June 11 – September 4, 2022
In 1883, French Impressionist painter Claude Monet settled in Giverny, a village nestled at the confluence of the Seine and Epte rivers. This is the scene of the CMA’s beloved Monet landscape painting. Glimpses of the new, still-radical Impressionist style inspired many American artists to go study in France where the movement was developing in real time.
American artists traveled to Giverny and home again for four decades at the turn of the 20th century, transforming the American art scene. This exhibition features over 40 artists, including Giverny Colony founders Willard Metcalf and Louis Ritter, as well as Richard Edward Miller, Lilla Cabot Perry, John Singer Sargent, Mary Fairchild MacMonnies, and Guy Rose.
Organized by the Columbia Museum of Art.
Dawson Dawson-Watson
(1864 – 1939)
Harvest Time (detail), c. 1891
Oil on canvas
Private Collection
Image courtesy of Bonhams
Multimedia Tour
See Monet's garden at Giverny and learn more about the exhibition from its curator, Martha Severens, in this multimedia tour.
Sponsors
Supporting Sponsors
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Anonymous
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Patricia L. Beckler
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Joyce and George Hill
Contributing Sponsors
Barbara and Roger Blau; Nelson Mullins Riley and Scarborough
Friend Sponsors
Barbara B. Boyd; The Braddock Group of Janney Montgomery Scott LLC; Joseph Bruce
Patron Sponsors
Docent Corps; John Kerr and Susan Gina Trippi; Margo Newton and Tom Collins; Sarah and Albert Reed; Rogers Lewis Jackson Mann & Quinn, LLC; Brenda and Joe Sullivan