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Monday, March 3, 2025 |
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Monet's Floating Worlds at Giverny: Portland's Waterlilies resurfaces |
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Claude Monet (French, 1840-1926), Waterlilies, 1914-1915, oil on canvas, image: 63 1/4 in x 71 1/8 in; frame: 68 3/4 in x 76 9/16 in x 3 1/4 in, Museum Purchase: Helen Thurston Ayer Fund. Portland Art Museum, Portland, Oregon, 59.16
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PORTLAND, OR.- After more than 60 years, Claude Monets celebrated masterpiece Waterlilies emerges in a new light at the Portland Art Museum. Thanks to a meticulous conservation process, the painting has been carefully returned to its original brilliancewithout varnishto reveal Monets intended color harmonies and luminosity. The newly revived Waterlilies painting will be the centerpiece of the exhibition Monets Floating Worlds at Giverny, a tribute to the artists groundbreaking work and the influences that shaped it. The exhibition opened today and will be on view through August 10, 2025.
Monets Floating Worlds at Giverny offers visitors new insights into Monets artistic lens, revealing his inspiration from Japanese woodblock printsukiyo-e, often referred to as pictures of the floating worldthat captivated Impressionist and Post-Impressionist artists. Featuring 45 artworks including prints, photographs, and paintings, the exhibition begins by stepping into Monets world with a recreation of his collection of Japanese woodblock print masterpieces by artists such as Toyokuni (Utagawa Kunisada), Utagawa Hiroshige, and Kitagawa Utamaro from the Museums expansive print collection. It continues with Impressionist European and American responses to Japanese aesthetics, featuring works by Mary Cassatt, Bertha Lum, Henri Rivière, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, and others who drew inspiration from Japanese art, also from the Museums own collection. The exhibition concludes with the newly conserved Waterlilies, which will be displayed alongside documentation of the research and restoration process that returned the work to its intended state.
Monets Floating Worlds at Giverny also includes contemporary photographs of Giverny and Portlands Japanese Gardens by celebrated photographers Susan Seubert and Stu Levy, offering fresh perspectives on the gardens that profoundly inspired Monets art.
In the late 19th century, Japanese art introduced radical perspectives and vibrant new aesthetics to European audiences, reshaping traditions in beauty that Monet and his contemporaries eagerly embraced, said exhibition curator Mary Weaver Chapin, Curator of Prints and Drawings. Japanese prints had a transformative impact. The vogue for all things Japanese that swept through France was called japonisme and could be found in art, fashion, and home decoration. Graphic artists immediately adopted the radical perspectives and insistent flatness in their own work, echoingbut not mimickingthe Japanese aesthetic. Some adopted Eastern methods of printing as well, seeking to create the beautiful color effects so distinctive of ukiyo-e woodcuts. American artists were equally entranced by Japanese prints and created their own version of japonisme in the United States.
Monet defies conventional Western composition in Waterlilies. With no horizon line and no clear depth, the painting immerses viewers in a tranquil but vital world of floating lily pads, blossoming flowers, reflections of willow branches, and a raindrop-mottled surface. While invoking a moment in a natural scene, this nature is an artfully cultivated setting: Monets Japanese-inspired garden pond in Giverny, planted with imported waterlilies and maintained by a team of gardeners.
Monets garden-inspired series became an astonishing project of over 250 paintings, immortalizing his dreamlike water garden on canvas over nearly 30 years. The magnificent Waterlilies in the Portland Art Museums collection, which the artist painted in 1914-15, is widely regarded as one of the finest in the series. The Monet family kept it in their private collection, and Monets son Michel displayed it in the family home for decades after the artists death before the Portland Art Museum acquired the painting in 1959.
In spring 2024, with the support of Bank of America Art Conservation Project, the Museum began the restoration of its Monet masterpiece to remove a layer of synthetic varnish and return Waterlilies to its original appearance as closely as possible. PAM Chief Conservator Charlotte Ameringer conducted the delicate restoration in the Museums new conservation studiopart of an ambitious museum transformation that will be complete in late 2025and the community was invited to follow along and learn about the conservation process in a series of videos on PAMs website and on social media channels.
"We are thrilled to invite our community to see their renowned Waterlilies as it hasn't been seen in over 60 yearsto see it as Monet intended, and to more deeply explore the art that inspired him," said Lloyd DeWitt, The Richard and Janet Geary Curator of European & American Art Pre-1930. Just as our careful restoration peels back the surface layer to reveal Monets authentic painting, seeing his masterpiece in conversation with these works from our collection for the first time will allow visitors to appreciate the reflective depth of Monets artistry.
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