While impressionism started out as an urban practice, many male artists of the late 19th century with the privilege and means of mobility moved into provincial locations to focus on the unique light and landscapes there. Claude Monet left Paris for Giverny where he concentrated on water lilies, among other things. Vincent Van Gogh moved to Saint Remy and Arles in the south of France, and Auvers-sur-Oise in the north, painting scenes in these areas and pioneering a hybrid style that drew on far East techniques.
One male artist, however, featured in the current exhibition at the Longmont Museum, George William Thornley, subverted this dynamic, seeking to be an imperceptible filter for art by using the repetitive facsimile process of lithography. Unlike Van Gogh’s unmistakable stamp on the wheat fields of the south of France, Thornley’s artistry is in being invisible.
