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===A "revolutionary" style=== [[File:Camille Pissarro, Le verger (The Orchard), 1872.jpg|thumb|'' Orchard in Bloom, [[Louveciennes]]'', 1872]] [[File:Camille Pissarro - The Hay Cart, Montfoucault - Google Art Project.jpg|thumbnail|''The Hay Cart, [[Lassay-les-Châteaux|Montfoucault]]'', 1879]] Pissarro showed five of his paintings, all landscapes, at the exhibit, and again [[Émile Zola]] praised his art and that of the others. In the Impressionist exhibit of 1876, however, [[art critic]] Albert Wolff complained in his review, "Try to make M. Pissarro understand that trees are not violet, that sky is not the color of fresh butter ..." Journalist and art critic [[Octave Mirbeau]] on the other hand, writes, "Camille Pissarro has been a revolutionary through the revitalized working methods with which he has endowed painting".<ref name="Gallery2"/>{{rp|36}} According to Rewald, Pissarro had taken on an attitude more simple and natural than the other artists. He writes: :"Rather than glorifying—consciously or not—the rugged existence of the peasants, he placed them without any 'pose' in their habitual surroundings, thus becoming an objective chronicler of one of the many facets of contemporary life."<ref name=Rewald/>{{rp|20}} In later years, Cézanne also recalled this period and referred to Pissarro as "the first Impressionist". In 1906, a few years after Pissarro's death, Cézanne, then 67 and a role model for the new generation of artists, paid Pissarro a debt of gratitude by having himself listed in an exhibition catalogue as "Paul Cézanne, pupil of Pissarro".<ref name=Rewald/>{{rp|45}} Pissarro, [[Degas]], and American impressionist [[Mary Cassatt]] planned a journal of their original prints in the late 1870s, a project that nevertheless came to nothing when Degas withdrew.{{sfn|Mathews|1994|pages=139, 149}}<ref name=Masters/> Art historian and the artist's great-grandson Joachim Pissarro notes that they "professed a passionate disdain for the Salons and refused to exhibit at them."<ref name=Joachim/> Together they shared an "almost militant resolution" against the Salon, and through their later correspondences it is clear that their mutual admiration "was based on a kinship of ethical as well as aesthetic concerns".<ref name=Joachim/> Cassatt had befriended Degas and Pissarro years earlier when she joined Pissarro's newly formed French Impressionist group and gave up opportunities to exhibit in the United States. She and Pissarro were often treated as "two outsiders" by the Salon since neither were French or had become French citizens. However, she was "fired up with the cause" of promoting Impressionism and looked forward to exhibiting "out of solidarity with her new friends".<ref>Roe, Sue. ''The Private Lives of the Impressionists'', HarperCollins (2006) p. 187</ref> Towards the end of the 1890s she began to distance herself from the Impressionists, avoiding Degas at times as she did not have the strength to defend herself against his "wicked tongue". Instead, she came to prefer the company of "the gentle Camille Pissarro", with whom she could speak frankly about the changing attitudes toward art.{{sfn|Mathews|1994|pages=190, 238–9}} She once described him as a teacher "that could have taught the stones to draw correctly."<ref name= Masters/>
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