Le Lever (1869 en) by FANTIN-LATOUR Henri
Artnews Articles and Exhibition Information: (7)
Click on any of the links below to read about artnews or exhibitions related to Fantin-Latour
Kröller-Müller Museum: Hommes de valeur
The world they depict is both real and imaginary, a world inhabited by dreamy fairies and nymphs as well as dark, ominous figures. Also on show are more traditional genres such as landscapes, still lifes and portraits rendered in the realistic vei...
Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts: after HISTORY: The Paintings of David Bierk
His compositions frequently address the
nostalgia of our age for the traditional painting styles of previous centuries,
while demonstrating how these classic styles have coalesced and been
transformed to create the pluralism indicative of ou...
Mummery + Schnelle Gallery: Ori Gersht Time After Time
The latest digital technology has enabled Gersht to create contemporary versions of frozen life, bringing the concerns of Fantin-Latour and other still-life masters into a contemporary context. His photographs echo the appearance of oil paintings ...
Metropolitan Museum of Art: The Annenberg Collection of Impressionist and Postimpressionist
Masterpieces
Philippe de Montebello, director of the Metropolitan
Museum, stated: For six months out of each year,
this extraordinary loan signi...
Van Gogh Museum: 800 prints by Toulouse-Lautrec, Bonnard, Vuillard and their contemporaries
The Vincent van Gogh Foundation already owns a small collection of prints assembled by Vincent van Gogh and his brother Theo, which is on loan to the Museum. The addition of this extensive collection adds depth and direction to the print collectio...
Oakville Galleries: Fuzzy at Centennial Square
Fuzzy explores the loving and playful exchanges between artists and their pets. The artists have in common an emotional engagement with their pets and view them as equal and loving participants in a cooperative dynamic to explore issues of identit...
Frick Art and Historical Center: FROM THE SUN KING TO THE ROYAL TWILIGHT: PAINTING IN EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY FRANCE FROM THE MUSEE DE PICARDIE, AMIENS
DeCourcy McIntosh, executive director of the Frick Art & Historical Center, says, “This exhibition
provides a powerful antidote to the commonly held view of eighteenth-century French painting as
...
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