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Impressionist Masterpieces from the
Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute to be Exhibited at the
Norton Museum of Art
West Palm Beach, Fl – The Norton Museum
of Art announces Collecting the Impressionists: Masterpieces from
the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute which opens to the
public on January 20, 2007. Organized by the Clark Art Institute,
Williamstown, Massachusetts, this exhibition includes works of
genius by the most recognizable and revered names of Impressionism:
Pierre Auguste Renoir, Claude Monet, Camille Pissarro, Edouard Manet,
Berthe Morisot, and Edgar Degas. The dozen featured paintings were
carefully selected to reveal the collecting preferences of Sterling
and Francine Clark; pictures suffused with a light and beauty unique
to the French Impressionists: sunny landscapes, portraits of lovely
young women, charming genre scenes, and colorful still lifes.
Regarding these remarkable paintings, Norton Museum Director,
Christina Orr-Cahall, commented "Many of these outstanding works of
art have never before left the Clark; they do so on this occasion to
celebrate the 50th anniversary of the magnificent bequest to the
museum which bears their name. This is an unprecedented opportunity
for the community to view the finest examples of this genre as an
ensemble, in the intimate setting of our museum."
Renoir was the couple’s preferred Impressionist, as evidenced in
their acquisition of 39 of his paintings, five of which are included
in this exhibition. Of their Renoirs, one of the more spectacular, A
Girl with a Fan of 1881, a portrait of the beautiful actress Jeanne
Samary, who was one of Renoir’s favorite models in the late 1870s,
is featured in this special exhibition. Her allure and sensuality
are rivaled by the extraordinary floral still life which dominates
the space where Samary stands, and by the exoticism of the Japanese
fan which she holds.
Other works in the exhibition include Degas’ Dancers in the
Classroom, Monet's Spring in Giverny, Morisot's A Girl Arranging Her
Hair, Pissarro’s The River Oise Near Pontoise, and Manet’s demure
yet poignant depiction of Moss Roses in a Vase, with its single
flower left out of the water to die—it was one of a number of
quickly-painted still lifes that Manet created in the last months of
his life. His fluent handling of paint allowed him to capture both
the ephemeral quality of the roses and the distorting effects of
glass and water.
Collecting the Impressionists will allow museum visitors to not only
view the masterpieces created by legends of this particular
movement, but to also glimpse into the lives of the artists
themselves and the trends of the times; a time when landscapes were
only beginning to shift due to development, when ladies wore hats
and gloves, and beauty could be found in the simplicity of flowers
and the organicity of onions. Within the exhibition, the innovative
approach of the painters will be explored, as artists who rebelled
against the norm and focused on depicting whatever subject matter
they pleased in a style distinctive to the Impressionists.
This exhibition at the Norton Museum of Art is made possible in part
through the generosity of Harold and Anne Berkley Smith, the Sydelle
and Arthur I. Meyer Endowment, the Gioconda and Joseph King
Endowment, the State of Florida, Department of State, Division of
Cultural Affairs and the Florida Arts Council, and the National
Endowment for the Arts.
About the Clarks:
Over a four-decade period, Sterling and Francine Clark built an
extraordinary collection of art that became the foundation of the
Clark Art Institute in Williamstown, Massachusetts. As collectors,
the Clarks were independent and self-reliant, their love and
knowledge making them distinguished collectors with an aesthetic
vision that was ahead of their time. While they collected mainly
19th-century French Impressionism, they also bought Italian
Renaissance paintings, works by American artists such as Winslow
Homer and John Singer Sargent, as well as English silver, master
prints and drawings, and European porcelain. The collection now
encompasses more than 8,000 works; its greatest strength, however,
is French Impressionism.
Exhibition Admission:
Adults $12
Visitors age 13-21 $5
Children 12 and under Admission is free
Members Free tickets based on Membership Level
Adult Group Tours $10
School Group Tours $3
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