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Luminism

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Luminism
The depiction of light in a painting. Any school of painting where the central theme is the depiction of lighting effects, such as pointillism and impressionism.

 


LUMINISM 1850-1870 style of painting characterized by emphasizing light and transparent veils of colored atmosphere in landscapes and seascapes.
(Associated with Hudson River School artists) ...

Luminism or luminism and luminists
luminosity - A quality seen in some paintings of a glow coming from within, the illusion that there is actually a light coming out of the picture.

Levitan-Luminism
Labisse Felix (b Douai, 9 March 1905; d Paris, 27 Jan 1982). French painter, illustrator and stage designer. He was of Flemish and Polish descent and worked in both France and Belgium.

Luminism
Lyon School
Macchiaioli c. 1850s-1900s
Mir iskusstva, founded 1898
Modernism, c. 1860s-ongoing
Naturalism
Nazarene, c. 1810s-1830
Neo-Classicism, c. 1780s-1900s
Neo-impressionism, c. 1880s-1910s
Norwegian romantic nationalism, c.

Luminism was another important movement in American landscape painting related to the Hudson River School. To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ...

Luminism Landscape Painting
Wanderers Art Movement (Russia)
French Impressionism
- Origins and Influences
- Early History
- Impressionist Manet
- Impressionism Monet
- Sisley, Pissarro, Renoir, Degas and Cezanne
- Monet & Pissarro in London ...

In mid-19th-century landscape painting there appeared a new trend, now defined as luminism, an interest in the atmospheric effects of diffused light. Among the luminist painters were John F. Kensett, Martin J. Heade, and Fitz Hugh Lane.

The artists used the effects of light to depict dramatic landscapes, particularly of sunsets and water. This technique became known as Luminism.

The particular use of light effects, to lend an exaggerated drama to such elements as mist and sunsets, developed into a subspecialty known as Luminism.

images of America's wilderness - in the Hudson River Valley and also in the newly opened West. The particular use of light effects, to lend an exaggerated drama to such elements as mist and sunsets, developed into a subspecialty known as Luminism.

Also see aesthetics, chado, cute, harmony, Hudson River School, Impressionism, kitsch, landscape, Luminism, mystery, nature, nice, pain, picturesque, positive, pretty, Realism, Romanticism, and Stendhal syndrome.

Works by artists of this second generation are often described as examples of Luminism, or the Luminist movement in American art. In addition to pursuing their art, many of the artists, including Kensett.

luminism - realistic depiction of light, especially dramatic effects of light in particular places, and on given objects and forms *
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Macabre - gruesome, horrifying or ghastly; representing death's grimmer aspects * ...

See also: Painting, Impression, School, Roman, Realism

Fine arts LowbrowLuminists

 
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