All along that time, the Impressionists painters were not very popular because they had a dissimilar approach to painting unlike most artists who painted in a very classic way like those of their previous masters. The other important Impressionist painters were Renoir, Camille Pissarro, Van-Gogh, and Alfred Sisley
The Impressionists often do their art outdoors and exemplify the effect of light and color at especial times of the day. Their works are sometimes referred to as 'captured moments' which are characterized by short agile brushstrokes of paint that when viewed closely, it may look untidy and unreal. But to Impressionists painters, exposure to light and movement was enough to come up an acceptable and artistic subject out of actually anything. Impressionist painters mastered how to transcribe candidly their visual sensations of nature, dispassionate with the actual likeness of an exact subject.
By looking at some Impressionist drawings, you will see that there is a fascination of the seasonal changes on the identical landscape. The effects of this approach lead us to perceive the changing nature of trees, vegetation, sky and clouds. Such method was initiated by Claude Monet and according to some art scholars he perfected how to exchange the season's impression on the canvas by painting the same landscape again and again in different seasons and at different times of the day. With this, Monet painted not the landscape alone, but its impression on his perceive as he kept seeing it. He simplified the subject through his drawing making it easy for us to remember it and this is the reason why his drawings are classics.