![]() ![]() The Judgment of Paris chronicles the dramatic decade between two famous exhibitions-the scandalous Salon des Refuses in 1863 and the first Impressionist showing in 1874-set against the rise and dramatic fall of Napoleon III and the Second Empire after the Franco-Prussian War. The drama of its birth, played out on canvas, would at times resemble a battlefield and, as Ross King reveals, Impressionism would reorder both history and culture as it resonated around the world. Indeed, no artistic movement has ever been, at its inception, quite so controversial. While the Civil War raged in America, another very different revolution was beginning to take shape across the Atlantic, in the studios of Paris: The artists who would make Impressionism the most popular art form in history were showing their first paintings amidst scorn and derision from the French artistic establishment. ![]()
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