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Details “The Impressionist Revolution from Monet to Matisse” continues through Nov. 3 at the Dallas Museum of Art, 1717 N. Harwood St. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday through Sunday.
The movement’s name was originally a critic’s insult. “Impressionist” came from a venomous review of an 1874 exhibition of paintings by Monet, Renoir, Degas, Pissarro — and one woman.
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‘The Impressionist Moment’ is a smart, bracing and unmissable art showVisitors to the National Gallery of Art’s marquee exhibition, “Paris 1874: The Impressionist Moment,” encounter two very different works upon entering. Side by side are a large, detailed ...
Impression, Sunrise has crossed the Atlantic for the first time as the centerpiece of “ Paris 1874: The Impressionist Moment,” at Washington, D.C.’s National Gallery of Art.
Berthe Morisot, Woman at Her Toilette (1875–80). Courtesy of the Art Institute of Chicago. Berthe Morisot, View of Paris from the Trocadero (1871–73). Courtesy of the Santa Barbara Museum of Art.
But since then, the boom in impressionist paintings has far surpassed his wildest imaginings. Today Paris art dealers get $15,000 for a small Pissarro oil.
Details "Berthe Morisot, Woman Impressionist" runs Feb. 24 to May 26 at the Dallas Museum of Art, 1717 N. Harwood St., dma.org ...
Gloria Groom, the Art Institute’s chair and curator, painting and sculpture of Europe, believes it is a little more expansive, in part because while men pervade the show, they do not monopolize it.
Ace Christie’s auctioneer Christopher Burge used to say that you could sell art from a rowboat in the middle of the Atlantic if the property was good enough, a sentiment that typically applied to the ...
We preview Fall Auction Week: Impressionist & Modern Art at Christie’s and Sotheby’s on November 13 and 14.
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