From wallpaper patterns to Monet's support for artists, here are five things you might know about the Impressionism movement
As the art world marks 150 years since Impressionism burst onto the canvas in a blurry riot of colour, here are five little-known facts about the wildly popular movement.
"Impressionism" was never meant as a compliment.
While today works by artists such as Claude Monet, Auguste Renoir and Edgar Degas fetch eye-popping sums at auction, reviews after their inaugural 1874 exhibition in Paris were scathing.
"A preliminary drawing for a wallpaper pattern is more finished than this seascape," wrote critic Louis Leroy about Monet's "Impression. Sunrise".
It was Leroy who coined the name for the movement, intended as an insult.