Post-impressionism
0 sources
Post-impressionism
Summary
Post-impressionism is an art movement[1]. Post-impressionism ranks in the top 7% of art_movement entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (2,661 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Post-impressionism's instance of is recorded as art movement[3].
- Post-impressionism followed Impressionism[4].
- Post-impressionism's Commons category is recorded as Post-Impressionism[5].
- Post-impressionism is the opposite of Impressionism[6].
- Post-impressionism began on 1886[7].
- Post-impressionism ended on 1905[8].
- Post-impressionism's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Post-Impressionism[9].
- Post-impressionism's Commons gallery is recorded as Post-impressionnisme[10].
- Post-impressionism's topic has template is recorded as Template:Post-Impressionism[11].
- Post-impressionism's native label is recorded as {'lang': 'fr', 'text': 'postimpressionnisme'}[12].
- Post-impressionism's significant person is recorded as Paul Gauguin[13].
- Post-impressionism's significant person is recorded as Vincent van Gogh[14].
- Post-impressionism's on focus list of Wikimedia project is recorded as Art+Feminism[15].
- Post-impressionism's on focus list of Wikimedia project is recorded as Wikipedia:Vital articles/Level/4[16].
Body
Definition and Type
Post-impressionism's instance of is recorded as art movement[3]. Post-impressionism is the opposite of Impressionism[6].
Why It Matters
Post-impressionism ranks in the top 7% of art_movement entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (2,661 views/month).[2] Post-impressionism has Wikipedia articles in 29 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[17] Post-impressionism is known by 64 alternative names across languages and contexts.[18]
Post-impressionism has been cited as an influence by Albert Gleizes[19], a painter[20], 1881–1953[21], of France[22], specialised in visual arts[23]; abstract impressionism[24], an art movement[25], founded in 1950[26]; Frank Bramley[27], a painter[28], 1857–1915[29], of United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland[30]; and Ernest Procter[31], a painter[32], 1886–1935[33], of United Kingdom[34].
FAQs
Who did Post-impressionism influence?
Post-impressionism has been cited as an influence by Albert Gleizes[19], abstract impressionism[24], Frank Bramley[27], and Ernest Procter[31].