[Redbook10:67][19910512:1718ff]{Modern Art [continued (12)]}[Extracts from source text with ms notes][12th May 1991]
19910512.1718
[continued]
‘Though the figurative aims of Impressionism can be regarded as the conclusion of 19th-century realism,* the method, which openly displayed the intrinsic means of painting, was an original one. Brushstrokes carried their chromatic message without naturalistic disguise; they pretended to be nothing but dashes of paint.** It was in this respect and in the all-embracing unity*** of colour**** and handling that resulted, rather than in its realism,# that Impressionism founded the new tradition of modern art. Other qualities that emerged in the 1860's had no immediate sequels in Impressionism.’#*
#**
*(See E[ncyclopaedia of ]V[isual] A[rt] 5)
**{R~?}
***C
****{R~}
#{S~}
#*(eg blank backgrounds)
#* – ibid [(Encyclopaedia Britannica 25:367)]
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