Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841-1919) was, along with Claude Monte and Camille Pissarro, a major French Impressionist whose painting style is archetypically "Impressionistic" in the minds of most viewers. (On the other hand Edgar Degas, although considered one of the original band of French Impressionists, painted in a more traditional style.)
Renoir's wanderings in a not-quite-Impressionist wilderness lasted roughly five years (1883-88). He then picked up where he had left off stylistically.
But not entirely. From time to time he continued to make paintings featuring more sharply defined subjects. And not just commissioned portraits; the final painting below was done for his own purposes in 1896.
Gallery
[Image]Luncheon of the Boating Party - 1880-81
[Image]On the Terrace - 1881
To set the scene are the two paintings above, made not long before he modified his style.
[Image]Les parapluies - ca. 1880-86
As this link notes, Renoir began "The Umbrellas" around 1880-81 and then reworked and completed it about 1885-86. It notes that the right side seems to have been painted first and the left part later. So it is a stylistic hybrid that Renoir was hesitant to sell for several years.
[Image]Children's Afternoon at Wargemont - 1884
[Image]Bather Arranging Her Hair - 1885
[Image]The Large Bathers - 1887
[Image]The Washerwomen - ca. 1888
[Image]La famille de l'artiste - 1896
posted by Donald Pittenger at 1:00 AM on Mar 16, 2015
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