The fifth Impressionist exhibition, which includes eighteen…
April 1880 CE
The fifth Impressionist exhibition, which includes eighteen participants, is held in Paris at No. 10 rue des Pyramides.
Edgar Degas exhibits eight paintings, pastels, drawings and etchings at the exhibition, in which he invites the controversial Jean-François Raffaëlli to participate.
Eadweard Muybridge’s serial action photographs of dancers and horses influence Degas’s ballet paintings.
Camille Pissarro exhibits eleven paintings and a series of etchings.
Berthe Morisot exhibits fifteen paintings and watercolors, and again spends the summer at Bougival and Beuzeval-Houlgate.
Mary Cassatt, who exhibits in the 1880 show, is at this time a figure painter whose subjects are groups of women drinking tea or on outings with friends.
Paul Gauguin, taking his starting point from Paul Cézanne's style of about 1880, passes from a capricious personal type of Impressionism to a greater use of symbols.
He exhibits with the Impressionists in 1880.