of different scenes in life and used detailed observation of nature to achieve this. Realist artists of the mid-19th Century commented on what they saw and experienced in everyday life. They were known as "The Eye" painters because they wanted to show people things that they had never noticed before. Their efforts resulted in new ideas regarding composition, form and technique that have become the foundation of modern art.
Camille Corot, 1840 - Landscape with Pollard Willows - fine art print
Theodor von Hörmann, 1892 - Bildstöckl, Lund Burg - fine art print
August Strindberg, 1892 - Stormy Sea. Broom Buoy - fine art print
Johann Nepomuk Ender, 1842 - Two girls in a landscape - fine art print
Friedrich Alois Schönn - Hard flagging - fine art print
Jean-Baptiste Camille Corot, 1845 - Mrs. Legois - fine art print
Camille Corot, 1869 - A Woman Reading - fine art print
Camille Corot, 1870 - A Lane through the Trees - fine art print
Johann Peter Krafft, 1801 - Portrait of a young man - fine art print
Henri Fantin-Latour, 1858 - Self-Portrait - fine art print
Johann Peter Krafft, 1809 - Helmet and buckler - fine art print
Joseph Hasslwander - Madonnenkopf - fine art print
Thomas Eakins, 1898 - General E. Burd Grubb (1841-1914) - fine art print
Remigius Adrianus van Haanen, 1875 - Eichenwald - fine art print
Henri Fantin-Latour, 1882 - Madame Lerolle - fine art print
Josef Lauer, 1839 - Blumenstillleben - fine art print
Robert Henri, 1916 - Betalo Rubino, Dramatic Dancer - fine art print
Johann Peter Krafft, 1834 - Marie Krafft at the desk - fine art print
Peter Fendi, 1829 - Girl before the lottery vault - fine art print
Joseph Hasslwander - Boy with cat in the garden - fine art print
Zygmunt von Ajdukiewicz, 1896 - Minister Dr. Rottner - fine art print
Albert Besnard, 1896 - Self Portrait - fine art print
Jean-François Millet, 1855 - Man with Wheelbarrow - fine art print
Franz Schrotzberg, 1850 - The Artist's Mother - fine art print
Robert Henri, 1908 - Mr. George Cotton Smith - fine art print
Georg Koberwein, 1850 - Self-portrait - fine art print
George Benjamin Luks, 1906 - The Wrestlers - fine art print
Camille Corot, 1860 - Girl Weaving a Garland - fine art print
Pieter Gerardus van Os, 1818 - The Canal at ’s-Graveland - fine art print
Gustave Courbet, 1860 - Portrait of a Woman: Juliette Courbet - fine art print
Christen Dalsgaard - A timber-long at Krabbesholm - fine art print
Édouard Manet, 1863 - Portrait of Madame Brunet - fine art print
Eugène Fromentin, 1864 - The Arab Falconer - fine art print
August von Pettenkofen, 1840 - Madonna - fine art print
Honoré Daumier - Water Carrier (The Water Carrier) - fine art print
Édouard Manet, 1882 - Portrait of Julien Blackrock - fine art print
Édouard Manet, 1868 - At the Prado (Prado Au) - fine art print
Josef Matthäus Aigner, 1863 - Self-portrait - fine art print
Carl Probst, 1879 - The Minister Leopold Ritter Hasner of Artha - fine art print
Albert Gottschalk - Market at Stege Torv - fine art print
Thomas Eakins, 1869 - Carmelita Requena - fine art print
Gustave Courbet, 1861 - Charles Switzerland - fine art print
