1. I was born on December 31, 1869, in Le Cateau-Cambrésis, in northern France. I grew up in a comfortable bourgeois household. I was expected to pursue a solidly middle-class career, like law or business.
2. At twenty, after a bout of appendicitis laid me low, my mother bought me a set of paints. As I painted, I discovered a kind of paradise. I began to dream of an entirely different career.
3. In 1905, I shocked the art world by unleashing wild, untamed colors on canvas. My daring strokes defied tradition and sparked the movement of Fauvism.
4. I wandered to sunlit Mediterranean coasts where light danced with shadow. These vibrant hues transformed my palette and ignited my creative spirit.
5. When illness confined me in later life, I reinvented my craft. I turned to paper cutouts—a new language of shape and form—to continue expressing my vision.
6. I never limited myself to one medium. I painted, sculpted, and printed—each creation a defiant act against the mundane, a pursuit of beauty in every form. Find out who I am in the final slide!
The mystery is unveiled: I am the visionary of color and form, the pioneer of Fauvism. I am Henri Matisse.
Visit real-life locations that inspired Monet and more
Impressionism was a school of painting which developed in 19th Century France, seeking to catch the changeable qualities of light and human perception using short brushstrokes and a subtly varied color palette.
Many famous Impressionist artists worked 'en plein air', setting up their easels outside to paint their surroundings. Scroll on to see seven Impressionist works, then click and drag the Street View panels to step through the frame into the landscape...
Gustave Caillebotte’s stunning oil painting of the Place de Dublin in Paris, created and exhibited in 1877, is perhaps the artist’s most famous work.
Caillebotte’s combines realism and impressionism. The details in the foreground are in sharp focus while the background fades away, similar to the depth of field of a camera lens.
Click to explore the area today. The streets of Place de Dublin, or Carrefour de Moscou as it was known in 1877, have a bit more traffic than they used to!
2. Pierre-Auguste Renoir – ‘The Piazza San Marco, Venice’
In the autumn of 1881, Renoir visited Venice, Italy, to see the city’s Renaissance masterpieces. While there, he also painted some masterpieces of his own!
In addition to other paintings of Venetian landmarks, Renoir created this ethereal painting of St. Mark’s Basilica.
The Piazza hasn’t changed much in the centuries since Renoir visited, and tourists still flock to the spot to see the same cathedral. Click and drag to look around St. Mark’s Basilica using Street View.
3. Mary Cassatt – ‘Woman with a Pearl Necklace in a Loge’
Mary Cassatt, an American artist who became one of the best-known Impressionists, painted several pieces in opera boxes, or loges, including this beautiful example at the Palais Garnier in Paris.
This oil painting was created in 1879 and debuted the same year at the fourth Impressionist exhibition in Paris. Cassatt’s sister Lydia is said to be the model for this piece, as well as for others in the series.
The immaculately-gilded theater at the Palais Garnier in Paris is still in use today, so if you attend a ballet, you may sit in Mary Cassatt’s seat!
Camille Pissarro’s vibrant portrayal of Paris in the springtime was painted in 1897, toward the end of his career. Pissarro is notably the only artist to have displayed work at all eight of the Paris Impressionist exhibitions.
In addition to his contributions to the Impressionist movement, Pissarro also worked with George Seurat and Paul Signac, and influenced the paintings of Vincent van Gogh.
Boulevard Montmarte is one of the grands boulevards of Paris, and its splendor is still evident today. Click to explore the charming street.
5. Berthe Morisot – ‘The Thames’
French artist Berthe Morisot painted this foggy picture of the Thames during her 1875 visit to London. Morisot was a brilliant and prolific artist whose career spanned a variety of media and subjects. She showcased her pieces at all but one of the Impressionist exhibitions!
The Thames, which flows through more than 200 miles of southern England, has drawn countless artists to its banks over the centuries.
Click and drag to look around the area, and paint the scene if you’re feeling inspired!
6. Claude Monet – ‘Port of Le Havre’
Claude Monet might be thought of as the original Impressionist, considering the movement was named after one of his pieces, ‘Impression, Sunrise.’ This painting depicts the same location: Le Havre, France, where Monet spent most of his adolescence.
Today, Le Havre is still a vibrant, thriving city in Normandy, France. In 2005, UNESCO classified it as a World Heritage Site. Use Street View to stroll down the same coast Monet did!
7. Alfred Sisley – ‘Aqueduct at Marly’
Alfred Sisley, a Paris-born artist of British descent, created this vivid scene in 1874. ‘L’Aqueduc de Louveciennes,’ as it’s known is French, was built in the 1680s and had actually been retired in favor of underground plumbing in 1866.
The Aqueduct at Marly still stands proudly, almost identical to Sisley’s oil painting. Click to explore the area!
The Milwaukee Art Museum's collections of American decorative arts, German Expressionist prints and paintings, folk and Haitian art, and American art after 1960 are among the USA's finest.