Arne Quinze’s ‘Camille’ in Rouen
I could go on talking about Monet for hours! I’m absolutely fascinated by this artist and by the way he painted. His paintings about his gardens in Giverny are mystical and mysterious, but also experimental and he kept studying on them. He could dive into a subject and paint it over and over to make it look exactly like the vision he had in mind. Monet was one of the first abstract painters, he was keen on experimenting and creating a new art movement. Arne Quinze
The city of Rouen is one of a number of towns and cities in Normandy taking part in one of the greatest festivals in celebration of Impressionism and the Impressionist artists in 2010. To mark this occasion in a grand way, Arne Quinze was commissioned to create an installation; he created Camille for Rouen, a tribute to Camille Doncieux, Claude Monet’s wife. [Read more →]
July 25, 2010 No Comments
Impressionist and Post-Impressionist Masterpieces to Houston for 2011

Édouard Manet, The Railway, 1873. Oil on canvas, 24 cm x 19.45 cm @ The National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
“These are not things that are in storage and are sort of being hauled out. These are [the National Gallery's] masterpieces.” Helga Aurisch, MFAH curator of European art.
The Museum of Fine Arts in Houston, Texas, will host a major exhibition of French Impressionist and Post-Impressionist masterpieces from the collections of the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC. for the first half of 2011. [Read more →]
June 26, 2010 No Comments
Summer Exhibitions in Giverny: Towsey, Hewitt & Bonner

Mary Towsey outside Galerie 60, Giverny.
Besides Monet’s house and garden and the Musée de Impressionismes, there are at least six other galleries in Giverny that display contemporary art. Some of these are dedicated to the work of one artist, others have a rolling programme of exhibitions throughout the season. So if you are visiting Giverny for the day or even staying in or near Giverny overnight there really is a lot to do. [Read more →]
April 29, 2010 No Comments
‘Masterpieces from Paris’ Ends on a High in Canberra

The Tim Rogers Band perform at ‘Starry Nights’, an evening event hosted by the National Gallery of Australia in Canberra during the ‘Masterpieces from Paris’ exhibition – visit the NGA’s Facebook or Flickr pages for more of their photographs. @National Gallery of Australia
On Sunday evening, 5 pm local time, the doors finally closed at Canberra’s National Gallery of Australia on the ‘Masterpieces from Paris‘ exhibition. By all accounts, the exhibition closed on an incredible high for the Gallery. [Read more →]
April 19, 2010 No Comments
Guest Review: ‘Monet’s Water Lilies’ at MoMA
![A review of Monet at MoMA, by Stephanie Cowell, author of Claude and Camille: a Monet novel. An exhibition which features: Claude Monet. The Japanese Footbridge [Le Pont japonais]. c. 1920–22. Oil on canvas. 89.5 cm x 116.3 cm. © The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Grace Rainey Rogers Fund. A review of Monet at MoMA, by Stephanie Cowell, author of Claude and Camille: a Monet novel. An exhibition which features: Claude Monet. The Japanese Footbridge [Le Pont japonais]. c. 1920–22. Oil on canvas. 89.5 cm x 116.3 cm. © The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Grace Rainey Rogers Fund.](http://www.monet-giverny-normandy.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/review-of-monet-at-moma.gif)
Claude Monet. The Japanese Footbridge [Le Pont japonais]. c. 1920–22. Oil on canvas. 89.5 cm x 116.3 cm. © The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Grace Rainey Rogers Fund.
Review of ‘Monet’s Water Lilies’ at MoMA, New York
It took me a long time to get down to the much-loved exhibit of six of Monet’s late garden paintings, created in his 70s and 80s at Giverny. Fortunately, though the one large exhibit room was crowded, one could still spend some time with the paintings which I did. [Read more →]
March 12, 2010 No Comments
‘Masterpieces from Paris’ Breaks Australian Attendance Records

“We predicted that we would get 250,000 people, but we didn’t predict that we would get 250,000 people six weeks before the finish of the exhibition and before Easter,” he said. “So we’re very thrilled about that.” Ron Radford, Director National Gallery of Australia, 2010.
The summer exhibition at the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, has broken previous attendance records. The exhibition opened 4 December 2009, and on Friday 26 February Ron Radford, Director of the National Gallery, personally welcomed the 250 000th visitor. According to tourism statistics, around 70% of the visitors are from outside Canberra. The previous record was set in 1992, with Rubens and the Italian Renaissance which attracted 241 770 visitors. [Read more →]
March 8, 2010 No Comments
Poland’s only Monet, the Plage de Pourville, Stolen in 2000 & Now Recovered

Claude Monet, Plage de Pourville, 1882. Oil on canvas (60 X 73 cm). © National Museum in Poznań, Poland. Stolen from the Museum in 2000, and recovered by Polish Police 12 January 2010.
Monet’s Plage de Pourville, painted in 1882 and stolen in 2000 from National Museum in Poznań, Poland, was recently recovered by the Polish police and presented to an eager press-pack in Poznań. And yesterday, 1 March, the man who stole Poland’s only painting by Monet was placed under psychiatric observation. [Read more →]
March 2, 2010 No Comments
Art & Alzheimer’s disease: Can Monet Help?
“This partnership speaks to the role that visual arts can play beyond aesthetic enjoyment. Every time we work with a different audience we learn so much more about how our works of art are meaningful to other people.” Dale Hilton, Cleveland Museum of Art, February 2010
Yesterday, 24 February 2010, the Cleveland Museum of Art and the Cleveland Clinic jointly hosted a symposium exploring the possibility of making art accessible to dementia patients. [Read more →]
February 25, 2010 3 Comments
Exhibition ‘Monet and Abstraction’ in Madrid

Claude Monet, Wisteria, 1917-1920. Oil on canvas (100 x 300 cm). © Musée Marmottan Monet, Paris. On display at the Fundación Caja Madrid, as part of Monet and Abstraction.
The Spanish Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza, in collaboration with the Fundación Caja Madrid, is currently hosting an exhibition of a selection of Claude Monet’s paintings that presents an innovative perspective. ‘Monet and Abstraction‘ demonstrates Claude Monet’s influence on the development of abstraction in in Western art during the second half of the 20th century. [Read more →]
February 24, 2010 No Comments
Getting Ready to Celebrate Claude Monet’s Painting of the Rouen Cathedral
”
People discuss my art and pretend to understand as if it were necessary to understand, when it’s simply necessary to love.” Claude Monet, 1902.
As Claude Monet painted the Rouen Cathedral 30 times at different times of the day and in different weather conditions over a period of a few months, it is not that surprising then that the Cathedral will play an important part in this year’s summer festival to celebrate the impressionists in Normandy. [Read more →]
February 15, 2010 No Comments


