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  1. Dictionary
    artist's impression

    noun

    • 1. a sketch or drawing of someone or something, produced when no photograph is available.
  2. An artist's impression, artist's conception, artist's interpretation, or artist's rendition is the representation of an object or a scene created by an artist when no other accurate representation is available. It could be an image, a sound, a video or a model.

  3. An artist's impression, artist's interpretation, or artist's rendition is the representation of an object or a scene created by an artist, when no other accurate representation is available. It could be an image, a sound, a video or a model.

  4. artist 's impression (plural artists' impressions) ( art, architecture) A sketch or drawing of someone or something, produced when it is not possible to take a photograph.

  5. Artist's Impression definition: A sketch or drawing of someone or something, produced when it is not possible to take a photograph .

  6. The earliest known use of the noun artist's impression is in the 1880s. OED's earliest evidence for artist's impression is from 1887, in Independent (New York) . artist's impression is formed within English, by compounding.

  7. Jun 18, 2024 · Impressionism, a broad term used to describe the work produced in the late 19th century, especially between about 1867 and 1886, by a group of artists who shared a set of related approaches and techniques. The founding Impressionist artists included Claude Monet, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Camille Pissarro, Alfred Sisley, Edgar Degas, and Berthe ...

  8. Normally, an artist’simpressions” were not meant to be sold, but were meant to be aids for the memory—to take these ideas back to the studio for the masterpiece on canvas. The critics thought it was absurd to sell paintings that looked like slap-dash impressions and to present these paintings as finished works.

  9. Dec 18, 2018 · Impressionist art is a style of painting that emerged in the mid-to-late 1800s and emphasizes an artist's immediate impression of a moment or scene, usually communicated through the use of light and its reflection, short brushstrokes, and separation of colors.

  10. The Impressionists painters, such as Monet, Renoir, and Degas, created a new way of painting by using loose, quick brushwork and light colors to show how thing appeared to the artists at a particular moment: an "impression" of what they were seeing and feeling.

  11. Though he never participated in any of their eight exhibitions, Manet's bold style and modern subjects inspired these younger artists, who came to be known as impressionists. The name is usually attributed to a disparaging critic who seized on the title of Claude Monet's Impression, Sunrise. Accustomed to the more polished works of the Salon ...