At almost the last minute we finally made it to the Detroit Institute of Art to see the Impressionist exhibit
Humble and Human which runs through October 13, 2019.
I loved seeing how art and individual artists developed over time.
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Alfred Sisley, Village Street in Marlotte, 1866 |
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Clearing in the Woods, Pierre-Auguste Renoir |
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Woman Sewing, Berthe Morisot, abt. 1879 |
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Violinist and Young Woman, Edgar Degas, abt. 1871 |
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Cafe Scene in Paris, Henri Gervix, 1877 |
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Political Woman, James Tissot, 1881-5 |
Tissot was a master at replicating fashion!
After several paintings of the rich and powerful came portraits of ordinary and plain folk.
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Woman With a Bandage, Edgar Degas, 1872-73 |
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Jockeys on Horseback Before Distant Hills, Edgar Degas, 1884 |
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View of the Crotoy from Upstream, Georges Seurat, 1889 |
Note how Seurat continued his pointillism onto the frame.
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Study for "Le Chahut", Georges Seurat, 1889 |
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Morning in Provence, Paul Cezanne, 1900-6 |
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Mont-Sainte-Victorie, Paul Cezanne, 1904-6 |
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Study for "Le Pont de L'Europe," Gustave Caillebotte, 1876 |
Many of these paintings are in the permanent collection of the DIA. Including these wonderful Van Goghs.
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The Old Mill, Van Gogh, |
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Spirit of the Dead Walking, Paul Gauguin, 1892 |
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The Yellow Christ, Paul Gauguin |
We then had to visit our favorite gallery of American paintings.
They remind us that empires fall but nature is eternal.
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Syria by the Sea, Frederic Edwin Church, 1873 |
And of the magnificent and awesome beauty of nature.
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Indian Summer, Jasper Francis Cropsey, 1866 |
And I will end by sharing my favorite Frederick Edwin Church painting,
Cotopaxi.
from the DIA website:
In Humble and Human: Impressionist Era Treasures from the Albright-Knox Art Gallery and the Detroit Institute of Arts, an Exhibition in Honor of Ralph C. Wilson, Jr., a selection of more than forty Impressionist and post-Impressionist treasures from the Albright-Knox Art Gallery and the Detroit Institute of Arts traces the arc of a period that elevated the irreducible beauty of the everyday to the status of fine art.
A testament to the power of collaboration among artists, museums, and cities, the exhibition explores the pioneering work of leading Impressionist and post–Impressionist artists, including Paul Cézanne, Edgar Degas, Vincent van Gogh, Claude Monet, and Berthe Morisot. It also celebrates the life and vision of Ralph C. Wilson, Jr., who saw in the art of these late nineteenth-century avant-gardists, especially that of Claude Monet, evocations of values and ideas that were close to his own heart, capturing the ephemerality of the everyday experience while dignifying hard work, simple pleasures, and ordinary people.
On the hundredth anniversary of Mr. Wilson’s birth, both institutions are proud to celebrate these extraordinary works and Mr. Wilson’s legacy as a philanthropist, business leader, and advocate for the citizens of Detroit and Buffalo.