Jonathan Olazo enters a conversation with Claude Monet, reimagining the Impressionist master’s devotion to light and motion ...
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.
The largest New York Monet exhibition in 25 years, focusing on the artist's time in Venice, opened at the Brooklyn Museum.
A multisensory show merges sound, scent, and art to reimagine the painter's 1908 journey through "the City of Canals." ...
For those who have long romanticized the floating city of Venice, the Brooklyn Museum 's new exhibit will only stoke those ...
In a luminous tribute, the Filipino artist channels the Impressionist master’s love for light and time in his latest Manila ...
A major German private art collection accumulated over four generations is going on large-scale show for the first time in ...
One year later, Monet was in much better spirits. Refreshed and reinvigorated, he made an unexpected return to the "Water Lilies," which he approached with aplomb. Well into his 60s, Monet was in the ...
It's time for another tmf tour folks and I think this is the most interesting to date. Japan is an amazing country with ...
Claude Monet did not want to travel to Venice in 1908 -- at the time, he was 68 and working on his famed water lilies paintings, and only reluctantly agreed to accompany his wife Alice Hoschede.
In the heart of Manhattan’s Chinatown, the artist Nicole Wittenberg’s sixth-floor studio is flushed with late September ...