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  1. Barbizon school, mid-19th-century French school of painting, part of a larger European movement toward naturalism in art, that made a significant contribution to the establishment of Realism in French landscape painting. Inspired by the Romantic movement’s search for solace in nature, the Barbizon.

  2. Barbizon Painting describes work produced by a colony of artists in and around Barbizon, a village some thirty-five miles to the southeast of Paris. The central figures within the colony were Théodore Rousseau; Jean-François Millet; Narcisse-Virgile Diaz de la Pena, all of whom lived in Barbizon; and Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot and Charles ...

  3. The Barbizon painters trialed various techniques including applying wet paint onto wet paint, completing a canvas in a single sitting, and concentrating on the effects of light on the landscape. Many also worked using looser brushstrokes and a freer style than was traditional in Academic painting.

  4. Mar 11, 2024 · European Art. Escape to the Forest: The Birth of Barbizon School. Gokce Dyson 11 March 202421 min Read. Théodore Rousseau, Les Chênes d’Apremont, 1850-1852, Louvre, Paris, France. During the 19th century, the most promising artists trained at the Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture in Paris.

  5. BARBIZON PAINTERS. Although often termed an artistic school of Romantic-era France, the Barbizon painters were only sometimes united by place: the village of Barbizon on the edge of the Fontainebleau forest. Only thirty miles southwest of Paris yet not quite the suburbs, Barbizon was home to an artists' colony from the 1820s that thrived into ...

  6. The Barbizon school of painters were part of an art movement toward Realism in art, which arose in the context of the dominant Romantic Movement of the time. The Barbizon school was active roughly from 1830 through 1870.

  7. Because their work did not change radically over the decades, the Barbizon painters have often been treated mainly as a transitional generation, helping to bridge the gap between classical...

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