First Impressionist Exhibition

{{Short description|19th century art exhibition}}

{{Infobox event

| title = First Impressionist Exhibition

| native_name = Première exposition des peintres impressionnistes

| native_name_lang = French

| also_known_as = The Exhibition of the Impressionists

| image = Première Exposition 1874, 35 Boulevard des Capucines Catalogue.jpg

| caption = Cover of the catalog of the First Impressionist Exhibition

| date = {{start and end date|1874|04|15|1874|05|15}}

| venue = 35 Boulevard des Capucines

| location = Paris, France

| type = Art exhibition

| organizers = Société anonyme des artistes peintres, sculpteurs, graveurs, etc.

}}

The First Impressionist Exhibition was an art exhibition held by the {{lang|fr|Société anonyme des artistes peintres, sculpteurs, graveurs, etc.}},{{efn|name="societe-anonyme"|English: "Anonymous Society of painters, sculptors, engravers, etc."}} a group of nineteenth-century artists who had been rejected by the official Paris Salon and pursued their own venue to exhibit their artworks. The exhibition was held in April 1874 at 35 Boulevard des Capucines, the studio of the famous photographer Nadar. The exhibition became known as the "Impressionist Exhibition" following a satirical review by the art critic Louis Leroy in the 25 April 1874 edition of Le Charivari entitled "The Exhibition of the Impressionists". Leroy's article was the origin of the term Impressionism.

History

= Background =

In mid-19th century France, artists depended on public exhibitions to connect them with patrons willing to buy their artworks. The most prestigious exhibition was the Salon in Paris. From the earliest Salons in the 17th century until the French Revolution in 1789, only members of the Académie royale de peinture et de sculpture were permitted to exhibit artworks. Following the revolution and the abolishment of the Royal Academy in 1791, non-member artists were permitted to exhibit artworks in the Salon. With the exception of a short period of a few years following the French Revolution of 1848, the artworks displayed at the Salon were chosen by a jury consisting of members of the Académie des Beaux-Arts.{{sfnp|Feist|2006|pages=55–56}} Being accepted to the Salon was vital for artists because the jury's decision affected the public's perception of artworks. Paintings that had been accepted by the Salon were more likely to sell, and the public would often refuse to purchase paintings that had been rejected. Patrons would sometimes even return paintings that had been purchased beforehand if they had been rejected by the jury.{{sfnp|Rewald|1973|page=79}} Artists who were rejected by the jury often complained about corruption and unfairness.{{sfnp|Dunlop|1972|page=14}} Disagreements among artists with the official standards of the Salon and the Académie des Beaux-Arts would lead to artists seeking alternative venues for promoting their art.

The Salon of 1863 was particularly controversial with artists. A new rule was established that limited artists to three artworks each. The jury was also stricter than it had been in previous years, rejecting three-fifths of all submissions. Even artists who had been regularly admitted were rejected. Louis Martinet, who had previously displayed artworks rejected from the Salon in his gallery, did not room to host all of the rejected artists.{{sfnp|Rewald|1973|pages=79–80}} After hearing about the controversy, Emperor Napoleon III visited Palais de l'Industrie where the Salon was to be held and consulted with the president of the jury. Two days later, it was announced that there would be a second elective Salon, a Salon des Refusés ("Salon of the Refused"), to exhibit the rejected artworks.{{sfnp|Rewald|1973|page=80}}

File:Edouard Manet - Luncheon on the Grass - Google Art Project.jpg by Édouard Manet, exhibited at the Salon des Refusés in 1863.]]

The artwork to attract the most visitors at the Salon des Refusés was the painting Le Déjeuner sur l'herbe by Édouard Manet.{{sfnp|Rewald|1973|page=85}} Manet had painted it specifically for the Salon, and had hoped that it would bring him success.{{sfnp|Dunlop|1972|pages=11–12}} When it was rejected, Manet chose to display it at the Salon des Refusés in hopes that the public would side with him against the jury and prove the jury wrong.{{sfnp|Rewald|1973|pages=81–82}} The painting proved to be controversial with among critics. Many critics criticized it for the indecency of its subject matter. Manet was also widely criticized for painting technique, which some critics considered sloppy. Despite this criticism, other critics lauded his technique, and described it as "fresh" and "lively".{{cite book |last1=McCauley |first1=Anne |editor1-last=Tucker |editor1-first=Paul Hayes |editor1-link=Paul Hayes Tucker |title=Manet's Le Déjeuner sur l'herbe |date=1998 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |location=New York, NY |isbn=0-521-47466-3 |pages=38–74 |url=https://archive.org/details/manetsledejeuner0000unse/ |chapter=Sex and the Salon: Defining Art and Immorality}}{{sfnp|Rewald|1973|page=86}} The scandal surrounding Édouard Manet and the Salon des Refusés brought several younger artists into his social circle.{{sfnp|Feist|2006|page=64}}

File:Henri Fantin-Latour - A Studio at Les Batignolles - Google Art Project.jpg by Henri Fantin-Latour]]

Manet was a frequent visitor at the Café Guerbois, located at 11 Grande rue des Batignolles in Paris. There he regularly met with many of his admirers, friends, and fellow artists. Some of the artists that regularly visited the café were Claude Monet, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Frédéric Bazille, Edgar Degas, Camille Pissarro, and Paul Cézanne. Émile Zola and Edmond Maître were also occasional visitors. The famous photographer Gaspard-Félix Tournachon, better known by his pseudonym Nadar, also sometimes visited the café.{{sfnp|Rewald|1973|page=197}} The artists that frequented the Café Guerbois called themselves the Batignolles group. They chose to refer to themselves as a "group" rather than a "school" because, although they all had contempt for "official art", they all sought their own directions.{{sfnp|Rewald|1973|page=205}}

The members of the Batignolles group had differing opinions about the Salon. Manet and Renoir believed that the Salon offered them the best chance at gaining recognition. Cézanne, on the other hand, believed that they should always submit their most "offensive" pictures to the Salon as a means of challenging established customs.{{sfnp|Rewald|1973|page=214}} Despite their differing views, the members of the Batignolles group regularly submitted their artworks to that annual Salon. All members of the group except for Cézanne had been accepted into the Salon at least once.{{sfnp|Rewald|1973|page=216}}

= The Exhibition of the Impressionists =

Claude Monet and Frédéric Bazille first proposed that the Batignolles group hold their own exhibition at their own expense in 1867. The group was unable to hold an exhibition then due to a lack of funds. Following the Salon of 1873 and the Exposition artisique des oeuvres refusées, a second Salon des Refusés, Monet once again proposed that the group hold their own exhibition. Bazille, who had died in the Franco-Prussian War in 1870, did not live to participate in the exhibition that he and Monet had once envisioned.{{sfnp|Rewald|1973|pages=302–304, 309}}{{sfnp|Dunlop|1972|pages=61–66}}

Edgar Degas expressed concern that if the exhibition only consisted of members of their own group, their exhibition might be seen by the public and critics as being put on by refusés and suggested that they invite outside artists and artists who had previously had success in the salon.{{sfnp|Dunlop|1972|pages=67–68}}{{sfnp|Rewald|1973|pages=311–312}} Some of the artists thought that inviting outsiders would change the character of the exhibition. Pierre-Auguste Renoir endorsed Degas's plan to invite outside artists, as a greater number of participating artists would result in a lower cost to each artist. The rest then agreed to Degas's plan.{{sfnp|Dunlop|1972|pages=68–69}} Some of the members of the group opposed Cézanne's participation in the exhibition, however they agreed after Monet supported his participation. Manet would ultimately not participate in the exhibition. He once told the others that it was because he would never participate in an exhibition with Cézanne, however, his main reason was that believed that the only way to succeed was to succeed at the Salon.{{sfnp|Rewald|1973|pages=314–316}}

File:Claude Monet, 1873-74, Boulevard des Capucines, oil on canvas, 80.3 x 60.3 cm, Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City.jpg in Paris by Claude Monet, painted from the window in Nadar's studio. The other version of this painting was featured in the first Impressionist Exhibition.]]

File:Atelier Nadar 35BoulevardDesCapucines 1860 Nadar.jpg

For the location of the group exhibition, Manet suggest the studio of the photographer Félix Nadar at 35 Boulevard des Capucines, which was sometimes rented out for concerts or lectures. Nadar had recently vacated his studio for a larger one at 51 rue d'Anjou nearby, so it was available for the group to use.{{cite book |last1=Gosling |first1=Nigel |author1-link=Nigel Gosling |title=Nadar |date=1976 |publisher=Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. |location=New York |isbn=0-394-41106-4 |pages=20–21 |url=https://archive.org/details/nadar0000nada/}} Nadar's studio was on the second floor of the building. A staircase led up to a series of large rooms on two floors which received light from the windows.{{sfnp|Rewald|1973|page=313}} While Nadar preferred more tradition styles of art, he sympathized with the group's anti-establishment stance. According to Monet, Nadar allowed the group to use his studio for free.{{sfnp|Rewald|1973|page=313}}

On Pissarro's suggestion, the group formed a joint-stock company. The charter was signed on December 27, 1873. The initial signers of the charter were Monet, Renoir, Sisley, Degas, Berthe Morisot, Pissarro, Béliard, Guillaumin, Lepic, Levert, and Rouart.{{sfnp|Rewald|1973|pages=312–313}} For the name of the group, Renoir and Degas wanted neutral name that would not be associated with a particular style or suggest a new "school" of art.{{sfnp|Rewald|1973|page=313}}{{sfnp|Moffett|1986|page=18}} Degas suggested that the group be called La Capucine after their exhibition space at 35 Bouleveard des Capucines, with a capucine flower as their logo.{{sfnp|Rewald|1973|page=313}}{{sfnp|Feist|2006|page=136}} In the end, the members of group settled on the name Société anonyme des artistes peintres, sculpteurs, graveurs, etc.{{efn|name="societe-anonyme"}}{{sfnp|Moffett|1986|page=18}}

The Première exposition of the Société anonyme opened on April 15, 1874. They chose to open the exhibition two weeks before the Salon of 1874 in hopes of emphasizing to the public that it was not another Salon des Refusés.{{sfnp|Dunlop|1972|page=74}} The exhibition was open for one month, from ten in the morning to six in the evening. It was also open from eight to ten in the evening. The entrance fee was one franc, and the catalog was sold for fifty centimes.{{sfnp|Rewald|1973|page=318}} Throughout its entire duration, the exhibition received about 3,500 visitors in total. This was significantly fewer than the Salon of 1874, which received about 400,000 visitors in total.{{sfnp|Rewald|1973|pages=327–328}} Most of the media coverage of exhibition came from left-wing and republican publications. Most of the conservative press chose not to provide platform to those who opposed official arts policy.{{sfnp|Feist|2006|page=140}}

On April 25, the satirical magazine Le Charivari published a review of the exhibition by Louis Leroy titled {{lang|fr|"L'Exposition des impressionnistes"}}.{{efn|English: "The Exhibition of the Impressionists"}} The satirical review was written in the form of a dialog between Leroy and a fictional{{sfnp|Dunlop|1972|page=80}} academic landscape painter named Joseph Vincent. In the review, as Leroy guides Vincent through the exhibition, Vincent is shocked and aghast at style of the paintings. Leroy begrudgingly defends each painting by saying that, while they are not accurate depictions, they have an impression of what they are supposed to depict. Vincent repeatedly mocks Leroy's use of the word "impression", and begins to refer to the artists collectively as "impressionists". When Vincent finally reaches Cézanne's A Modern Olympia, he is driven mad at its sight and begins to hallucinate that the paintings are talking to him.{{sfnp|Rewald|1973|pages=318–324}} Leroy's article was intended to be just as much of a spoof of the reactions of conservative academic painters to the "Impressionists" as it was a mockery of Impressionists themselves.{{sfnp|Moffett|1986|page=117}}

File:Monet - Impression, Sunrise.jpg by Claude Monet, 1873.]]

Louis Leroy's review was the first use of the term "Impressionists", a term that would come to refer to the artists who painted in style of Impressionism. Leroy's use of the word "impression" derived from the title of Claude Monet's painting Impression, Sunrise. Monet chose to call his painting an "impression" after Edmond Renoir (the brother of Pierre-Auguste Renoir), the editor of the exhibition catalog, complained that the titles of his paintings were too monotonous. Monet told him "Why don't you just put Impression!"{{sfnp|Rewald|1973|page=318}} Critics had sometimes previously used the term "impression" in reference to the landscape paintings of Camille Corot, Charles-François Daubigny, and Johan Jongkind. The members of the Batignolles group had also previously used the term "impression" in reference to creating "impressions of nature".{{sfnp|Rewald|1973|page=212}}

The First Impressionist Exhibition was a commercial failure. Money earned from entrance fees, catalog sales, commissions on painting sales, etc. amounted to 10,221.50 francs. Expenses from rent, decorations, insurance, wages, etc. amounted to 9,272.20 francs. The remaining 949.20 francs were added to 2,359.50 in outstanding shares. In December 1874, Renoir called a meet where he announced that, after paying off all debts, the Société anonyme still owed over 3,700 francs in liabilities, but only had about 278 francs remaining. All of the members still owed about 185 francs each. The group was then liquidated, and members that had already paid their dues for the next year were refunded.{{sfnp|Rewald|1973|pages=334–336}}

= Legacy =

{{Expand section|date=January 2024}}

Despite the commercial and critical failure of the First Impressionist Exhibition and the Société anonyme, the Impressionists would not be dissuaded from pursuing their own style and would hold seven more Impressionist Exhibitions. A second exhibition was held in 1876, a third 1877, a fourth in 1879, a fifth in 1880, a sixth 1881, a seventh in 1882, and an eight and final exhibition was held in 1886.{{sfnp|Dunlop|1972|page=87}}

== Commemorative exhibitions ==

In 1974, the Louvre and the Metropolitan Museum of Art held an exhibition titled Impressionism: A Centenary Exhibition to celebrate the one-hundredth anniversary of the first Impressionist exhibition. The goal of the exhibition was to exhibit some of the most significant Impressionist works that were painted from approximately 1860 thorough the late 1880s.{{sfnp|Dayez|Hoog|Moffet|1974|pages=9–13}} Forty-two paintings were included in the exhibition. The version of the exhibition held at the MET included additional galleries of other contemporaneous paintings to help put the Impressionist paintings in context as well as later Impressionist and Post-Impressionist paintings.{{cite journal |last1=Hoving |first1=Thomas |title=[Director's Note] |journal=The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin |date=1973 |volume=32 |issue=3 |pages=1 |jstor=3269130 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/3269130 |access-date=2 April 2024 |issn=0026-1521 |archive-date=2 April 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240402225249/https://www.jstor.org/stable/3269130 |url-status=live }}

In 2024, from March 26th to July 14th, the Musée d'Orsay held an exhibition titled Paris 1874: Inventing Impressionism to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the First Impressionist Exhibition. The exhibition featured many of the works that were featured in the First Impressionist Exhibition alongside many works that were featured in the Paris Salon of the same year. The goal of the exhibition was to recreate the visual shock that contemporary viewers would have experienced at seeing the Impressionist works for the first time by showing Impressionist artworks alongside Salon artworks.{{cite news |last1=LaBarge |first1=Emily |title=The Impressionists’ First Flowering Is Still Fresh After 150 Years |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/26/arts/design/impressionism-exhibition-musee-d-orsay-paris.html |access-date=2 October 2024 |work=The New York Times |date=26 March 2024}}{{cite web |title=Exhibition Paris 1874 Inventing impressionism |url=https://www.musee-orsay.fr/en/whats-on/exhibitions/paris-1874-inventing-impressionism |website=Musée d'Orsay |access-date=2 October 2024 |language=en |date=2024}} The same exhibition, under the name Paris 1874: The Impressionist Moment, was shown at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. from September 8, 2024 through January 19, 2025.{{cite news |last1=Tremo |first1=Phil |title=Paris 1874: Impressionist Exhibit Arrives in DC |url=https://francetoday.com/culture/paris-1874-the-impressionist-exhibition-has-landed-in-washington/#fm-popup-modal-close |access-date=2 October 2024 |work=France Today |date=10 September 2024}}{{cite web |title=Paris 1874: The Impressionist Moment |url=https://www.nga.gov/exhibitions/2024/paris-1874-impressionist-moment.html |website=National Gallery of Art |access-date=2 October 2024 |date=2024}}

Reception

File:Cham - Caricature of the first Impressionist Exhibition in Paris.jpg. The caption reads: "Impressionist painting: a revolution in painting that is starting to spread alarm."{{sfnp|Schaefer|Saint-George|Lewerentz|2008|page=158}}]]

{{Expand section|date=March 2024}}

Much of the critical reception to the First Impressionist Exhibition was negative. Many of the critics commented that the paintings looked unfinished.{{sfnp|Schaefer|Saint-George|Lewerentz|2008|page=159}}

Participating artists

The exhibition catalog lists thirty artists as participated in the First Impressionist Exhibition in 1874.{{sfnp|Moffett|1986|pages=118–123}} A thirty-first artist, the Comtesse de Luchaire, was mentioned as participating in the exhibition in a review by Marc de Montifaud, but was not listed among the participating artists in the catalog.{{sfnp|Berson|1996|page=9}}{{cite book |editor1-last=Dumas |editor1-first=Ann |title=Inspiring Impressionism: The Impressionists and the Art of the Past |date=2007 |publisher=Denver Art Museum |location=Denver |isbn=978-0-914738-57-2 |page=249 |url=https://archive.org/details/inspiringimpress0000unse/}}

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List of artworks

{{Incomplete list|date=January 2024}}

The exhibition catalog for the First Impressionist Exhibition lists artworks as numbered 1 through 165. Several of these entries contain multiple artworks each, and there are no entries listed for numbers 71, 72, and 73.{{sfnp|Moffett|1986|pages=118–123}} Three artworks were shown at the exhibition {{lang|fr|hors catalogue}} ("out of catalog"), meaning that they were exhibited but were not listed in the catalog. These artworks have been identified as being displayed at the exhibition through references in contemporary reviews.{{sfnp|Moffett|1986|page=6}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=vii, 283}} These {{lang|fr|hors catalogue}} artworks are numbered as "HC#" in the list below.

{{sticky header}}

class="wikitable sortable sticky-header"

|+ Artworks at the First Impressionist Exhibition

No.TitleImageArtistDateTechniqueDimensionsCurrent LocationNotes
1.Le Bouquet à la PénitenteZacharie AstrucWatercolor
2.La Leçon du vieux TorreroZacharie AstrucWatercolor
rowspan="6" |3.rowspan="6" | Frame of figures containing:{{ordered list |list_style_type=lower-alpha |Dames flamandes à leur fenêtre |Scène de Somnambulisme |Enfants flamands dans une serre |Poupées japonaises |Les Présents chinois (Londres) |Intérieur parisian}}Zacharie Astruc
Zacharie Astruc
Zacharie Astruc
Zacharie Astruc
File:Les Prèsents Chinois.jpgZacharie AstrucWatercolor on paper{{convert|38 x 55|cm|in|abbr=on}}Private collection{{sfnp|Moffett|1986|page=124}}
File:Zacharie Astruc Intérieur Parisien.jpgZacharie Astruc1874Watercolor on vellum paper{{convert|36.4 x 28.4|cm|in|abbr=on}}Musée d'Évreux{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=3, 15}}{{cite web |title=Intérieur Parisien |url=https://www.pop.culture.gouv.fr/notice/joconde/07030004661 |website=POP: la plateforme ouverte du patrimoine |publisher=Ministrè de la Culture |access-date=5 January 2024 |language=fr |archive-date=5 January 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240105030350/https://www.pop.culture.gouv.fr/notice/joconde/07030004661 |url-status=live }}
rowspan="4" |4.rowspan="4" | Frame of landscapes containing:{{ordered list |list_style_type=lower-alpha | Estaminet dans les Flandres | Jardins de Schaerbeck | Intérieur d'estaminet | Étang de Saint Josse-ten-Noode (Flandres)}}Zacharie Astruc
Zacharie Astruc
Zacharie Astruc
Zacharie Astruc
5.Les Poupées blanches (Japon)Zacharie Astruc
6.Le Ménage mal assortiZacharie Astruc
7.Nature morteAntoine-Ferdinand Attendu
8.Un fin ConnaisseurAntoine-Ferdinand Attendu
9.Quelques réflexions (au XIIIe arrondissement)Antoine-Ferdinand Attendu
10.Nature morte : MusiqueAntoine-Ferdinand AttenduWatercolor
11.Nature morte : CuisineAntoine-Ferdinand AttenduWatercolor
12.Nature morte : CuisineAntoine-Ferdinand AttenduWatercolor
13.Le Fort de la HalleÉdouard Béliard
14.SaulesÉdouard Béliard
15.Rue de l'Hermitage, à PontoiseÉdouard Béliard
16.Vallée d'AuversÉdouard Béliard
17.Le Toulinguet, côtes de Camaret (Finistère)Eugène Boudin
18.The Coast of Portrieux, Cotes-du-NordFile:Eugène Boudin Cotenord.jpgEugène Boudin1874Oil on canvas{{convert|85 x 148|cm|in|abbr=on}}Private collection{{efn-lr|Two paintings by Boudin with identical titles are listed in the catalog of the first Impressionist Exhibition. Another painting by Boudin with an identical is listed in the catalog of the Salon of 1874. The painting listed here may have been one of the two shown at the Impressionist Exhibition, or it may have been the one shown at the Paris Salon.}}{{sfnp|Dayez|Hoog|Moffet|1974|pages=40–41}}
19.The Coast of Portrieux, Cotes-du-NordEugène BoudinSee above.
20.4 Cadres (même numéro). Études de ciel ("4 Frames (same number). Sky studies")Eugène BoudinPastels
21.2 Cadres (même numéro). Études diverses ("4 Frames (same number). Various studies")Eugène BoudinPastels
22.4 Cadres (même numéro). Plage de Trouville ("4 Frames (same number). Trouville Beach")Eugène BoudinWatercolors
23.PortraitFélix BracquemondDrawing
rowspan="12" |24.rowspan="12" | Frame of etchings: Portraits of MM.{{ordered list |list_style_type=lower-alpha | Robert | Meyer Heine | Hoschedé | Edwards | Aug. Compte | Ch. Kean | A. Legros | Meryon | Th. Gauthier | Th. Gautier (le Tombeau) | Baudelaire | Madame Graner}}File:Portrait of Louis Robert MET DP814355.jpgFélix BracquemondEtching{{convert|33 x23|cm|in|abbr=on}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=3, 15}}
File:Félix Bracquemond - Meyer-Heine - 1966.163 - Cleveland Museum of Art.tifFélix BracquemondEtching{{convert|21.8 x 24.5|cm|in|abbr=on}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=3, 15}}
File:Hoschedé, d'après nature (NYPL b14504927-1129414).jpgFélix BracquemondEtching{{convert|27.5 x 10|cm|in|abbr=on}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=3, 15}}
File:Edwin Edwards by Félix Bracquemond.jpgFélix BracquemondEtching{{convert|16.4 x 14.5|cm|in|abbr=on}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=3, 15}}
File:Auguste Comte, fondateur de la religion de l'humanité (NYPL b14504927-1129364).jpgFélix BracquemondEtching{{convert|19 x 13.5|cm|in|abbr=on}}New York Public Library{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=3, 16}}
File:Félix Bracquemond - Charles Kean - 1922.354 - Cleveland Museum of Art.jpgFélix BracquemondEtching{{convert|22.8 x 13.5|cm|in|abbr=on}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=3, 16}}
File:Félix Bracquemond - Alphonse Legros - 2005.242 - Cleveland Museum of Art.tifFélix BracquemondEtching{{convert|17 x 11.5|cm|in|abbr=on}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=3, 16}}
File:Félix Bracquemond (French, 1833-1914), Gazette des Beaux-Arts - Charles Méryon - 2005.256 - Cleveland Museum of Art.jpgFélix BracquemondEtching{{convert|12 x 8.8|cm|in|abbr=on}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=3, 16}}
File:Théophile Gautier by Félix Bracquemond after Nadar.jpgFélix BracquemondEtching{{convert|15.4 x 12.1|cm|in|abbr=on}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=4, 16}}
File:Théophile Gautier (NYPL b14504927-1129400).tiffFélix BracquemondEtching{{convert|15.4 x 9.8|cm|in|abbr=on}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=4, 16}}
File:Charles Baudelaire (NYPL b14504927-1129348).tiffFélix BracquemondEtching{{convert|10.5 x 7|cm|in|abbr=on}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=4, 17}}
File:Madame Granger, d'après Ingres (NYPL b14504927-1129409).tiffFélix BracquemondEtching{{convert|24.5 x 16.2|cm|in|abbr=on}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=4, 17}}
rowspan="6" |25.rowspan="6" | Frame of etchings:{{ordered list |list_style_type=lower-alpha | La Locomotive (D'après Turner) | Le Lièvre (D'après A. de Belleroy) | Le Divan (D'après Manet) | Le Tournoi (D'après Rubens) | La Source (D'après Ingres) | La Servante (D'après Leys)}}File:The Locomotive MET DP814342.jpgFélix BracquemondEtching{{convert|20.2 x 26.3|cm|in|abbr=on}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=4, 17}}
File:Félix Bracquemond (French, 1833-1914) - The Hare (Le Lièvre) - 2016.142 - Cleveland Museum of Art.jpgFélix BracquemondEtching{{convert|17.9 x 25|cm|in|abbr=on}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=4, 17}}
File:Femme en costume espagnol d'après Manet, PPG189.jpgFélix BracquemondEtching{{convert|22.1 x 32.4|cm|in|abbr=on}}Cabinet des estampes, Bibliothèque nationale de France{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=4, 17}}
File:Un tournoi, d'après Rubens (NYPL b14693583-1153430).jpgFélix BracquemondEtching{{convert|27.2 x 39.5|cm|in|abbr=on}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=4, 17}}
File:La source, d'après Ingres (NYPL b14504923-1130986).tiffFélix BracquemondEtching{{convert|31.3 x 16.2|cm|in|abbr=on}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=4, 18}}
File:La servante, d'après Leys (NYPL b14504923-1130994).tiffFélix BracquemondEtching{{convert|14.3 x 22.8|cm|in|abbr=on}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=4, 18}}
rowspan="7" |26.rowspan="7" | Frame of etchings:{{ordered list |list_style_type=lower-alpha | Les Saules | Les Arbres de la manufacture à Sèvres | Les Charmes | Les Bouleaux | La Montèe de Bellvue | Le Mur | Les Bachots }}File:Les saules des Mottiaux (NYPL b14506647-1128843).jpgFélix BracquemondEtching{{convert|20.3 x 29.5|cm|in|abbr=on}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=4, 18}}
(No free image)Félix BracquemondEtching{{convert|14 x 31.7|cm|in|abbr=on}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=4, 18}}
Félix BracquemondEtching
File:À droite, trois bouleaux sans feuilles.. (NYPL b14506647-1128765).jpgFélix BracquemondEtching{{convert|21.3 x 15.2|cm|in|abbr=on}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=4, 18}}
File:Félix Bracquemond, The Road Leading to Bellevue, 1873, NGA 57860.jpgFélix BracquemondEtching{{convert|10 x 31|cm|in|abbr=on}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=4, 18}}
(No free image)Félix BracquemondDrypoint{{convert|23 x 31|cm|in|abbr=on}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=4, 19}}
File:Bachots au bords de la Seine MET DP814345.jpgFélix BracquemondDrypoint{{convert|25 x 34.9|cm|in|abbr=on}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=4–5, 19}}
rowspan="5" |27.rowspan="5" | Frame of engravings:{{ordered list |list_style_type=lower-alpha | Le Chemin du parc | Frontispice pour les "Fleurs de mal" | Margot la critique | Bois de Boulogne | La Mort de Matamore (Capitaine Fracasse)}}File:Le Chemin des Coutures, à Sèvres (NYPL b14506647-1128863).tiffFélix BracquemondEtching and aquatint{{convert|21.5 x 23|cm|in|abbr=on}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=5, 19}}
File:Unpublished frontispiece for Baudelaire's Les Fleurs du Mal MET DP814149.jpgFélix BracquemondEtching{{convert|18 x 12|cm|in|abbr=on}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=5, 19}}
File:Margot la Critique MET DP814024.jpgFélix BracquemondEtching{{convert|24 x 21|cm|in|abbr=on}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=5, 19}}
File:Le Bois de Boulogne MET DP814034.jpgFélix BracquemondEtching{{convert|16.1 x 11|cm|in|abbr=on}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=5, 19}}
File:The Death of Matamore MET DP814032.jpgFélix BracquemondEtching{{convert|16 x 22.5|cm|in|abbr=on}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=5, 20}}
rowspan="2" |28.rowspan="2" | Frame of engravings:{{ordered list |list_style_type=lower-alpha | Portrait d'Erasme, D'après Holbein, Premier État | Portrait d'Erasme, D'après Holbein, État}}File:Érasme, d'après Holbein (NYPL b14504927-1129389).tiffFélix BracquemondEtching{{convert|24.8 x 19.7|cm|in|abbr=on}}Unknown{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=5, 20}}
File:Hans Holbein - Erasmus (Didier Erasme) - 2016.137 - Cleveland Museum of Art.tifFélix BracquemondEtching{{convert|24.8 x 19.7|cm|in|abbr=on}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=5, 20}}
29.Scene in a SynagogueFile:Scene in a Synagogue.jpgJacques Émile Édouard Brandon1869–70Oil on canvas{{convert|156.9 x 88.3|cm|in|abbr=on}}Philadelphia Museum of Art{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=5, 20}}
30.Portrait de M. A. Z.Jacques Émile Édouard Brandon
31.WatercolorsJacques Émile Édouard BrandonWatercolors
32.Exposition du corps de Sainte-Brigitte à Rome, en 1392Jacques Émile Édouard Brandon
32. (bis)Le Maître d'ecole(No free image)Jacques Émile Édouard BrandonLithograph{{convert|16 x 21|cm|in|abbr=on}}Cabinet des estampes, Bibliothèque nationale de France{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=6–7, 20}}
33.Le Clocher de Jouy-le-ComtePierre-Isidore Bureau
34.Près de l'étang de Jouy-le-ComtePierre-Isidore Bureau
35.Moonlight on the banks of the Oise in Isle-AdamFile:Pierre-Isidore Bureau - Clair de lune sur les bords de l'Oise à l'Isle-Adam, 1867.pngPierre-Isidore Bureau1867Oil on canvas{{convert|33 x 41|cm|in|abbr=on}}Musée d'Orsay{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=6, 20}}
35. (bis)Clair-de-LunePierre-Isidore Bureau
36.Portrait de Madame Ed. G.Adolphe-Félix Cals
37.Le Bon Père Pêcheur à Honfleur(No free image)Adolphe-Félix Cals1874Oil on canvas{{convert|120 x 100|cm|in|abbr=on}}Unknown{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=6, 21}}
38.Vieux pêcheurFile:Adolphe-Félix Cals, Le Vieux pêcheur, 1873.jpgAdolphe-Félix Cals1873Oil on canvas{{convert|115.9 x 88.9|cm|in|abbr=on}}Private collection{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=6, 21}}
39.PaysageAdolphe-Félix Cals
40.Bonne Femme tricotantAdolphe-Félix Cals
41.La Fileuse bleue(No free image)Adolphe-Félix Cals1860Oil on canvas{{convert|39 x 30|cm|in|abbr=on}}Unknown{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=6, 21}}
42.The Hanged Man's HouseFile:La Maison du pendu, Auvers-sur-Oise, par Paul Cézanne, FWN 81.jpgPaul Cézanne1873Oil on canvas{{convert|55 x 66|cm|in|abbr=on}}Musée d'Orsay, Paris{{sfnp|Rewald|1973|page=322}}
43.A Modern OlympiaFile:Paul Cezanne, A Modern Olympia, c. 1873-1874.jpgPaul Cézanne1873–74Oil on canvas{{convert|46.2 x 55.5|cm|in|abbr=on}}Musée d'Orsay, Paris{{sfnp|Rewald|1973|page=323}}
44.Étude: Paysage à AuversFile:Paul Cézanne - Quartier Four, Auvers-sur-Oise.jpgPaul Cézanne1873Oil on canvas{{convert|46.3 x 55.2|cm|in|abbr=on}}Philadelphia Museum of Art{{sfnp|Moffett|1986|page=126}}
45.Haurra-MariaGustave-Henri Colin
46.La Maison du CharpentierGustave-Henri Colin
47.L'Étang aux poules d'eauGustave-Henri Colin
48.Marchandes de poissons de Fontarabie (Espange)Gustave-Henri Colin
49.Entrée du port de Pasages (Espange)Gustave-Henri Colin
50.Un PaysanLouis Debras
51.Une Nature morteLouis Debras
52.San Juan de la Rapita (Espagne)Louis DebrasDrawing
53.Rembrandt dans son atelierLouis Debras
54.Examen de danse au théâtreEdgar Degas
55.The Dancing ClassFile:Edgar Degas - Chasse de danse.jpgEdgar Degas1871Oil on wood{{convert|19.7 x 27|cm|in|abbr=on}}Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York{{sfnp|Dayez|Hoog|Moffet|1974|pages=94–98}}
56.Intérieur de coulisseEdgar DegasDestroyed by artist{{sfnp|Berson|1996|page=7}}
57.BlanchisseuseEdgar Degas
58.Départ de CourseEdgar DegasSketch drawing
59.Faux DépartEdgar DegasDrawing
60.Ballet Rehearsal on StageFile:Edgar Degas - Ballet Rehearsal on Stage - Google Art Project.jpgEdgar Degas1874Oil on canvas{{convert|65 x 81.5|cm|in|abbr=on}}Musée d'Orsay, Paris{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=7, 22}}{{efn-lr|There are two other versions of this painting in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. These other two versions were probably painted after the Musée d'Orsay version.{{cite web |title=Répétition d'un ballet sur la scène |url=https://www.musee-orsay.fr/en/artworks/repetition-dun-ballet-sur-la-scene-1154 |website=Musée d'Orsay |access-date=3 January 2024 |archive-date=3 January 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240103190330/https://www.musee-orsay.fr/en/artworks/repetition-dun-ballet-sur-la-scene-1154 |url-status=live }}{{cite web |title=The Rehearsal of the Ballet Onstage |url=https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/436155 |website=The Metropolitan Museum of Art |access-date=3 January 2024 |language=en |archive-date=24 January 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220124164903/https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/436155 |url-status=live }}{{cite web |title=The Rehearsal Onstage |url=https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/436156 |website=The Metropolitan Museum of Art |access-date=3 January 2024 |language=en |archive-date=24 January 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220124164900/https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/436156 |url-status=live }}}}
61.Une BlanchisseuseFile:Degas La Repasseuse Musee dOrsay.JPGEdgar Degas1869Charcoal, white chalk, and pastel on paper{{convert|74 x 61|cm|in|abbr=on}}Musée d'Orsay, Paris{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=7, 22}}
62.Après le bainEdgar DegasDrawing
63.At the Races in the CountrysideFile:Edgar Degas - At the Races in the Countryside - Google Art Project.jpgEdgar Degas1869Oil on canvas{{convert|36.5 x 55.9|cm|in|abbr=on}}Museum of Fine Arts, Boston{{sfnp|Rewald|1973|page=311}}
64.View of the Seine, ParisFile:Armand Guillaumin - View of the Seine, Paris - Google Art Project.jpgArmand Guillaumin1871Oil on canvas{{convert|126.4 x 181.3|cm|in|abbr=on}}Museum of Fine Arts, Houston{{sfnp|Moffett|1986|page=128}}
65.Temps pluvieux (landscape)Armand Guillaumin
66.Soleil couchant à IvryFile:Armand Guillaumin - Soleil couchant à Ivry - 1869.jpgArmand Guillaumin1869Oil on canvas{{convert|65 x 81|cm|in|abbr=on}}Musée d'Orsay{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=8, 22}}
67.Clocher de Berk (pas-de-Calais)Louis Latouche
68.Vue des Quais (Paris)Louis Latouche
69.La Plage, marée basse à Berck (Pas-de-Calais)Louis Latouche
70.Sous boisLouis Latouche
74.L'Arrivée de la marée à CayeuxLudovic-Napoléon LepicWatercolor
75.La pêcheLudovic-Napoléon LepicWatercolor
76.Golfe de NaplesLudovic-Napoléon LepicWatercolor
77.Le Départ pour la pêche du harengLudovic-Napoléon LepicEtching
78.L'Escalier du château d'Aix en Savoie(No free image)Ludovic-Napoléon Lepic1863Etching{{convert|41 x 38.4|cm|in|abbr=on}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=8, 23}}
79.César, Portrait de chienFile:Ludovic Lepic - Cesar.jpgLudovic-Napoléon Lepic1861Etching{{convert|32 x 24|cm|in|abbr=on}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=8, 23}}
80.Jupiter, Portrait de chienFile:Ludovic-Napoléon Lepic - Jupiter, 1861.jpgLudovic-Napoléon Lepic1861Etching{{convert|34.5 x 25.5|cm|in|abbr=on}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=8, 23}}
81.Le canal Saint-DenisStanislas Lépine
82.La rue CortotStanislas Lépine
83.Bank of the SeineFile:Stanislas Lépine - Paysage (Landscape), 1869.jpgStanislas Lépine1869Oil on canvas{{convert|30 x 58.5|cm|in|abbr=on}}Musée d'Orsay{{sfnp|Moffett|1986|page=129}}
84.Bords de l'EssonneLéopold Levert
85.Le Moulin de TouiauxLéopold Levert
86.Près d'AuversLéopold Levert
HC1Lieutenant des lanciersComtesse de Luchaire{{efn-lr|This artwork was shown at the exhibition, but neither the artist nor the artwork were listed in the catalog.}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|page=9}}
87.Estienne Marcel, prévôt des marchandsAlfred MeyerEnamel
88.Doña Maria Pacheco, épouse de Don Jaun de Padilla, chef de l'insurrection, qui avait pris le nom de Sainte Ligue des communes sous Charles-QuintAlfred MeyerEnamel
89.Le FirmamentAlfred MeyerEnamel
90.Figure d'après RaphaëlAlfred MeyerEnamel
91.Figure d'après RaphaëlAlfred MeyerEnamel
91. (bis)IdylleAlfred MeyerDrawing
92.The Comming Storm(No free image)Auguste de Molins1874Oil on panel{{convert|34.6 x 55.5|cm|in|abbr=on}}Private collection, Lausanne{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=9, 23}}
93.Rendez-Vous de chasse(No free image)Auguste de MolinsOil on canvas{{convert|35.5 x 55|cm|in|abbr=on}}Private collestion{{efn-lr|This painting may have been either 93 or 94 (bis), as the two listings have identical titles.}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=9, 23}}
94.Relai de chiensAuguste de Molins
94. (bis)Rendez-Vous de chasseAuguste de Molins
95.Poppies at ArgenteuilFile:Claude Monet - Poppy Field - Google Art Project.jpgClaude Monet1873Oil on canvas{{convert|50 x 65|cm|in|abbr=on}}Musée d'Orsay, Paris{{sfnp|Wildenstein|1996|pages=117–18}}
96.Fishing Boats Leaving the Port of Le HavreFile:Claude Monet, Fishing Boats Leaving the Harbor, Le Havre.jpgClaude Monet1874Oil on canvas{{convert|60 x 101|cm|in|abbr=on}}Private collection{{sfnp|Wildenstein|1996|page=126}}
97.Boulevard des CapucinesFile:Claude Monet 009.jpgClaude Monet1873Oil on canvas{{convert|61 x 80|cm|in|abbr=on}}Pushkin Museum, Moscow{{sfnp|Wildenstein|1996|page=125}}{{efn-lr|Monet painted two paintings titled Boulevard des Capucines. It has been traditionally held that the version in the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, Missouri was the version exhibited at the First Impressionist Exhibition. However, recent scholarship has suggested that it was the version that is currently in the Pushkin Museum in Moscow, Russia.{{cite journal |last1=Lilley |first1=Ed |title=A Rediscovered English Review of the 1874 Impressionist Exhibition |journal=The Burlington Magazine |date=2012 |volume=154 |issue=1317 |pages=843–845 |jstor=41812904 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/41812904 |access-date=3 January 2024 |issn=0007-6287 |archive-date=3 January 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240103132911/https://www.jstor.org/stable/41812904 |url-status=live }}{{cite journal |last1=Kennedy |first1=Ian |title=Monet's Boulevard des Capucines: Kansas City or Moscow? |journal=Apollo |date=March 2007 |volume=165 |issue=541 |pages=69–71 |issn=0003-6536}}}}
98.Impression, SunriseFile:Monet - Impression, Sunrise.jpgClaude Monet1872Oil on canvas{{convert|48 x 63|cm|in|abbr=on}}Musée Marmottan Monet, Paris{{sfnp|Wildenstein|1996|pages=113–14}}{{sfnp|Dayez|Hoog|Moffet|1974|pages=150–154}}
99.Deux croquis ("Two sketches")Claude MonetPastel
100.Deux croquis ("Two sketches")Claude MonetPastel
101.Deux croquis ("Two sketches")Claude MonetPastel
102.Un croquis ("A sketch")Claude MonetPastel
103.The LuncheonFile:Claude Monet - The Luncheon - Google Art Project.jpgClaude Monet1868–69Oil on canvas{{convert|150 x 230|cm|in|abbr=on}}Städel Museum, Frankfurt{{sfnp|Wildenstein|1996|pages=63–64}}
104.The CradleFile:Berthe Morisot 008.jpgBerthe Morisot1872Oil on canvas{{convert|56 x 46|cm|in|abbr=on}}Musée d'Orsay, Paris{{sfnp|Moffett|1986|page=131}}
105.La lectureFile:L'ombrelle verte.jpgBerthe Morisot1873Oil on canvas{{convert|45.1 x 72.4|cm|in|abbr=on}}Cleveland Museum of Art{{sfnp|Berson|1996|page=10, 25}}{{cite web |title=Reading |url=https://www.clevelandart.org/art/1950.89 |website=Cleveland Museum of Art |access-date=12 March 2024 |archive-date=4 October 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231004172154/https://www.clevelandart.org/art/1950.89 |url-status=live }}
106.Hide-and-SeekFile:Morisot - hide-and-seek.jpgBerthe Morisot1873Oil on canvas{{convert|45 x 55|cm|in|abbr=on}}Private collection, New York{{sfnp|Moffett|1986|page=133}}
107.The Harbor at LorientFile:Berthe Morisot The Harbor at Lorient.jpgBerthe Morisot1869Oil on canvas{{convert|43.5 x 73|cm|in|abbr=on}}National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC{{sfnp|Moffett|1986|page=134}}
108.Portrait of Madeleine ThomasFile:Morisot - young-girl-with-a-parrot.jpgBerthe Morisot1873Oil on canvas{{convert|60 x 49.5|cm|in|abbr=on}}Private collection, New York{{sfnp|Moffett|1986|page=135}}
109.Le village de MaurecourtFile:Morisot villagemaurecourt.jpgBerthe MorisotPastel on paper{{convert|47 x 72|cm|in|abbr=on}}Private collection, New York{{sfnp|Moffett|1986|page=136}}
110.Sur la falaiseFile:Morisot - Sur la falaise, RF 3429, Recto.jpgBerthe MorisotWatercolor on paper{{convert|18 x 23|cm|in|abbr=on}}Musée d'Orsay{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=10, 26}}
111.Jeune Femme et enfant sur un bancFile:Morisot - Jeune femme dans un paysage, RF 3393, Recto.jpgBerthe MorisotWatercolor on paper{{convert|33 x 23|cm|in|abbr=on}}Musée d'Orasy{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=10, 26}}
112.Femme et enfant assise dans un préFile:Berthe Morisot - Woman and Child Seated in a Meadow (1871).jpgBerthe MorisotWatercolor on paper{{convert|21 x 24.1|cm|in|abbr=on}}Private collection{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=10, 26}}
HC2Portrait of Madame PontillonFile:Morisot - Portrait de Madame Pontillon, soeur de l'artiste, assise, sur un canapé, RF 5262, Recto.jpgBerth Morisot1871Pastel on paper{{convert|81 x 65|cm|in|abbr=on}}Musée d'Orasy{{efn-lr|This artwork was shown at the exhibition, but was not listed in the catalog.}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=vii, 11, 26}}
113.Barques à plombMulot-Durivage
114.La RampeMulot-Durivage
115.Paysage près de BloisGiuseppe De Nittis
116.Lever de Lune. VésuveGiuseppe De Nittis
117.Campagne du VésuveGiuseppe De Nittis
118.Études de femmeGiuseppe De Nittis
118. (bis)Route en ItalieGiuseppe De Nittis
119.Amour et PsychéAuguste-Louis-Marie OttinMarble group
120.Acis et GalathéeFile:Paris 6e - Jardin du Luxembourg - Fontaine Médicis - Acis et Galatée.jpgAuguste-Louis-Marie OttinBronze reductionUnknown{{efn-lr|Catalog items 120, 121, and 122 were smaller bronze versions of Auguste-Louis-Marie Ottin's marble sculptures made for the Medici Fountain in the Luxembourg Gardens in Paris. The current location of these bronze reductions is unknown. Pictured is the full-sized marble version of Acis et Galathée at the gardens, which is located at the center-bottom of the fountain.}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=11, 26}}
121.Jeune FauneFile:Pan par Auguste Ottin - Fontaine de Médicis.jpgAuguste-Louis-Marie OttinBronze reductionUnknown{{efn-lr|Catalog items 120, 121, and 122 were smaller bronze versions of Auguste-Louis-Marie Ottin's marble sculptures made for the Medici Fountain in the Luxembourg Gardens in Paris. The current location of these bronze reductions is unknown. Pictured is the full-sized marble version of Jeune Faune at the gardens, which is located in the left niche of the fountain.}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=11, 26}}
122.Nymphe chasseresseFile:Diane par Auguste Ottin - Fontaine de Médicis.jpgAuguste-Louis-Marie OttinBronze reductionUnknown{{efn-lr|Catalog items 120, 121, and 122 were smaller bronze versions of Auguste-Louis-Marie Ottin's marble sculptures made for the Medici Fountain in the Luxembourg Gardens in Paris. The current location of these bronze reductions is unknown. Pictured is the full-sized marble version of Nymphe chasseresse at the gardens, which is located in the right niche of the fountain.}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=11, 26}}
123.Jeune Femme portant un vaseAuguste-Louis-Marie OttinTerracotta
124.Jeune Femme portant un vaseAuguste-Louis-Marie OttinTerracotta
125.BusteAuguste-Louis-Marie OttinTerracotta
126.Buste de IngressFile:Musée Ingres-Bourdelle - Buste d'Ingres 1840 - Marbre - Auguste-Louis-Marie Ottin - MI.50.890.jpgAuguste-Louis-Marie Ottin1840Plaster reduction{{convert|53|cm|in|abbr=on}}Musée Ingres, Montauban{{efn-lr|Pictured is the full-sized marble version. A Non-free photograph of the plaster version is available at the Musée Ingres website.[https://museeingresbourdelle.com/notice?id=h%3A%3AINGRES_47320c4d-67f6-489b-94ad-cabbff07c224&locale=en Buste d'Ingres] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240127200500/https://museeingresbourdelle.com/notice?id=h::INGRES_47320c4d-67f6-489b-94ad-cabbff07c224&locale=en |date=2024-01-27 }} (In French)}}{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=11, 26}}
127.Le Dernier Mousse du VengeurAuguste-Louis-Marie OttinPlaster
128.Buste de M. B***Auguste-Louis-Marie OttinTerracotta
129.Après la messe à la campagneLéon-Auguste Ottin
130.Au Château (sannois)Léon-Auguste Ottin
131.La Butte Montmartre, versant sudLéon-Auguste Ottin
132.La Fête chez ThérèseLéon-Auguste OttinWatercolor
133.Une Bergerie sans moutonsLéon-Auguste OttinLithograph
134.At homeLéon-Auguste Ottin
135.MaretteLéon-Auguste Ottin
136.Orchard in Bloom, LouveciennesFile:Camille Pissarro, Le verger (The Orchard), 1872.jpgCamille Pissarro1872Oil on linen{{convert|45.1 x 54.9|cm|in|abbr=on}}National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC{{sfnp|Moffett|1986|page=137}}
137.HoarfrostFile:Camille Pissarro - Gelée blanche, ancienne route d´Ennery, Pontoise - 1873.jpgCamille Pissarro1873Oil on canvas{{convert|65.5 x 93|cm|in|abbr=on}}Musée d'Orsay, Paris{{sfnp|Moffett|1986|page=138}}
138.The Chestnut Trees at OsnyFile:Pissarro, Camille, Les chataigniers a Osny (The Chestnut Trees at Osny), 1873.jpgCamille Pissarro1873Oil on canvas{{convert|65 x 81|cm|in|abbr=on}}Private collection, New York{{sfnp|Moffett|1986|page=139}}
139.The Public Garden at PontoiseFile:Camille Pissarro - La Jardin de la Ville, Pontoise - 1874.jpgCamille Pissarro1874Oil on canvas{{convert|60 x 73|cm|in|abbr=on}}Metropolitan Museum of Art{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=12, 27}}
140.June Morning at PontoiseFile:June Morning at Pontoise - Camille Pissarro - Google Cultural Institute.jpgCamille Pissarro1873Oil on canvas{{convert|55 x 91|cm|in|abbr=on}}Staatliche Kunsthalle Karlsruhe{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=12, 27}}
141.The DancerFile:Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Danseuse.jpgPierre-Auguste Renoir1874Oil on canvas{{convert|142.5 x 94.5|cm|in|abbr=on}}National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC{{sfnp|Moffett|1986|page=141}}
142.La Loge, ("The Theatre Box")File:La Loge de P.-A. Renoir (Fondation Vuitton, Paris) (46499625955).jpgPierre-Auguste Renoir1874Oil on canvas{{convert|80 x 63.5|cm|in|abbr=on}}Courtauld Gallery, London{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=12, 28}}
143.La ParisienneFile:Pierre-Auguste Renoir 089.jpgPierre-Auguste Renoir1874Oil on canvas{{convert|163.2 x 108.3|cm|in|abbr=on}}Amgueddfa Cymru – Museum Wales{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=12, 28}}{{cite web |title=The blue lady |url=https://museum.wales/collections/online/object/ad07f7ef-94c9-38d6-b8d9-0a6c507df4f6/La-Parisienne/ |website=Museum Wales |access-date=3 January 2024 |language=en |archive-date=16 April 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230416221146/https://museum.wales/collections/online/object/ad07f7ef-94c9-38d6-b8d9-0a6c507df4f6/La-Parisienne/ |url-status=live }}
144.HarvestersFile:Pierre-Auguste Renoir - Les Moissonneurs.jpgPierre-Auguste Renoir1873Oil on canvas{{convert|58 x 72.5|cm|in|abbr=on}}Private collection{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=12, 28}}
145.Mixed Flowers in an Earthenware PotFile:Pierre-Auguste Renoir - Mixed Flowers in an Earthenware Pot - Google Art Project.jpgPierre-Auguste Renoir1869Oil on canvas{{convert|64.8 x 54|cm|in|abbr=on}}Museum of Fine Arts, Boston{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=12, 28}}
146.CroquisPierre-Auguste RenoirPastel
147.Tête de femme(No free image)Pierre-Auguste RenoirOil on canvas{{convert|32 x 24.1|cm|in|abbr=on}}Unknown{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=12, 28}}
148.Ferme bretonneHenri Rouart
149.Levée d'étangHenri Rouart
150.Vue de MelunHenri Rouart
151.VillageHenri Rouart
152.ForêtHenri Rouart
153.Route bretonneHenri Rouart
154.Ferme bretonneHenri RouartWatercolor
155.Maisons béarnaisesHenri RouartWatercolor
155.Maisons béarnaisesHenri RouartWatercolor
157.Eau-forteHenri Rouart
158.Eau-forteHenri Rouart
159.Jeunes filles dans les foins en fleursLéopold Robert
160.CadreLéopold RobertWatercolor
161.The Route from Saint-Germain to MarlyFile:The Route from Saint-Germain to Marly by Alfred Sisley.jpgAlfred Sisley1872Oil on canvas{{convert|46.4 x 61|cm|in|abbr=on}}McNay Art Museum{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=13, 28}}{{cite web |title=The Route from Saint-Germain to Marly |url=https://collection.mcnayart.org/objects/1030/the-route-from-saint-germain-to-marly |website=McNay Art Museum |access-date=5 January 2024 |language=en |archive-date=5 January 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240105162648/https://collection.mcnayart.org/objects/1030/the-route-from-saint-germain-to-marly |url-status=live }}
162.The Ferry of the Ile de la Loge FloodFile:Le Bac de l'île de la Loge, inondation.jpgAlfred Sisley1872Oil on canvas{{convert|46 x 61|cm|in|abbr=on}}Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek, Copenhagen{{sfnp|Shone|1999|pages=62–64}}
163.The Machine at MarlyFile:Alfred Sisley 043.jpgAlfred Sisley1873Oil on canvas{{convert|45 x 64.5|cm|in|abbr=on}}Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek, Copenhagen{{sfnp|Shone|1999|pages=64, 83}}
164.Orchard(No free image)Alfred Sisley1873Oil on canvas{{convert|50 x 73|cm|in|abbr=on}}Private collection, Paris{{sfnp|Berson|1996|pages=13, 29}}
165.Port Marly, soiré d'hiverAldred Sisley
HC3Autumn: Banks of the Seine near BougivalFile:Alfred Sisley, L'automne - Bords de la Seine pres Bougival (Autumn - Banks of the Seine near Bougival), 1873.jpgAlfred Sisley1873Oil on canvas{{convert|46 x 62|cm|in|abbr=on}}Montreal Museum of Fine Arts{{efn-lr|This painting was shown at the exhibition, but was not listed in the catalog.}}{{sfnp|Moffett|1986|pages=6, 142}}

= Catalog notes =

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See also

Notes

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References

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Bibliography

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  • {{cite book |last1=Berson |first1=Ruth |title=The New Painting: Impressionism 1874–1886: Documentation |date=1996 |publisher=Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco |location=San Francisco |isbn=0-295-96704-8 |url=https://archive.org/details/newpaintingimpre0000unse/ }}
  • {{cite book |last1=Dayez |first1=Anne |author1-link=Anne Distel |last2=Hoog |first2=Michel |last3=Moffet |first3=Charles S. |title=Impressionism: A Centenary Exhibition |date=1974 |publisher=The Metropolitan Museum of Art |location=New York, NY |isbn=978-0-87099-097-7 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dhc-U0t14vMC |access-date=2024-04-02 |archive-date=2023-07-16 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230716135823/https://books.google.com/books?id=dhc-U0t14vMC |url-status=live }}
  • {{cite book |last1=Dunlop |first1=Ian |title=The Shock of the New: Seven Historic Exhibitions of Modern Art |date=1972 |publisher=American Heritage Press |location=New York |url=https://archive.org/details/shockofnew0000unse/ |language=en }}
  • {{cite book |last1=Feist |first1=Peter H. |title=Impressionist Art, 1860–1920 |date=2006 |volume=1 |publisher=Taschen |location=Köln, London, Los Angeles, Madrid, Paris, Tokyo |isbn=978-3-8228-5053-4 |url=https://archive.org/details/impressionistart0000unse/ |language=en }}
  • {{cite book |last1=Moffett |first1=Charles S. |title=The New Painting: Impressionism 1874-1886 |date=1986 |publisher=Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco |location=San Francisco |isbn=0-88401-047-3 |url=https://archive.org/details/newpaintingimpre00moffrich/ }}
  • {{cite book |last1=Rewald |first1=John |title=The History of Impressionism |date=1973 |publisher=Museum of Modern Art |location=New York |isbn=((0-87070-360-6)) |edition=Fourth |url=https://archive.org/details/historyofimpress0000unse_x5j4/ |language=en }}
  • {{cite book |last1=Schaefer |first1=Iris |last2=Saint-George |first2=Caroline von |last3=Lewerentz |first3=Katja |title=Painting Light: The hidden techniques of the Impressionists |date=2008 |publisher=Skira |location=Milan |isbn=978-88-6130-609-7 |url=https://archive.org/details/paintinglighthid0000scha/ }}
  • {{cite book |last1=Shone |first1=Richard |title=Sisley |date=1999 |publisher=Phaidon Press Limited |location=London |isbn=0-7148-3892-6 |edition=Revised paperback |url=https://archive.org/details/sisley0000shon/ }}
  • {{cite journal |last1=Tucker |first1=Paul |author1-link=Paul Hayes Tucker |title=The First Impressionist Exhibition and Monet's 'Impression, Sunrise': A Tale of Timing, Commerce and Patriotism |journal=Art History |date=December 1984 |volume=7 |issue=4 |pages=465–476 |doi=10.1111/j.1467-8365.1984.tb00117.x |language=en}}
  • {{cite book |last1=Wildenstein |first1=Daniel |author1-link=Daniel Wildenstein |title=Monet: Catalogue Raisonné |date=1996 |publisher=Taschen, Wildenstein Institute |location=Köln |isbn=3-8228-8759-5 |volume=II |url=https://archive.org/details/c.rclaudemonetvolumeiiwildensteininstitute/ }}

{{refend}}