Post-Impressionism was an art movement which pushed away the idea of Impressionism and developed their own style that focused the emotional, structural, symbolic, and spiritual elements which they felt were missing in Impressionist art. The term "Post-Impressionism" was created at Grafton Gallery in London in 1910 by Roger Fry as he prepared for an exhibition, which was called "Manet and the Post-Impressionists". However the exhibition also included some of the Impressionist artists such as: Vincent van Gogh, Paul Cézanne, Paul Gauguin, George Seurat, André Derain, Maurice de Vlaminck and Othon Friesz, plus the sculptor Aristide Maillol, who did a different style of painting during Post-Impressionism. (Are some of these artists also Impressionists?) The Post-Impressionists were an individual group. There were no broad, unifying characteristics. So the artist took the view of Impressionists and represent it. For example, Vincent van Gogh intensified Impressionism's already vibrant colors (bright and mixed color) and painted them thickly on the canvas which is called impasto. George Seurat took the rapid, "broken" brushwork of Impressionism and developed it into the millions of colored dots that create Pointillism. Additionally Paul Cézanne did the new style of art called Cloisonnism, Synthetism and Symbolism which was part of Post-Impressionism.