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The Many Ways of Looking at Monet
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17942 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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| Issue
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5 / 1990 |
2,350 Words |
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Eric Gibson Eric Gibson, art critic for the Washington Times, last wrote
on Henry Ossewa Tanner in the September 1991 issue of The
World & I. |
Nowadays, there's no more surefire crowd pleaser in the museum world than an exhibition of Impressionist paintings. Every museum director knows that if he wants to reverse a slump in attendance figures, or even remind the public that his institution actually exists, he has only to arrange a show of works by artists such as Monet, Renoir, or Degas. Cash registers will ring joyously, both at the admissions desk and in the gift shop, not to mention the cafeteria, the coat check room - and on and on.
But how long has it been since an Impressionist show was put together that really told us something, made a novel point, or enlarged our understanding of the movement, rather than simply recycling familiar faces, however beloved those faces might be? Quite a long time, I must say. In fact, the last really memorable Impressionist exhibition took place a little over a decade ago, when in 1978 the Metropolitan Museum in New York surveyed Monet's years at Giverny. It was a splendid exhibition, a feast for the eye, and one that managed to raise a few questions even as it answered others.
Happily, such an occasion is upon us once again, with the opening in Boston of Monet in the '90s: The Series Paintings. It has been organized by Paul Tucker of the University of Massachusetts, and covers the period in which Monet painted some of his most memorable images - poplar trees, grainstacks, and Rouen Cathedral - not singly, but in a succession of views observed at different times of the day.
Incredibly, there has never been such an exhibition, even though Monet has received intense scrutiny by scholars. In fact, there are paintings here that haven't been
... (1998 of 13691 Characters)
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