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7 février 2009

" Landscapes from the Age of Impressionism" @ The Norton Museum

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John Singer Sargent (American, 1856–1925): Dolce Far Niente, about 1907. Oil on canvas, 16 1/4 by 28 1/4 inches (41.3 by 71.7 cm). Brooklyn Museum, Bequest of A. Augustus Healy, 11.518.

WEST PALM BEACH, FL.- The Norton Museum presents today Landscapes from the Age of Impressionism, on view through May 10, 2009. This exhibition of some 37 paintings includes many of the finest examples of mid-nineteenth through early twentieth-century French and American landscape in the Brooklyn Museum's collection. The works presented offer a broad survey of landscape painting as practiced by such leading French artists as Gustave Courbet and Claude Monet and their most significant American followers including Frederick Childe Hassam and John Singer Sargent.

Among the earliest works in the exhibition are Charles-François Daubigny's The River Seine at Mantes (1856), and Gustave Courbet's Isolated Rock (1862), which reveal the impact of plein-air sketching practice on landscape art of the period. Heirs to this plein-air tradition, French Impressionists Claude Monet, Alfred Sisley, Camille Pissarro, and Gustave Caillebotte painted highly elaborated "impressions"—the seemingly spontaneous, rapidly executed landscapes and cityscapes that prompted the name of their movement. Monet is represented here by several works including Rising Tide at Pourville (1882), Vernon in the Sun (1894), and The Islets at Port-Villez (1897).

Following in the footsteps of the French archetypes, beginning at mid-century many American painters sought to improve their skills and find inspiration in Paris and its environs, attending French art academies and frequenting the painting locations made famous by their Barbizon and Impressionist predecessors. Some of the Americans had direct contact with leading French landscape painters, sharing landscape sites or seeking informal guidance from admired mentors.

The majority of the American paintings on display depict American locales: beaches, factories, tenements, and notable subjects such as Central Park in works distinguished by brilliant colors and lively, broken brushwork, including Williams Glackens's Bathing at Bellport, Long Island (1912), Julian Alden Weir's Willimantic Thread Factory (1893), Robert Spencer's The White Tenement (1913), and Willard Leroy Metcalf's Early Spring Afternoon, Central Park (1911).

Organized by the Brooklyn Museum. This exhibition is made possible in part through the generosity of Harris Private Bank, Melvin and Claire Levine, John and Priscilla Richman, and the Sydelle and Arthur I. Meyer Endowment.

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Pierre-Auguste Renoir (French, 1841–1919): The Vineyards at Cagnes (Les Vignes à Cagnes), 1908. Oil on canvas, 18 1/4 by 21 3/4inches (46.4 by 55.2cm). Brooklyn Museum, Gift of Colonel and Mrs. E.W. Garbisch, 51.219.

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