 Impressionist painters: they were a motley group, radical for their 
time, daring, and adventurous. Their angle was to paint what they saw, 
rather than what they thought they should see, or what people expected 
them to see.
Impressionist painters: they were a motley group, radical for their 
time, daring, and adventurous. Their angle was to paint what they saw, 
rather than what they thought they should see, or what people expected 
them to see.What does this have to do with books and reading? Well, I’m no art historian, but I noticed over the years that Impressionist painters have a bit of an obsession with readers. And not just any readers- women readers.
Why women? I could spout the academic view that women were often associated with novel reading in the 19th century, or I could spout the shallow view that Impressionist painters just loved how women in frilly dresses looked while they were engrossed in a good story. What I will say is that Impressionist painting and reading are perfect for each other, for a person who is deep in a good book is not really “there,” even if you think you see them. They are, in fact, traveling in another land and another time, and thus they’re slightly out of focus. As a reading woman myself, I am strongly drawn to these paintings of other women reading, even if we’re separated by more than a century. As you’ll also see, women painted many of these scenes, as if they were conjuring up the times when they were most happy.
And so, without any further ado, I bring you some of the greatest “go-away-annoying-people-can’t-you-see-I’m-reading?” Impressionist paintings.




 
 

 
Thanks for this! I'm looking for a painting like one of these for a reading nook in my house :)
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