MONDAY LECTURES

Zoom Lecture

Recording

 

20 June 2022


Impressionist Decorations. 

Tracing the Roots of Monet’s Water Lilies.

A lecture on the exhibition at the Orangerie Museum, Paris

with Anne Catherine Abecassis 

 

 

 

Impressionism is rarely associated with the term decoration, nor is it associated with walls, objects, fans, ceramics or bas-reliefs. However, Impressionist works that are now seen as easel paintings - landscapes, flowers or scenes of modern life - were originally conceived as decorations. Concerned about the place of beauty in everyday life, the impressionist artists made it a field of experimentation, venturing out into different media, and fully exploring their possibilities.  

 

This aspect of Impressionism is little known today. Yet the Water Lilies cycle at the Orangerie, which Monet called his “great decorations,” crowns more than sixty years of forays into this field.  For the first time, this exhibition invites visitors to explore another history of Impressionism with works by Caillebotte,Cassatt, Cézanne, Degas, Manet, Monet, Morisot, Pissarro, and Renoir from international collections, many of which have only rarely or never been shown in France.  

Pierre-Auguste Renoir, The Great Bathers, 1884-87, Philadelphia, Museum of Art
Pierre-Auguste Renoir, The Great Bathers, 1884-87, Philadelphia, Museum of Art


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