Comparing Realism and Impressionism

Comparing Realism and Impressionism
Realism originated in France in the 1850’s as a result of the political and social upheaval of the time.   The Industrial Revolution created a huge chasm between the rich and the working class, most of whom were quite poor.   Artists began to reject the idealistic subjectivity of the romantic arts, focusing instead, on the everyday life and problems of the common man.   Painters strove to depict life as it was without embellishment, painting the world around them as it was.  
This movement attempted to present life, good or bad, ugly or sordid, and create a public consciousness of the squalor and desperation   of this new working class.   This attempt to create social awareness created a public outrage, mainly because they didn’t know what to do with this new knowledge.  
Impressionism began in the 1860’s and lasted through the 1880’s.   It was a new form of art based on the scientific qualities of light, a natural progression of painting with the advent of photography. Artists strove to catch a fleeting moment of time on canvas.   The subject switched from the plight of ordinary man to plein air scenes of the recreational activities of the more genteel class.   Like Realists, Impressionist painters painted realistic scenes of things around them, but they strove to recreate the visual effects of transient sunlight rather than details in their work.   But working en plein air required the artist to paint quickly to keep the paint from drying out.   Because the painter had to work so quickly, the techniques of painters changed from carefully planned and executed to spontaneous, almost sketch-like works, leaving one with an impression of the subject rather than a tediously rendered portrait.
Edouard Manet’s painting “Young Lady of 1866” and Berthe Morisot’s “Young Girl with a Parrot” contain similar subjects, but strikingly different painting styles and techniques.   Manet’s painting consists of a young woman and a parrot on a stand, with...