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Friday, November 22, 2024 |
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Nationalgalerie - Staatliche Museen zu Berlin opens 'Monet and the Impressionist Cityscape' |
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Claude Monet, Quai du Louvre, 1867 © Kunstmuseum Den Haag - bequest Mr. and Mrs.
G.L.F. Philips-van der Willigen, 1942.
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BERLIN.- For the first time in Europe, the Alte Nationalgalerie is presenting Claude Monets three earliest views of Paris in a collaborative exhibi- tion focused on the Impressionist cityscape. Using this series of 1867 as a starting point, the exhibition explores how Impressionist and Post-Impressionist artists discovered the metropolis as a sub- ject for their art. With a clear thematic focus, Monet and the Impres- sionist Cityscape showcases around 25 works of painting, photo- graphy and graphic art.
Claude Monet (18401926) is known as one of the most renowned land- scape painters of Impressionism. Monet and the Impressionist Cityscape at the Alte Nationalgalerie shows, however, that his artistic treatment of the modern city of Paris also had a considerable influence on the painting of his period. In April of 1867, the still little-known artist painted the city from the colonnade of the Louvre. Usually artists came to the museum to study and practice copying the Old Masters. Now, Monet was literally turn- ing his back on this tradition, instead painting life in the streets in the growing metropolis.
Beginning in the mid-19th century, Paris underwent a profound transfor- mation of its urban plan. Directed by the prefect Georges-Eugène Hauss- mann, the radical changes in the city involved tearing down medieval structures and establishing in their place wide boulevards and avenues, representative squares and extensive parks. Modern architecture and comprehensive infrastructural measures led Paris into the industrial age. A section of the exhibition is dedicated to the ways in which painters, graphic artists and photographers documented and reflected on these changes.
Monet was one of the first to recognise new subject matter in the city un- der Haussmann with its new visual axes and perspectives. In the spring of 1867, he painted three cityscapes from the balcony of the Louvre. In their radiant brightness, the intensity of their colours, a rapid application of paint and their new perspective, they differed fundamentally from tradi- tional city views. Today, the paintings Saint-Germain-lAuxerrois, Quai du Louvre and Le Jardin de lInfante (1867) are found in the collection of the Nationalgalerie, at the Kunstmuseum Den Haag and at the Allen Memorial Art Museum at Oberlin College (Ohio, USA). The collaborative efforts of the three institutions have allowed for a very special reunification of these important works. For the first time since their creation, it has become possible to view all three together n Europe in a single exhibition.
The exhibition also shows just how consequential Monets view from the balcony was for the development toward a new Impressionist urban land- scape. Monet became a trailblazer for artists such as Auguste Renoir, Gustave Caillebotte (18481894) and Camille Pissarro (18301903), but also for Maximilien Luce and Henri Matisse, who would likewise discover modern Paris for their art. Monet himself continued to paint the metropolis, for example with La Rue Montorgueil, à Paris. Fête du 30 juin 1878 (1878). Now held at the Musée dOrsay, it is one of the artists last depic- tions of Paris.
With the exhibition Monet and the Impressionist Cityscape, the Alte Na- tionalgalerie is marking the 150th anniversary of the first exhibition in 1874 of the Impressionists in Paris. In the rooms adjacent to the special exhibition, visitors can furthermore discover a new presentation of the preeminent holdings of French Impressionism, and can view for the first time the newly acquired sculpture LImplorante (petite modèle) (design 1898, cast around 1905?) by Camille Claudel.
Monet and the Impressionist Cityscape is the final exhibition curated by Ralph Gleis as outgoing director of the Alte Nationalgalerie. He is sup- ported here by Josephine Hein as Curatorial Assistant.
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