The possible answers to this question depend in large part on what you mean by "impact". Many artists who were popular in their time had a tremendous influence then, but their work went out of fashion later. Other artists labored in obscurity and were misunderstood or neglected during their lives but found fame after their deaths. Some artists work within the professional art world, with exhibitions in galleries, while others reject those confines as artificial or commercial.
A recent artist who had tremendous impact is Andy Warhol. He began his career as a commercial artist in advertising. When he made the switch to "fine" art, he often used common objects or commercial products as his subjects. Items like Campbell's soup cans that everyone could recognize and relate to, had not generally been considered suitable subjects for serious art. Warhol changed all of that and many would argue that the art world has permanently changed because of him.
Another factor to consider is the relative position of women and people of color in the art world. Achieving success in commercial and critical terms is difficult for every artist. The dominant image of the artist is still a white man but there are thousands of successful artists of other heritages.
One woman artist who has made a substantial impact is Frida Kahlo. During her life, physical injuries severely limited her mobility. Her career was also overshadowed by that of her husband, Diego Rivera. After her death, and largely as a result of feminist art historians' attention, Kahlo's work has become highly valued both in monetary terms and for her unique, perceptive visions. Powerful self-portraits are among her finest works.
In the U.S., the African American artist Jacob Lawrence achieved popular success at a time when very few African American artists had exhibitions in mainstream galleries. His Migration Series consists of 60 panels detailing the postwar migration of blacks to the northern United States, away from the segregated South.
https://lawrencemigration.phillipscollection.org/artist/about-jacob-lawrence
https://www.warhol.org/
A tricky question, particularly dependent upon which kind of art you're referencing. Because music is such an integral part of the fabric of our lives, I would start there.
The first musical artist to make an impact on our modern times would be George Handel (1685-1759). The ostinato bass treatment, that is used throughout his work, can be found in most popular music today. From Pink Floyd to Cardi B's Bodak Yellow the listener can track a very clear, short pattern of notes that are repeated over and over again. While not the creator of the ostinato bass line, Handel used his bass lines in a driving, passionate way that propels his music forward--not dissimilar to hip-hop artists today. In fact, the driving bass lines found in most arias from his masterpiece Ariodante can rival those of the most influential hip-hop artists of today.
Jonathan Larson single handedly transformed the landscape of Broadway and American musical theater with his composition Rent. The way the vocal lines were written demanded a new style of singing from its actors. No longer were traditional tessitura taken into account. The music instead took on a rock/pop sensibility that relied more on the emotion of the moment than the physical limitations of the vocal mechanism. This piece has influenced all musical theatre writing that has come since, and has forced a new style of belting from women looking to make a career for themselves on the stage.
I would be remiss if I did not mention Richard Wagner's contribution to the musical landscape. This man not only broke opera as we once knew it, but he bent the laws of music. His compositions departed from the traditional operatic structure to create their own. He created large, sweeping, through-composed epics that took the art form and stood it on its head. He built a theater specifically designed to perform his works, where the orchestra was primarily hidden underneath the stage. This created an immersive environment for his singers and audience that had never been explored before. He wrote in a new way for the voice that allowed and demanded the extremes of the vocal apparatus be tested. All the while, playing with harmony in ways that had never been explored. He created a chord so mysterious that still, to this day, its harmonic purpose is only referred to as 'The Tristan Chord.'
Artistic impact is hard to pin down and it all truly depends upon your chosen reality. For my money, these men were the ultimate influencers to the soundtrack of our lives.
This is a challenging question, but three artists jump out: Claude Monet, Vincent Van Gogh and Pablo Picasso. All three helped move painting away from a strict realism in which the artist tried to reproduce the most accurate possible stylized imitation of objects in the real world, to art that pushed the boundaries of perception in different ways. It's important to note that all three artists worked after the camera made it possible to capture the kind of realistic images that before had been the realm of painting and sculpture in the Western world. They are influential because they changed the way people see.
Claude Monet would have argued strongly that his approach, called impressionism, was scientific, and that he strove to capture an accurate and authentic depiction of a landscape or scene. What Monet did was to go outside and paint whatever he actually saw. He would frequently paint the same object over and over again at different times of day, in different seasons and in different weather. What he showed was that our impression of an object can be almost entirely different based on when and how we see it. For example, he famously painted haystacks at different times of year, in different weather and at various times of day. A haystack looks different in the fog or the rain than it does in the snow and different at dusk then mid-day. Sometimes my students will say: any four-year-old could have painted that haystack. But what Monet painted was what he saw, and if the weather made the haystack look like a wavy blob, that's what he recorded. What Monet did was establish the subjectivity of seeing. When we paint a haystack from memory, we paint an idealized haystack, not necessary the haystack as it appears in front of us in a particular moment: Monet helped break that way of seeing apart.
Van Gogh used vivid colors and laid paint thickly on his canvasses to achieve emotional, rather than realistic, effects. He famously said "real painters do not paint things as they are ... they paint them as they themselves feel them to be." For example, unlike Monet, he painted his famous canvas, Starry Night, from memory and used it to convey a spirit of emotional tumult in the swirling sky.
Picasso is an extraordinarily influential painter whose long life spanned two world wars. He is most famous as one of the inventors of cubism, a method of painting that broke objects into their geometrical parts and reassembled them without necessarily paying attention to creating something representational but often overlaying one point of view on top of another: thus a human being might be reduced to geometric shapes representing his front, back and side views and then all the shapes placed together. This abstract or non-representational art went far beyond Monet or Van Gogh's work in separating a painting from its subject, revolutionizing the art world in the twentieth century.
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