CHICAGO, IL.- The Art Institute of Chicago is presenting Gustave Caillebotte: Painting His World, on view June 29 through October 5, 2025. The exhibition features a fresh look at Impressionist artist Gustave Caillebotte, who many visitors will recognize for his most famous painting, the Art Institutes own Paris Street; Rainy Day. The show includes more than 120 workspaintings, drawings, photographs, and other documents from throughout the artists careerthat explore the very personal interests and relationships that shaped him.
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Step into Impressionist Paris with Gustave Caillebotte! Explore his unique perspective on urban life and leisure. Shop books on Amazon!
Caillebotte charted his own path in comparison to his Impressionist peers. While other artists focused on painting fashionable young women and new forms of entertainment, Caillebotte focused on a more intimate sphere. He painted family and friends, his fellow sportsmen, and the bourgeois and working class people who frequented his neighborhood. He was an active member of the Impressionist group but also participated in several activities as a high-level amateur, including rowing, gardening, and sailing all of which are reflected in the exhibition.
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Visitors will have an opportunity to see the full range of Caillebottes paintings, and gain an appreciation for his unique ability to work on monumental realistic compositions as well as smaller scale canvases with a more Impressionist technique, said Gloria Groom, chair and Winton Green Curator, Painting and Sculpture of Europe. Caillebottes works were brazenly radical in their composition and perspective and this exhibition truly highlights the world from his point of view.
The show includes many works from private collections that are rarely seen by American audiences, in addition to recognizable works like Floor Scrapers and lesser-known but pivotal works like the Musée dOrsays recent acquisition, Boating Party, and the Louvre Abu Dhabis The Bezique Game.
The various works in the show shed light onto Caillebotteas a complex figure with many interests, as an Impressionist who painted like no other Impressionist, and as an artist who captured his own, very distinct Paris.
Gustave Caillebotte: Painting His World is organized by the Art Institute of Chicago, the Musée dOrsay in Paris, and the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles. The exhibition is curated by Gloria Groom, chair and Winton Green Curator, Painting and Sculpture of Europe, The Art Institute of Chicago; Scott Allan, curator of paintings, The J. Paul Getty Museum; and Paul Perrin, curator and head of conservation and collections, Musée dOrsay.
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