Beyond Impressionism

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Day 07

Beyond Impressionism: The Bridge to Modernism

Beyond Impressionism: The Bridge to Modernism

This context section is your companion for the exhibition Impressionism and Beyond: Masterpieces from the Detroit Institute of Arts — a guide built so you can savor its central story all day long, right in front of the paintings: namely, how art crossed over from Impressionism into Modernism. The show is laid out in seven sections: (1) Realism, exemplified by Courbet, just before Impressionism; (2) Impressionism, where Renoir and Degas chased light and the fleeting moment; (3) Post-Impressionism, represented by van Gogh's emotion and Cézanne's sense of point of view; (4) Symbolism; (5) Fauvism, Matisse's liberation of color; (6) Cubism, Picasso's dismantling of form; and (7) the Expressionism of Beckmann and Kokoschka, the École de Paris of Modigliani, and Kandinsky's leap into abstraction. At the hinge of this whole arc stands Cézanne. He analyzed form with his famous instruction to treat nature in terms of the cylinder, the sphere, and the cone — an analysis that led straight into Cubism and on to Kandinsky's non-objective painting. As you cross this bridge, this section points out what to look for in front of the actual works — the brushstrokes, the thickness of the paint, the sheen and cracks on the surface. Factual accuracy comes first here, and wherever sources disagree on a detail or it is simply better checked on the spot, you'll find a note flagged right there in the text.

What the Title 'Beyond Impressionism' Means, and a Map of the Seven Sections

In the original English title, Impressionism and Beyond, the key word is Beyond. Impressionism began with the first group exhibition of 1874, capturing impressions of light, atmosphere, and the passing moment in quick brushwork — but that was not an end point, it was a starting point. This exhibition arranges 52 masterpieces from the Detroit Institute of Arts (DIA) across seven sections, showing some sixty years of change as a single continuous thread: Realism (Courbet) → Impressionism (Renoir, Degas) → Post-Impressionism (van Gogh, Cézanne) → Symbolism → Fauvism (Matisse) → Cubism (Picasso) → Expressionism and the École de Paris (Beckmann, Kokoschka, Modigliani) and abstraction (Kandinsky). The single most important thing to watch for as you walk through is how the center of gravity shifts from representation to expression, and then to abstraction. Up through Impressionism, the question was how to render the visible world; from Post-Impressionism onward, it is the painter's emotion, structure, and point of view that take command of the canvas. In Fauvism, color breaks free from the local color of objects; in Cubism, form is broken apart into multiple viewpoints; in Expressionism, the figure is distorted in the service of inner turmoil. At the very end stands Kandinsky's Study for Painting with White Form (1913), where the recognizable subject finally disappears. In short, this exhibition compresses the birth of Modernism into a single museum's collection — a walking textbook of art history. (The scale of 52 works across 7 sections follows the exhibition's official information; the number of works per section can be confirmed from the gallery labels.)


The Four Branches of Post-Impressionism, and Cézanne as the 'Hinge'

Post-Impressionism is the umbrella term for several paths that branched off in the late 1880s as a reaction against Impressionism's capturing of the fleeting moment. First, van Gogh used color and brushwork as a language of emotion — thickly squeezed impasto and swirling strokes that carve feeling directly into the canvas. The DIA's Bank of the Oise at Auvers (July 1890, accession 70.159, oil on canvas, 73.3 × 93.6 cm) was painted at Auvers-sur-Oise, where he spent the last few weeks before his death; the riverside scene teems with short, rhythmic strokes. Second, Cézanne explored point of view and solid structure — he urged painters to treat nature in terms of the cylinder, the sphere, and the cone, and he returned to the same motif (Mont Sainte-Victoire) throughout his life, drilling down toward the essence of form. The DIA holds both Cézanne's Mont Sainte-Victoire (1904–06, oil on canvas, approx. 60 × 72 cm, accession 70.161, credit line Bequest of Robert H. Tannahill) and his Bathers/Baigneuses (c. 1879–80, accession 70.162) — both part of the 1970 Tannahill bequest. Third, Seurat systematized optical color mixing into a scientific method with Pointillism (his famous A Sunday on La Grande Jatte belongs to the Art Institute of Chicago and is not in this show; it is used here only as a context image to explain Pointillism). Fourth, Gauguin moved toward flat planes of color and symbolism. Of these four branches, Cézanne is called the hinge because his geometric analysis of form fed directly into the Cubism of Picasso and Braque after 1907, and from there into Kandinsky's abstraction, which liberated form completely. Standing before a Cézanne, look for the traces of contours redrawn again and again (the marks of repeated reconsideration), the constructive stroke in which planes of color interlock to build space, and the unpainted white canvas ground showing through between the planes — his unfinished synthesis.


Fauvism, Cubism, Expressionism — Liberating Color, Form, and Emotion

The door that Post-Impressionism opened was pushed wide by three movements at once. Fauvism (from 1905) was led by Matisse. The name fauves (wild beasts) stuck after the 1905 Salon d'Automne, when the critic Louis Vauxcelles, seeing a classical-style sculpture set amid blazing pure colors, jeered that it was like a Donatello among the wild beasts. The point is the liberation of color — color no longer follows the local color of objects but is applied freely, in the service of the canvas's mood and composition. The DIA has the distinction of being, in 1922, the first American museum to buy a painting by Matisse: The Window (painted 1916, purchased 1922, credit line 'City of Detroit Purchase') — don't confuse the creation date of 1916 with the purchase date of 1922. Cubism (from 1907) saw Picasso and Braque push Cézanne's analysis of form to its extreme, viewing a single object from multiple viewpoints at once and breaking it into facets to be reassembled — the moment the single-vanishing-point perspective of the Renaissance collapses. Expressionism arose powerfully in the German-speaking world, where Max Beckmann (1884–1950) and Oskar Kokoschka (1886–1980) distorted the figure to pour out the spirit of an age of war and anxiety. Within the École de Paris, Modigliani (Amedeo Modigliani, 1884–1920) created a signature style of elongated necks and almond-shaped eyes. And in Kandinsky's (Wassily Kandinsky, 1866–1944) Study for Painting with White Form (1913), the recognizable subject all but vanishes and abstraction arrives. Many of the works in this section are by artists still under copyright (Picasso d. 1973, Matisse d. 1954, Kandinsky d. 1944, Beckmann d. 1950, Kokoschka d. 1980, Modigliani d. 1920), so this guide includes no images of them and provides only links to the museum's pages.


Helpful Things to Know When Looking at This Guide's Images and Captions

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The images included in this guide are limited entirely to works clearly in the public domain (artists long enough deceased), and works by artists who may still be under copyright were excluded from the start. For all five images, the file, the license (2D PD-Art), and the holding institution were verified on the publicly available Wikimedia Commons. That said, two of them are for context only and are not in this exhibition, as the captions make clear. (a) Courbet's A Burial at Ornans (1849–50) belongs to the Musée d'Orsay in Paris (accession RF 325) and serves as a context image showing what Realism is (Courbet d. 1877, PD). (b) Seurat's A Sunday on La Grande Jatte (1884–86) belongs to the Art Institute of Chicago (1926.224) and serves as a context image for explaining Pointillism (Seurat d. 1891, PD). By contrast, Renoir's The White Pierrot (1901–02, DIA 70.178), van Gogh's Bank of the Oise at Auvers (DIA 70.159), and Cézanne's Mont Sainte-Victoire (DIA 70.161) and Bathers (DIA 70.162) are all PD works genuinely held by the DIA, consistent with the actual context of this exhibition (though 'held by the DIA' does not by itself guarantee inclusion among these 52 works, so it is safest to confirm final inclusion at the gallery). The model for Renoir's The White Pierrot is recorded differently across sources — the DIA and some catalogues give the youngest son, Claude ('Coco'), while the Commons category and some sources give the second son, Jean Renoir. In front of the actual paintings, see for yourself that Renoir's white is not a single white but several whites — bluish gray, pale pink, and ivory layered together; that van Gogh's riverbank has both raised impasto and thin passages where the canvas weave shows through; and that Cézanne's surface holds contours redrawn many times and a white ground peeking between the planes.

At a Glance

Venue: Sejong Museum of Art, Galleries 1 and 2, Sejong Center, Seoul (175 Sejong-daero, Jongno-gu, Seoul).
Dates: May 28 (Thu) – Aug 23 (Sun), 2026.
Hours: 10:00–19:00 (last entry 18:00).
Admission: Adults 23,000 won / Youth 19,000 won / Children 16,000 won; free for under 36 months; open to all ages.
Inquiries: The Korea Economic Daily, 02-360-4525.
Scale: 52 masterpieces from the DIA, in 7 sections (the number of works per section can be confirmed from the gallery labels).
Tour information: The same 52-work touring exhibition was held at the Museo dell'Ara Pacis in Rome through May 3, 2026, before moving to Seoul.
Route tip: Viewing in the order Realism → Impressionism → Post-Impressionism (Cézanne, the 'hinge') → Symbolism → Fauvism → Cubism → Expressionism / abstraction lets you cross the bridges of art history one by one.
Viewing tip: In front of a Cézanne, look at the contours redrawn several times and the white ground between the planes; in front of a van Gogh, observe the thickness of the impasto and the direction of the brush marks at an angle (raking light).
Before you go: Closing days, docent and audio-guide schedules, and the rules on photography and re-entry may change with operations, so it's best to check the official channels of the Sejong Center and the organizers (ticketing via NOL and Interpark) in advance.

Timeline

1849-50 Courbet, A Burial at Ornans (Orsay, RF 325) — Realism shocks the art world by painting an ordinary country funeral on the enormous scale of a history painting.
1874 The first Impressionist group exhibition (Paris). Monet, Renoir, Degas, Cézanne, and others take part. The name 'Impressionism' comes from a critique of Monet's Impression, Sunrise.
1884-86 Seurat, A Sunday on La Grande Jatte (Chicago, 1926.224) — systematizing optical color mixing through Pointillism.
1886 Van Gogh, Vase with Carnations — his Paris period, with a brightened palette. Whether it is held by the DIA and its exact date vary across sources, so they can be confirmed in the museum's official information.
1887 Van Gogh, Self-Portrait with Straw Hat (DIA accession 22.13) — the van Gogh work the DIA bought in 1922, the first by any American museum.
1890 Van Gogh painted Bank of the Oise at Auvers (DIA 70.159) and died that July — the peak of the emotion-and-impasto branch.
1901-02 Renoir, The White Pierrot (DIA 70.178) — the soft tones of late Renoir and its 'several whites.'
1904-06 Cézanne, Mont Sainte-Victoire (DIA 70.161) — a motif he repeated all his life, probing the essence of form. Cézanne died in 1906.
1905 At the Salon d'Automne, the blazing pure colors of Matisse and others earn the nickname 'fauves,' and Fauvism is born.
1907 Picasso, Les Demoiselles d'Avignon — the threshold of Cubism. Cézanne's analysis of form leads on to the dismantling of form.
1910 Roger Fry mounts the London exhibition 'Manet and the Post-Impressionists' — the birth of the term 'Post-Impressionism.'
1913 Kandinsky, Study for Painting with White Form (DIA collection) — the arrival of abstraction, in which the recognizable subject all but disappears.
1916 / 1922 Matisse painted The Window (1916). In 1922 the DIA became the first American museum to buy a Matisse painting ('City of Detroit Purchase') along with a van Gogh self-portrait.
1970 The Bequest of Robert Hudson Tannahill greatly strengthens the DIA's modern collection — Cézanne, van Gogh, Gauguin, Degas, Seurat, Matisse, Picasso, and more (70.159, 70.161, 70.162, 70.178, etc.).

Glossary

RealismA movement led by Courbet and others in 1840s–50s France. Instead of myth and history, it depicts ordinary contemporary reality just as it is.
ImpressionismFirst group exhibition in 1874. It captures impressions of light, atmosphere, and the passing moment in quick brushwork and bright color, painted outdoors (en plein air).
Post-ImpressionismFrom the late 1880s, an umbrella for several branches that went beyond Impressionism's capturing of the moment to pursue emotion, structure, and symbol (van Gogh, Cézanne, Seurat, Gauguin). Named by Roger Fry in 1910.
Pointillism / Neo-ImpressionismA technique used by Seurat and Signac. Dots of pure color are placed side by side so the colors mix in the viewer's eye — optical mixing (divisionism).
ImpastoA technique of applying paint thickly, leaving three-dimensional texture and the marks of brush or knife on the surface. Van Gogh is the prime example; under raking light, the thickness and direction stand out clearly.
Constructive strokeCézanne's brushwork in small, flat units of color plane. Instead of shimmering light, planes are stacked like bricks to build the architectural structure of the picture. The direct source of Cubism's faceting of form.
SymbolismA late-19th-century tendency to express dream, idea, and emotion — rather than external reality — through suggestive forms and colors (Odilon Redon, Puvis de Chavannes).
FauvismCentered on Matisse around 1905. The 'liberation of color' — breaking free from the local color of objects to use intense pure colors freely.
CubismPicasso and Braque around 1907. A single object is viewed from multiple viewpoints and broken into facets, then reassembled. The dismantling of single-point perspective.
ExpressionismExaggerating and distorting form and color in the service of inner emotion and anxiety. It arose powerfully in the German-speaking world (Beckmann, Kokoschka).
École de ParisA loose label for the group of foreign-born painters who gathered in Paris in the early 20th century (Modigliani, Chagall, Soutine, and others).
AbstractionGiving up the representation of recognizable subjects and composing the picture with color, form, and line themselves. Pioneered by Kandinsky.
CraquelureThe fine network of cracks that forms as a paint layer ages and dries. Observable by viewing the surface of an actual work at an angle.

Key Points

  • The exhibition's original English title is 'Impressionism and Beyond: Masterpieces from the Detroit Institute of Arts' — the key is the transition Beyond Impressionism.
  • Scale: 52 masterpieces from the DIA, in 7 sections (Realism → Impressionism → Post-Impressionism → Symbolism → Fauvism → Cubism → Expressionism / École de Paris / abstraction).
  • Cézanne is the hinge: his geometric analysis of form ('the cylinder, the sphere, the cone') leads into Cubism, and on to Kandinsky's abstraction (1913).
  • Post-Impressionism is not a single movement but an umbrella for four branches — van Gogh (emotion), Cézanne (structure and point of view), Seurat (Pointillism), and Gauguin (symbolism and flatness).
  • Fauvism = the liberation of color (Matisse); Cubism = the dismantling of form (Picasso and Braque, the collapse of single-point perspective); Expressionism = the distortion of the figure for the sake of emotion (Beckmann, Kokoschka).
  • In 1922 the DIA became the first American museum to buy works by van Gogh (Self-Portrait with Straw Hat, 1887, accession 22.13) and Matisse (The Window, painted 1916 / purchased 1922, 'City of Detroit Purchase'), and the 1970 Bequest of Robert H. Tannahill greatly strengthened its modern collection.
  • Only PD works are used as images. Artists still under copyright (Picasso, Matisse, Kandinsky, Beckmann, Kokoschka, Modigliani) are presented without images, with only museum links.
  • Caption caution: Courbet's A Burial at Ornans (Orsay, RF 325) and Seurat's A Sunday on La Grande Jatte (Chicago, 1926.224) are context images, not works in this exhibition.
  • All five images are public-domain works whose file, license (2D PD-Art), and holding institution were verified on the publicly available Wikimedia Commons.
The name 'fauves' (wild beasts) stuck after the 1905 Salon d'Automne, when the critic Louis Vauxcelles, seeing a classical-style sculpture set amid blazing colors, jeered that it was like a Donatello among the wild beasts — a piece of criticism that became the name of a movement.
Cézanne urged painters to treat nature in terms of the cylinder, the sphere, and the cone, and that single remark became the seed of Cubism. Picasso is said to have called Cézanne 'the father of us all.'
In 1922 the DIA became the first American museum to bring works by both van Gogh and Matisse into its collection in the same year. Van Gogh's Self-Portrait with Straw Hat is said to have been acquired for around $4,200, though the exact sum and circumstances are told a little differently across sources.
Van Gogh's Bank of the Oise at Auvers (DIA 70.159) belongs to the group of works he painted at Auvers-sur-Oise during the last few weeks before his death.
Before coming to Seoul, this exhibition toured to the Museo dell'Ara Pacis in Rome with the same 52-work selection.
During Detroit's 2013 bankruptcy crisis, the 'Grand Bargain' (about $820 million in total: $100 million from the museum, $330 million from foundations, $350 million from the State of Michigan) spared the collection from being sold off and converted it to nonprofit ownership.
Sources (22)
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