
This study of the world-famous painting also brings the narrative up to date, analyzing the art-historical rediscovery of the work in recent decades and its enshrinement as a foundational painting in the history of modern art. It offers a colorful biography of Impression, Sunrise, from the influences that led to its creation in 1872 and the circumstances of its display two years later, to its eventual acquisition by the Musée Marmottan Monet in the mid-20th century. This beautiful book accompanies a major exhibition celebrating the 140th anniversary of the First Impressionist Exhibition. A particularly scathing review of the show in the newspaper Le Charivari bore the headline “The Exhibition of the Impressionists,” a derisive play on the title of one of the paintings exhibited by Monet called Impression, soleil levant ( Impression, Sunrise), thus giving this disparate group of artists the name by which they would henceforth collectively be known.

In April 1874, thirty artists-among them Claude Monet, Auguste Renoir, Camille Pissarro, Paul Cézanne, and Edgar Degas-participated in an extraordinary exhibition held at the Paris studio of the photographer Nadar. Impression, Sunrise was first shown in 1874 at an independent exhibition in Paris that was organized by a group of artists including Monet, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, and Edgar Degas. The artistic movement known as Impressionism owes its name to this influential work. An intriguing portrait of an early Impressionist masterwork, tracing the painting's history and reception from its creation up to the present day Impression, Sunrise, oil painting created by Claude Monet in 1873.
