French for ‘in open air’, used to describe paintings that have been executed outdoors, rather than in the studio. Plein air painting was taken up by the English painters Richard Parks Bonington and John Constable, and the French painters of the Barbizon School. It also became central to the development of Impressionism.
French for ‘in open air’, used to describe paintings that have been executed outdoors, rather than in the studio. Plein air painting was taken up by the English painters Richard Parks Bonington and John Constable, and the French painters of the Barbizon School. It also became central to the development of Impressionism.

