I've been painting in a fairly realistic style for years, but I've recently become fascinated with Impressionism, particularly the way artists like Monet captured light and atmosphere rather than detail. My attempts to paint en plein air in that style have been frustrating—my colors get muddy, and the brushwork feels hesitant and overworked instead of loose and expressive. I'm using oils and trying to work more quickly. For painters who have studied this movement, what practical exercises or mindset shifts helped you break away from rendering forms and learn to see and paint the effects of light and color in a more impressionistic way?
Here's a quick 15‑minute plein air drill I actually used: block in broad color shapes with a big brush, aim for the impression of light and temperature rather than perfect forms. Don’t chase finish; the goal is speed and atmosphere.
I found a limited palette helps a lot. Pick 4–5 pigments plus white, mix temps on the fly, and paint patches instead of lines. Step back every few minutes and compare to the scene—eye‑mixing will often tell you more than trying to get it perfect on the canvas.
Three‑step workflow that softened my approach: 1) mass in the scene with large sweeps to establish light, 2) add broken color strokes to imply texture, 3) fine‑tune values with a light glaze or subtle edge tweaks to unify the scene.
Edge strategy matters in impressionism. Soften background edges, keep a couple of sharper foreground edges to anchor depth. That helps the viewer read the image as a cohesive moment without overrendering.
Try 'gesture sessions'—short 10–15 minute bouts where you paint what you feel rather than what you know. The constraint forces looseness and often reveals color relationships you wouldn’t notice with careful planning.
Study a Monet or two, not to copy, but to feel how he reduces forms to color blocks that read as light. Do a couple of practice studies: one color-block version, one more detailed but still loose, then compare—pattern emerges.