Skip to Content (Press Enter)
askART
Toggle navigation
Menu
askART
Toggle navigation
Search
X
Artists listed by last name:
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
#
Search by:
Recent Auctions
Art for Sale
Advanced Artist Search
Auction Records
Since 1987
Upcoming at auction
Search by Artist
Sample Auction Records
Cy Twombly
Georgia O'Keeffe
Andrew Wyeth
Ed Ruscha
Camille Pissarro
Sample Sales Stats
Cy Twombly
Georgia O'Keeffe
Andrew Wyeth
Ed Ruscha
Camille Pissarro
Sample Artist Signatures
Cy Twombly
Georgia O'Keeffe
Andrew Wyeth
Ed Ruscha
Camille Pissarro
Help / Contact Us
Research
Search Artists
Search Art for Sale
Search Auctions
Search Auction Houses
Search Galleries / Dealers
Search Museums
Upcoming at Auction
What's my art worth?
Essays
Regional Interests
Artist Groups
Topics
Art Styles
Mediums
Record Stats
Highest auction prices
Record prices by sq inch
Art Glossary
Biographies - write a bio!
Help / Contact Us
Services
Sign Up
Auction Alerts (free)
For Individuals
For Dealers / Galleries
For Auction Houses
For Institutions
Institutions
Museums
Libraries / Schools
Auction Listing Services
Ads on askART
Homepage ads
Artist Pages: Featured Ad
Artist Pages: Art for Sale
Artist Pages: Art Wanted
Alphabet Pages
Help / Contact Us
Subscribe
Sign In
X
Whoa, you've got an
older browser
! (Or, we've got a glitch...) For a better experience, we recommend a newer browser.
Ok, hide this
Style & Genre Essays
Expressionism
Artists
(350k+)
Art for Sale
(10k+)
Auctions
Upcoming
Lots
Galleries
Auction Houses
Pricing Art
Museums
Art Topics
Style & Genre Essays
Abstract Expressionism
Art Deco
Art Nouveau
Barbizon
Bay Area Figurative
California Style
Cartoon Drawing
Conceptual Art
Constructivism
Cubism
Dada
Expressionism
Fauves/Fauvism
Folk Art
Futurism
Hudson River
Illustration
Impressionism pre-1940
Impressionism-American
Installation Art
Minimalism
Modernism
Op Art
Photo Realism
Plein Aire
Pointillism
Pop Art
Post Impressionism
Precisionism
Realism
Romanticism
Surrealism
Symbolism
Tonalism
Trompe l'Oeil
Artists by Style
Abstract Figurative, Human Figure
Abstraction, Abstract
Color Field Painting
Conceptual
Constructions
Contemporary Classical Realism
Contemporary Realism
Funk Art
Geometric Abstraction, Hard Edge
Gestural/ Action /Drip Painting
Impressionism After 1940
Installation Art
Luminous, Luminism
Naive, Childlike
Neo Classical
Copyright © 1999-2024 askART.com and underlying auction houses. All Rights Reserved. Digital copying of these images and content strictly prohibited; violators will be subject to the law including the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.
Artists
(350k+)
Art for Sale
(10k+)
Auctions
Upcoming
Lots
Galleries
Auction Houses
Pricing Art
Museums
Art Topics
Regions
Artist Groups
Topics
Styles
Mediums
Glossary
Stats
Art in which the emotions of an artist are paramount over a rational and faithful-to-life rendering of subject matter, it is conveyed by distortion of color, surface and shapes. Because of emphasis on carefully-executed method, Impressionism is the opposite of Expressionism. The term Expressionism appears to have been coined by Herwarth Walden in 1911 in the publication, "Sturm", which he served as editor. Originally the term referenced all modernist or progressive movements from the inception of Cubism and Fauvism. Today, the meaning is more specific in that it refers to one specific early 20th century art movement emanating primarily from Germany. Much Expressionism was prompted by desires for social reform, psychological and spiritual issues. Expressionist style was simple, bold and colorful with large areas of unbroken color and dramatic brushwork. Although the movement remains associated with modernism, it had roots further back historically. Late Medieval and early Renaissance Expressionist artists were Hieronymus Bosch (fl 1488-1516) and Matthias Grunewald,(fl 1475-1528). Spanish artist El Greco (1541-1614) had dramatic Expressionist distortion in his figure paintings. In the 19th Century, Vincent Van Gogh (1853-1890) and Paul Gaughin (1848-1903) led the first phase of what is officially defined by art historians as the Expressionist movement. From France, the movement spread to Germany and to Norway where Edward Munch (1863-1944) embraced the style. American artists much influenced by Expressionism include Marsden Hartley, George Grosz, Max Weber, Ben Shahn, Ivan Albright, Abraham Ratner, Jack Levine, Karl Knaths and Philip Evergood. After World War II in America, elements of Expressionism evolved into Abstract Expressionism. Sources: "The Britannica Encyclopedia of American Art"; "Phaidon Dictionary of Twentieth-Century Art"; Robert Atkins, ART SPOKE
Sample of artists connected to Expressionism
Associations may be by subject, geography, school, style, etc.
Adolphus George Broomfield
Miller Gore Brittain
Emily M Carr
Albert Edward Cloutier
Peter Haworth
Tony (Anthony) Morse Urquhart
John Howard Gould
Donald Alvin Jarvis
Kenneth Campbell Lochhead
David Lloyd Blackwood
Robert McInnis
John Graham Coughtry
Ivan Kenneth Eyre
Maxwell Bennett Bates
Marcella Maltais
Lee Gatch Jr
Fritz (Friedrich) Wilhelm Brandtner
Paul Rodrik
Rene Marcil
Charles Pachter
Jori Smith
Herbert Johannes Joseph Siebner
Gordon Appelbe Smith
Philip Henry Howard Surrey
Oscar Cahen
Bruno Joseph Bobak
Stanley Morel Cosgrove
Tony Scherman
Paul Vanier Beaulieu
Good news! We do not share your data or cookies with 3rd parties for their ads or markerting!
Privacy Policy
Ok, hide this
Top