GIVE THE GIFT OF ART - Want guaranteed Christmas delivery? Order by 10/12 for framed art and 18/12 for unframed art.

Impressionistic Art For Sale

Explore our collection of impressionist art for sale. We offer a range of impressionist art available for purchase and rental, sourced direct from the artists. Refresh your space with impressionist artwork. Browse landscapes, animals or portraits for inspiration.

About the artists

Philip Tyler is a British artist who focuses on the materiality of paint and its potential to create illusionary spaces on the canvas. This is achieved by the thick, sweeping, textured brush strokes which feature in his paintings. The artist explores themes of loss in his work which often features landscapes and nude bodies as its subject, and the result is hauntingly beautiful, yet deeply melancholic.

Another artist whose work is not to be missed is Ta Byrne. This artist takes inspiration from a range of artistic styles including modernism and cubism and has grown to develop an incredibly distinctive style. Take a look at Egg Boy in Top Hat and we are sure you’ll agree.

Using a uniquely modern and impressionist style to create striking animal portraiture, Dave White captures the essence of every being his depicts, big or small.

The seascapes of British artist Alison Johnson showcase the artist’s expert rendering of the play of light on the surface of water. By combining dark washes with rapid brushwork of bright colours, Johnson renders a dynamic, Impressionistic, landscape, at once sublimely vast and teeming with vibrant life. The artist’s work Bamburgh Castle (2023) demonstrates this effect, as playful splashes of water against rock are balanced with a grounding expanse of calm water.

Finally, don’t miss the work of Ewa Czarniecka who often uses a row of people walking in the rain carrying brightly-coloured umbrellas as the subject of her paintings which are bold, bright and deeply textured. The beautifully colourful result is stunning.

Discover more Impressionism artists here including our female Impressionism artists.

History of Impressionist Art

Impressionist art is art that adheres to the movement founded in 19th-century France, Impressionism. It focuses upon the practice of painting outdoors, as well as upon capturing the fleetingness of light and scenes of everyday life, and often features visible brushstrokes.

The art form was developed during the 19th century in France by a group of Paris-based artists, including most notably Claude Monet. Their focus was upon painting outdoors, or en plein air, on the spot, quickly and spontaneously, rather than the usual practice of painting in a studio and off of sketches. The main subjects the painters depicted were those of landscapes and scenes of daily life. The painters focused largely upon the light and its transience. They found that they were able to capture the momentary effects of the sunlight by working quickly directly in front of their subjects en plein air, and sought to render the shifting pattern of the natural scene in their pieces with the greater awareness of light and colour that this new setting allowed them.

In order to render this fleeting quality of the quickly changing light, brushwork became rapid and often broken up into visibly separate dabs – creating the visual effect for which Impressionism is so well known today. Additionally, scientific discoveries and inventions of the 19th century had an important influence on the ways in which the Impressionists worked. New research encouraged artists to experiment with complementary colours, leading them to use contrasting colours tactically in order to make each appear deeper and brighter.

Yet, even more significant to the Impressionists was an interest in the way in which the human mind processes what it sees. When we look at a landscape, or a crowd of people, we do not instantly see every face, or leaf in detailed focus, but as a mass of colour and light. It was this experience that Impressionist painters sought to express in their works.

Styles and Techniques of Impressionist Art

Impressionism is characterised as much by subject as it is by technique, and landscapes and scenes from modern urban and suburban life, painted in bright, pure colours are typical of the genre. The changing light and its realistic representation as well as bold and visible, quickly-painted brush strokes are of course integral to the genre but several distinct styles exist define it further.

The broken colour technique is perhaps the most famous of the genre. It features colour being painted on the canvas using small, short strokes as opposed to the conventional method of carefully blending the tones and colours together and leads to the striking, almost dotted visual effect that is thought of as typical of Impressionism today.

Another technique is the wet-on-wet style, which involves painting objects with layers of wet paints without waiting for each stroke to dry and is characteristic of the Impressionist genre. This technique allows for looser and softer edges, as well as innovation in terms of mixing colours together.

Another technique which is heavily used in Impressionist art is the Impasto technique, which entails depicting objects with thick and short brush strokes which are visible and stand out of the surface, providing them with great volume and depth.

Famous Impressionist Artists

When you think of Impressionism, you likely think of Claude Monet, and for good reason – it was he who pioneered the medium. He and the other Impressionists in his Paris-based group defied the conventions and norms of painting at the time and were met with huge backlash from critics.

Amongst the painters who pioneered the Impressionist style was Edgar Degas who is especially identified with the subject of dance – although, interestingly, Degas rejected the term ‘Impressionist’, preferring instead to be known as a ‘Realist’. Additionally, in the field of dance, Degas took a particular interest in the setting of the racecourse and took great enjoyment in rendering the complex musculature of horses and ballet dancers alike.

Jean-Louis Forain, Degas’ protégé, is another painter who helped to found the Impressionist movement. He focused primarily upon Parisian nightlife in his paintings, depicting scenes of cafés as well as the opera and the ballet. In his paintings he employed similar techniques to those used by his friend Degas, including a blurred background and isolated moments of sharp detail, as well as bold flecks of bright colour.

Size
Height
Width
Price
Orientation
    No mediums available
    No styles available
    No subjects available
    No countries available
    No colors available
    sort
    All Art
    showing 2,523 pieces
    Cornish kitty by Rosemary Burn
    View in a room interior
    Cornish kitty by Rosemary Burn
    Cornish kitty
    Paintings - 26x31 cmRent for $75 /mo
    Untitled by Barbara Hoogeweegen
    View in a room interior
    Untitled by Barbara Hoogeweegen
    Untitled
    Paintings - 40x30 cm
    Heir by Nick Offer
    View in a room interior
    Heir by Nick Offer
    Heir
    Paintings - 80x82 cmRent for $240 /mo
    Bashful by Kate Lowe
    View in a room interior
    Bashful by Kate Lowe
    Bashful
    Paintings - 90x125 cmRent for $200 /mo
    Dark in open air by Tania Rutland
    View in a room interior
    Dark in open air by Tania Rutland
    Dark in open air
    Paintings - 50x50 cmRent for $125 /mo
    Sea Change by Lasse Thorst
    View in a room interior
    Sea Change by Lasse Thorst
    Sea Change
    Paintings - 26x20 cm
    End of an orange by Rosemary Burn
    View in a room interior
    End of an orange by Rosemary Burn
    End of an orange
    Paintings - 26x31 cmRent for $70 /mo
    Des Rives 1 by Isabelle Courtois Lacoste
    View in a room interior
    Des Rives 1 by Isabelle Courtois Lacoste
    Des Rives 1
    Paintings - 60x100 cm
    ID no. 75 by Zin Lim
    View in a room interior
    ID no. 75 by Zin Lim
    ID no. 75
    Paintings - 41x32 cm
    Bedroom Blonde
    Sculpture - 34x44 cm
    View in a room interior
    Marée basse by Sasha C. Bokobza
    Marée basse
    Paintings - 30x30 cm
    View in a room interior
    Cake Betty by Rita Minichiello
    Cake Betty
    Photography - 51x36 cm
    View in a room interior
    Outta Here by Brenda Ullrich
    Outta Here
    Paintings - 18x18 cmRent for $41 /mo
    View in a room interior
    Fountain of life by Alison Johnson
    Fountain of life
    Prints - 80x80 cm
    View in a room interior
    Gentleness Clears The Soul by Claire Cansick
    Gentleness Clears The Soul
    Prints - 100x71 cmRent for $70 /mo
    View in a room interior
    June by Lorna Scheepers
    June
    Paintings - 100x50 cm
    View in a room interior
    26.DARK by Alina Schiau
    26.DARK
    Drawings - 50x40 cm
    View in a room interior
    Secret whisper by Viet Ha Tran
    Secret whisper
    Photography - 90x60 cm
    View in a room interior
    Bouzigues in winter by Jean-Noël Le Junter
    Bouzigues in winter
    Paintings - 38x46 cm
    View in a room interior
    CMYK #2 by Katsutoshi Yuasa
    CMYK #2
    Prints - 45x30 cm
    View in a room interior
    Sans titre 97 by Thomas Gigot
    Sans titre 97
    Photography - 80x55 cm
    View in a room interior
    nu de femme sur fond jaune by Olivier Payeur
    nu de femme sur fond jaune
    Paintings - 80x60 cm
    View in a room interior
    Cactus Moonlight by Nadia Attura
    Cactus Moonlight
    Prints - 70x50 cmRent for $70 /mo
    View in a room interior
    Mars by Catherine Villermé
    Mars
    Paintings - 50x50 cm
    View in a room interior
    20.TREAD by Alina Schiau
    20.TREAD
    Drawings - 50x40 cm
    View in a room interior
    Monhegan Dandelions by David Aimone
    Monhegan Dandelions
    Photography - 30x45 cm
    Regional Settings
    English
    US (USD)
    United States
    Metric (cm, kg)