Error: 3002 Source: GeoIP.asp line 56: File could not be opened. "Landscapes from the Age of Impressionism to Open at Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
The First Art Newspaper on the Net Established in 1996 Sunday, May 26, 2013
 
"Landscapes from the Age of Impressionism to Open at Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
American artist John Singer Sargent's "Dolce Far Niente," was painted in oil on canvas in about 1907. (Photo: Brooklyn Museum)
RICHMOND, VA.-"Landscapes from the Age of Impressionism," opening Feb. 22, 2008, at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, will present a selection of 40 French and American paintings that are among the finest examples of late 19th- and early 20th-century landscapes from the Brooklyn Museum collection.

VMFA Director Alex Nyerges says the works are "full of the light and freshness that characterize the Impressionist style of painting. I am sure this will be a very popular exhibition with our visitors."

The show, organized by the Brooklyn Museum, will remain on view in Richmond through May 11, 2008.

"The Brooklyn Museum has a world-class collection of French and American Impressionist paintings, many of which were acquired long before other U.S. art museums were showing these avant garde works. This exhibition, which has been touring in South Korea, will present some of the finest paintings in the Brooklyn collection and has been made available to a few select institutions in the U.S. while the Brooklyn Museum undergoes renovation. We are proud to be able to show it in Richmond," Nyerges says.

The earliest works in the exhibition, dating from the 1850s and 1860s, demonstrate the impact of progressive, outdoor sketching practices on French landscape painting. Before the 19th century, artists had worked mostly inside their studios. Important examples by Barbizon and Realist painters such as Charles François Daubigny, Henri-Joseph Harpignies and Gustave Courbet will be on view in the exhibition.

"French Impressionists, who were the heirs to the new outdoor sketching tradition, painted highly elaborated 'impressions' - that is, they created seemingly spontaneous, rapidly executed canvases that prompted the name of their movement," says Robin Nicholson, VMFA's associate director for exhibitions.

The exhibition also features works by some of the most popular French Impressionists, including Eugène Boudin (who is the subject of a VMFA exhibition to be on view from Nov. 14, 2007, to Jan. 27, 2008), Claude Monet, Pierre-Auguste Renoir and Alfred Sisley.

A particular highlight is Monet's "Doge's Palace, Venice," a 1908 oil on canvas. "Monet was able to completely reinvent a well known tourist subject, endowing it with a shimmering, glowing quality entirely appropriate to its unique setting. By contrast, in another of his works in the exhibition, 'The Islets at Port-Villez,' 1897, Monet nearly approaches abstraction," says Dr. Mitchell Merling, VMFA's Paul Mellon Curator and head of the department of European art.

Other Impressionist works in the show are equally compelling, Merling says.

"Harpignies' 'A Meadow in the Bourbonnais, Morning,' 1876, is one of this master's most ambitious paintings, in which he can be seen transplanting the formal qualities of John Constable to French soil. 'The River Seine at Mantes,' circa 1856, shows Daubigny at his best as a poet of tranquility and gentle nature. Caillebotte's 'Apple Tree in Bloom,' circa 1885, shows Impressionism at its most revolutionary, with its sharp diagonals and clashing reds and greens."

Following in the footsteps of the French, many late 19th-century American painters found inspiration in the streets of Paris as well as in the city's rural environs. Atmospheric images by George Inness, Theodore Robinson, John Singer Sargent and Julian Alden Weir are among the featured strengths of Brooklyn's holdings to be shown in "Landscapes from the Age of Impressionism."

Dr. Sylvia Yount, VMFA's Louise B. and J. Harwood Cochrane Curator of American Art, says the exhibition also reveals "how Americans selectively absorbed the high-keyed palette and broken brushwork of Impressionism when painting local subjects of leisure and labor.

"Many Americans continued to work in an Impressionist vein through the first two decades of the 20th century. Of course, the ever-popular style continues to delight viewers today," she says.

The exhibition's curators are Theresa A. Carbone, the Brooklyn Museum's Andrew W. Mellon Curator of American Art, and Judith F. Dolkart, associate curator of European art at the Brooklyn Museum.

"Landscapes from the Age of Impressionism" is on view now through Sept. 16 at the John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art in Sarasota, Fla. It will be shown at the North Carolina Museum of Art in Raleigh from Oct. 21, 2007, to Jan. 13, 2008; at VMFA from Feb. 22 to May 11, 2008; at the Denver Art Museum in Denver, Colo., from June 13 to Sept. 7, 2008; and at the Portland Museum of Art in Portland, Maine., from Oct. 19, 2008 to Jan. 4, 2009.

The exhibition has already been shown in South Korea, at the Hangaram Art Museum and at the Busan Museum.

The admission fee for the VMFA showing will be $8 for adults and $6 for those age 13 to 18 or those with a full-time student ID. The fee per person in adult groups of 10 or more (in one ticket purchase) will be $6. There is no additional discount for groups age 13 to 18 or those with a full-time student ID. Admission is free to VMFA members and those age 12 and younger.

The Virginia Museum of Fine Arts is an educational institution of the Commonwealth of Virginia. The museum is on the Boulevard at Grove Avenue. The galleries are open Wednesday through Sunday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. For additional information about exhibitions and programs, telephone (804) 340-1400 or visit the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts Web site, www.vmfa.museum.



Last Week News

August 12, 2007

Homeless Man Pleads Guilty to Attacking Joshua Reynolds Painting at NPG with Hammer

2007 Edition of Float at Socrates Sculpture Park

Guild Hall Presents Billy Sullivan

Camera Work Presents: Josef Hoflehner - Photographs

Ben Uri Gallery Presents Bomberg's Relevance

Surati Summer Fest at Jersey City Museum

I Pool Gallery Presents Simultaneous Spaces

World's Leading Photography Galleries to Hold New Fair in Miami

Fourth Annual Snap to Grid: the UN-Juried Show

August 11, 2007

National Gallery, London Features Dutch Portraits: The Age Of Rembrandt And Frans Hals

Portraits - Libia Posada from the "Clinic Evidence" Series

One Way or Another: Asian American Art Now

Nocturns at Museo Tamayo Arte Contemporaneo

TO FLY: Contemporary Aerial Photography

From Soho Road to the Punjab at The Brunei Gallery

Stainless Steel Roof Ready at Art Museum of Western Virginia

Tacoma Art Museum Now Offers Free Internet Access

Matt Calderwood - Projections in London

Jersey City Museum Names First JPMorgan Chase Museum Career Intern

London Business School Invites Allan Majotra to be a Sloan Fellow

August 10, 2007

Edward Hopper Exhibition Near the End at The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Irish Museum of Modern Art Opens Exhibition in Co Tyrone

Picturing the Bible: The Earliest Christian Art at Kimbell Art Museum

Michener Art Museum Pairs Rockwell and Hargens For Fall Exhibitions

Currents: Evan Penny at The Columbus Museum of Art

Sculptors Drawing at The Aspen Art Museum

Renowned American Abstract Painter Peter Young at P.S.1

Korean Comics: A Society through Small Frames at Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum

Most Successful Six Months in Auction History for Sotheby's

"Lola Alvarez Bravo" Opens at the Smithsonian's International Gallery

Smithsonian Scientists Show Differing Patterns of Rainforest Biodiversity

August 9, 2007

Irish Museum of Modern Art Presents Major Exhibition of Celebrated Artist Lucian Freud

Exhibition Highlights Splendor of Turn-of-the-Century Vienna

Lawrence Schiller "Marilyn and the '60s"

Freelance Photographer Chris Schwarz, 59, Dies

Matthew Buckingham - Everything Has a Name

Victor Vázquez: Dialogs at Museo de Arte de Ponce

Masters of Studio Glass: Joel Philip Myers and Steven I. Weinberg

Molecule Mountain Mayhem

Turner Contemporary Presents Rag and Bone

Philip Glaser - Polaroid SX70 in Berlin

Michener Art Museum Receives Grant To Build Upon Educational Art Programs

August 8, 2007

Three Picasso Paintings Were Recovered in France After They Were Stolen in February

Guggenheim Director Lisa Dennison Resigns

Bertram Mackennal at Art Gallery of New South Wales

New Work By Ettore Sottsass in New York

Major Three-Part Video Installation by British Artist Phil Collins

When Animals Are Out, Our Artists Will Come In

Treasure Hunt Introduces Kids to Noted Artist Jasper Johns

World's Largest Teddy Bear Collection to Be Auctioned at Christie's

Destination: Geodecity - Installed Dome City

Etienne Clément, Wendy's World

August 7, 2007

The Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum Presents American Painter Richard Estes in Madrid

Osram Art Projects Presents Seven Screens

The Asian Art Fair Announces Best of Discovery

Great Rivers Biennial 2008 Winners Announced

Native American and Precolumbian Art Transforms Galleries

LongHouse Reserve Presents Miquel Barceló

D I S E A S E D: New Paintings by James Marshall

Nest: Dash Snow Dan Colen in New York

The Athens Biennial To Open in September

Public Conversation With International Art Experts

Gallery 39 Presents Distance Learning

Sultana's Dream at Exit Art

Most Popular Last Seven Days



1.- Jackson Pollock work "Number 19, 1948" sells for record $58.4 million at Christie's

2.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

3.- Belize City officials say ancient thirty-meter high Mayan pyramid razed for road fill

4.- Hidden drawings from Nazi concentration camp on display at Jewish Museum in Berlin

5.- Records fall at Sotheby's contemporary art auction; Barnett Newman painting sells for $43.84M

6.- Death mask of Napoleon to be auctioned at Bonhams' Book, Map and Manuscript sale

7.- New Yorkers unnerved by neighbor's voyeuristic photos on view at Julie Saul Gallery

8.- Rare Vincent Van Gogh sketchbook copies up for unprecedented sale at museum store and online

9.- Leonardo DiCaprio environmental art auction at Christie's New York tops $38 million

10.- Hong Kong cries fowl as giant rubber duck by Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman deflates

Related Stories



Important Judaica and Israeli & international art bring a combined $7.9 million at Sotheby's New York

Tunisia to auction ousted despot's treasures

Andy Warhol's Mao portraits excluded from the Beijing and Shanghai shows next year

China criticises French Qing dynasty seal auction

Christie's announces auction marking the first half century of the popular and luxurious interiors shop Guinevere

Nine new exhibits debut at San Diego International Airport

Rembrandt masterpiece "Portrait of Catrina Hooghsaet" back on display at National Museum Cardiff

Amber: 40-million-year-old fossilised tree resin is Baltic gold

Egyptian artist Iman Issa wins the Ist FHN Museu d’Art Contemporani de Barcelona Award

The main chapel of the Basilica of Santa Croce open for visits after five year restoration



Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 

Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal - Consultant: Ignacio Villarreal Jr.
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Rmz. - Marketing: Carla Gutiérrez
Web Developer: Gabriel Sifuentes - Special Contributor: Liz Gangemi
Special Advisor: Carlos Amador - Contributing Editor: Carolina Farias
Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org theavemaria.org juncodelavega.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. The most varied versions
of this beautiful prayer.
Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site