Venice was “too beautiful to be painted,” according to Claude Monet. Yet he painted the Italian city anyway.
Claude Monet's overlooked Venice paintings are in the spotlight at the Brooklyn Museum and de Young—and they made his "Water Lilies" possible.
Agence France-Presse on MSN
Exhibit on Monet's prolific Venice visit debuts at Brooklyn Museum
Claude Monet did not want to travel to Venice in 1908 -- at the time, he was 68 and working on his famed water lilies ...
Fret not, Boston. There’s more Monet en route. The Museum of Fine Arts has assembled another exhibition around the Impressionist master to open on the heels of its current “Monet and Boston: Lasting ...
A new exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum is transporting visitors to turn-of-the-century Venice, seen through the eyes of ...
For those who have long romanticized the floating city of Venice, the Brooklyn Museum 's new exhibit will only stoke those ...
Claude Monet’s “Water Lilies” series is coveted by museums and private collectors worldwide. But one Dutch museum owned one without even knowing it. Experts at the Gemeentemuseum in the Hague ...
For the first time in 25 years, the Museum of Fine Arts has called home every last one of its 35 Claude Monet paintings. "Monet and Boston: Lasting Impression,” which opened Saturday, explores the ...
The latest in a succession of immersive art playgrounds has colorful rooms made for Instagram pictures and vivid smells. But does it really do justice to the wonder of Monet? Culture Reporter After ...
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