Top 50 — Impressionism
Famous Impressionist Painters
Monet, Renoir, Degas, Pissarro and 46 other masters of light
In 1874, thirty-nine artists exhibited together in the former studio of photographer Nadar, on boulevard des Capucines in Paris. Critic Louis Leroy mocked Monet's painting Impression, Sunrise, and inadvertently coined the term impressionism. The movement was launched. This top 50 brings together the painters who carried it forward, from the founding nucleus to the American and Scandinavian heirs.
From the founding nucleus to the heirs of the 20th century
Context
What makes these painters essential?
Impressionism was born from a triple break: against the studio, against the official Living room, and against the primacy of drawing over color. Within a few years, these painters made light the very subject of the painting — no longer an effect, but the raw material of the work.
The ranking that follows combines three criteria: historical influence on the movement, current museum distribution (musée d'Orsay, Marmottan, Met, MoMA, National Gallery of Art), and presence in the permanent collections of major Western museums. Each entry offers a portrait, an iconic work, and a direct link to the corresponding collection of reproductions in our shop.
This page was designed as a visitor's guide, not a hit parade. The painters are grouped by schools and generations to make lineages visible — who influenced whom, who responded to whom, who diverged. The ranking numbers are indicative: a rank of 17 is not "less good" than a rank of 4, it is simply later or more peripheral.
The founding core (1869-1880)
The six fathers of impressionism
Six painters defined the language of impressionism between 1869 and 1880: the broken brushstroke, plein air painting, and the rejection of studio painting. They exhibited together starting in 1874, quarreled, reconciled, and ultimately came to embody a distinctly French idea of modernity.
#1Claude Monet
#2Pierre-Auguste Renoir
#3Edgar Degas
#4Camille Pissarro
#5Alfred Sisley
#6Berthe Morisot
The Era of Independent Exhibitions (1874-1886)
Transitional Figures and Peripheral Exhibitors
The first Impressionist exhibition (1874) was no accident: the official Living room was rejecting works deemed too modern. Hence these "independent exhibitions" that followed one another until 1886. They brought together founding fathers, transitional figures (Caillebotte, Cézanne), and painters who would remain on the periphery — never reaching the posterity of Monet or Renoir, but consolidating the movement.
#7Édouard Manet
#9Gustave Caillebotte
#11Armand Guillaumin
#13Eva Gonzalès
#50Lesser Ury
Masters of Intimate Light (1880-1920)
Impressionist Americanism
After 1880, Impressionism traveled. In the United States, a generation of painters (Hassam, Chase, Robinson, Tarbell, Benson) imported the French fragmented touch and adapted it to American outdoor scenes: Boston, New York, the coast of Maine, the villages of Connecticut. What would later be called Impressionist Americanism was born—envying nothing of the French model, and even constituting, according to several historians, its fulfillment.
#10Frédéric Bazille
#23Childe Hassam
#24William Merritt Chase
#25Theodore Robinson
#26John Henry Twachtman
#27Willard Metcalf
#28Frank Weston Benson
#29Edmund Tarbell
#30Frederick Carl Frieseke
The North and atmospheric sensitivity (1880-1930)
Impressionism beyond France
Impressionism is not solely a French affair. Belgium (Lemmen, Rysselberghe), Denmark (Ancher, Krøyer), Sweden (Hammershøi), Italy (Boldini, De Nittis, Zandomeneghi), the Netherlands (Slevogt, Corinth), Germany (Liebermann) adopted the movement — each in its own way. The light of the North, colder and more diffuse, gave birth to more contemplative works, sometimes haunted by the silence of interiors (Hammershøi).
#8Mary Cassatt
#12Marie Bracquemond
#14Eugène Boudin
#15Giuseppe De Nittis
#16Federico Zandomeneghi
#17Stanislas Lépine
#18Henri Le Sidaner
#19Henri Martin
#20Théo van Rysselberghe
#21Anna Boch
#22Georges Lemmen
#31Guy Rose
#32Edward Henry Potthast
#33Colin Campbell Cooper
#34Cecilia Beaux
#35Lilla Cabot Perry
#36Richard E. Miller
#37Laura Muntz Lyall
#38John Lavery
#39Peder Severin Krøyer
#40Anna Ancher
#41Michael Ancher
#42Frits Thaulow
#43Max Liebermann
#44Lovis Corinth
#45Max Slevogt
#46Anders Zorn
#47Joaquín Sorolla
#48Isaac Israëls
#49Philip Wilson Steer
To continue the visit
Sources, collections, and paths truly related to the subject
A few useful references for checking information, comparing free images, and extending the reading without wandering off to a museum that never asked for the visit.
Painters to (re)discover in this Impressionists top
Useful blog hubs
Useful sources on this topic
Bring a little of that light into your home
Impressionism changed the way we look at the world. A quality reproduction, placed in the right spot, is enough to bring that revolution into your home: the light of Monet on a white wall, the fragmented touch of Renoir above the sofa, the silence of Hammershøi in a hallway. All the works in this Top 50 are available as canvas reproductions in our collection — with particular care given to the fidelity of the original colors and formats.
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