Daubigny, Monet, Van Gogh

"Daubigny, Monet, Van Gogh: Impressions of Landscape" is a special exhibition organized by the Taft Museum of Art in partnership with the Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh, Scotland, and the Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam, The Netherlands, and will travel to these two European museums after premiering at the Taft.

  • 1 minute 33 seconds
    1. Introduction
    The exhibition "Daubigny, Monet, Van Gogh: Impressions of Landscape" introduces Charles François Daubigny, a relatively forgotten artist from the 1800s. It explores his landscape painting and his influence on the younger generation of artists known as the French Impressionists.
    12 January 2016, 2:09 am
  • 1 minute 50 seconds
    2. Daubigny, "The Crossroads of the Eagle’s Nest," 1844
    Born in Paris in 1817, Daubigny studied Dutch landscapes in the Louvre Museum and trained with painters at the French Academy. He painted this early forest view delicately and precisely, using small brushes.
    12 January 2016, 2:08 am
  • 1 minute 49 seconds
    3. Daubigny, "The Harvest," 1851
    In about 1851, Daubigny painted this view of peasants harvesting grain in the fields just northeast of Paris. He wanted to capture the diffuse sunlight shimmering through the hazy atmosphere on a hot summer day in central France.
    12 January 2016, 2:06 am
  • 1 minute 37 seconds
    4. Daubigny, "Spring," 1857
    On a diagonal path alongside an orchard of flowering apple trees, a young woman rides a donkey. Behind her walk two young lovers, their heads barely visible above the fields of new grain. The scene evokes spring, with its fragrance, bursting growth, and romance. Surprisingly, this was not a common subject for painters at the time.
    12 January 2016, 2:05 am
  • 1 minute 25 seconds
    5. Daubigny, "At the Water’s Edge, Optevoz," about 1856
    Daubigny traveled extensively to paint France’s many landscapes. Here, he captures the appearance of a still pond in the hills above the Rhône Valley.
    12 January 2016, 2:04 am
  • 1 minute 30 seconds
    6. Daubigny, "Ferryboat near Bonnières-sur-Seine," 1861
    In 1857, Daubigny bought an old ferryboat and equipped it with a cabin so that he could paint the French riverbanks from the water.
    12 January 2016, 2:03 am
  • 1 minute 34 seconds
    7. Daubigny, "The Banks of the Oise River," 1863
    After his first venture on his studio boat, Daubigny embarked on more painting trips—often for weeks at a time—in spring, summer, and fall. The pictures created on his boat trips have a watery foreground that features reflections of the sky, clouds, and trees. No one had ever painted landscapes like this; he had invented another new compositional type that everyone recognized then as highly original.
    12 January 2016, 2:01 am
  • 1 minute 48 seconds
    8. Daubigny, "The Cliffs of Villerville-sur-Mer," 1864 and 1872
    Daubigny first encountered the ocean when visiting the Normandy coast in 1854. He wrote, “I see the ocean, and it is so beautiful that I don’t want to go anywhere else, and I can’t wait to work!”
    12 January 2016, 2:00 am
  • 1 minute 42 seconds
    9. Claude Monet, "The Point of la Hève at Low Tide," 1865
    At the Salon of 1864, Monet saw Daubigny’s "Cliffs at Villerville" and must have appreciated the way it captured the ever-changing light and weather at the seashore. Soon Monet created his own large picture of another stretch of beach and cliffs in Normandy, and exhibited it at the following year’s Salon, as if in dialogue with Daubigny.
    12 January 2016, 1:58 am
  • 1 minute 34 seconds
    10. Claude Monet, "Houses on the Achterzaan," 1871
    Monet visited the Netherlands and painted this landscape near the village of Zaandam, very likely from a boat, in the manner of Daubigny. Like the older artist, Monet concentrated on the colorful reflections in the water and on capturing nuances of light and atmosphere.
    12 January 2016, 1:55 am
  • 1 minute 36 seconds
    11. Daubigny, "The Beach at Villerville at Sunset," 1873
    Daubigny loved to paint the color transformations produced by sunsets over the sea at Villerville, his favorite spot on the coast. Whereas many earlier landscapists had depicted the natural world in a state of timeless perfection, Daubigny was fascinated by the transitory conditions of nature.
    12 January 2016, 1:54 am
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