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Saturday, October 4, 2025 |
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Masterpieces by Monet, van Gogh, Matisse and more will travel to Adelaide |
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Paul Signac, born Paris, France 1863, died Paris, France 1935, Entrance to the Grand Canal, Venice, 1905, oil on canvas, 73.5 x 92.1 cm; Purchased with funds from the Libbey Endowment, Gift of Edward Drummond Libbey, Toledo Museum of Art, Ohio, United States of America.
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ADELAIDE.- An Australian-exclusive exhibition of masterworks from the acclaimed Toledo Museum of Art, Ohio, United States, will open at the Art Gallery of South Australia in July 2026 as the debut exhibition in AGSAs new Winter Art Series. Featuring works never-before-seen in Australia, Monet to Matisse: Defying Tradition traces a ground-breaking period in art history through seminal works by the most influential European and American artists of the 19th and 20th centuries including Paul Cézanne, Edgar Degas, Helen Frankenthaler, Henri Matisse, Piet Mondrian, Claude Monet, Berthe Morisot, Pablo Picasso, Robert Rauschenberg, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Vincent van Gogh and James McNeill Whistler.
Featuring 57 paintings from the Toledo Museum of Arts world-renowned collection, Monet to Matisse follows the development of modern art in Europe and the United States at the turn of the 20th century. These works tell the story of succeeding generations of painters and how the styles they invented - from Impressionism to Cubism, Surrealism to Abstract Expressionism - defied tradition and transformed modern art. Monet to Matisse presents a rare opportunity for Australian audiences to experience landmark works by pre-eminent artists, from Impressionists such as Degas, Monet, Morisot and Renoir; to examples of the European and American avant-garde including Matisse, Mondrian, Picasso and Rauschenberg; through to bold abstract paintings by Josef Albers, Frankenthaler and Willem de Kooning.
Amongst these celebrated paintings from the Toledo Museum of Art will be a selection of paintings and works on paper from AGSAs collection, including works by Manet, Matisse, Picasso and Whistler, and a remarkable drawing by Édouard Vuillard, highlighting the international significance of AGSAs collection.
Presented in partnership with the South Australian Government through the South Australian Tourism Commission, AGSAs Winter Art Series is a major new initiative that brings major international exhibitions exclusively to Adelaide during the winter seasons from 2026-29, celebrating Adelaides position as a vibrant cultural destination through exhibitions from world-renowned art collections and complemented by curated experiences and events.
AGSA Director, Jason Smith, said, Monet to Matisse will reveal one of art historys most transformative periods through a truly outstanding collection of 57 treasures from one of the United States finest art museums. This important collaboration with the Toledo Museum of Art will see masterworks travel to Australia for the first time, on display exclusively at the Art Gallery of South Australia throughout winter 2026. From van Goghs luminous haystacks to Monets iconic water lilies, visitors will encounter paintings by some of the worlds most influential artists - the innovators and trailblazers of their time whose work defied traditions and whose legacies continue to reverberate today.
Adam Levine, Edward Drummond and Florence Scott Libbey President, Director, and CEO of the Toledo Museum of Art, said, The Toledo Museum of Art is renowned for the exceptional quality of its collection. Never before have so many of the Museums masterworks travelled together, and we are proud to share them with audiences in Australia for the first time.
Premier of South Australia, The Hon. Peter Malinauskas MP, said cultural tourism generates significant economic benefits and positive social impacts for South Australians.
Monet to Matisse is a real coup for South Australia, bringing iconic paintings by artists including Vincent van Gogh and Henri Matisse to Adelaide for the first time. The Art Gallery of South Australia has cemented itself as a major tourism destination and AGSAs Winter Art Series will see blockbuster exhibitions exclusively in Adelaide over winter for the next four years, driving tourism visitation and delivering tangible economic growth to the state, Premier Malinauskas said.
The Hon. Andrea Michaels MP, Minister for the Arts, said, Next winter, we invite all South Australians to spend time with some of art historys most famous figures at the Australian-exclusive exhibition Monet to Matisse: Defying Tradition. AGSAs Winter Art Series will invigorate South Australias arts offering over the winter months, forming an important part of South Australias year-round cultural calendar. There will be no better place to be than Adelaide in winter.
The Hon. Zoe Bettison MP, Minister for Tourism, said, Im thrilled that Adelaide will once again become a must-visit destination next winter when this Australian-exclusive exhibition opens next July. Visitors will not only have the opportunity to experience these internationally acclaimed works of art but will also encounter the simple pleasures of Adelaides world-class hospitality, wine regions and bespoke events during their stay.
Chair of the Art Gallery Board, Sandy Verschoor says, Were thrilled that through the Winter Art Series, AGSA will be a premier destination to view extraordinary masterpieces rarely seen in Australia. Monet to Matisse: Defying Tradition, the inaugural exhibition in AGSAs new Winter Art Series, further consolidates AGSAs vision to be the most inspiring art destination in Australia.
Among the masterworks on display in Monet to Matisse: Defying Tradition are:
Vincent van Gogh, Wheat Fields with Reaper, Auvers, 1890
Vincent van Gogh was fascinated by the vast fields of wheat that stretched above Auvers-sur-Oise, a town north of Paris where he lived the last two months of his life. He painted many views of these fields, including this landscape with a reaper cutting the golden grain while the stacked sheaves recede toward a village and the distant blue hills. For van Gogh, the reaper was sometimes a biblical metaphor of the final harvest when mankind will be reaped like ripe wheat. Though inspired by the observation of his immediate surroundings, van Gogh was not interested in mimicking what he saw. As he wrote in 1888 to his brother Theo, Instead of trying to reproduce exactly what I have before my eyes, I use colour more arbitrarily, to express myself more forcibly. His thick, sculptural brushstrokes add to this forceful expression.
Piet Mondrian, Composition with Red, Blue, Yellow, Black, and Gray, 1922
Every true artist has been inspired more by the beauty of lines and colour and the relationships between them than by the concrete subject of the picture. - Piet Mondrian. Dominated by a large white square surrounded by small colour planes that extend to the edges of the canvas, Composition with Red, Blue, Yellow, Black, and Gray expresses Mondrians desire to balance opposing forces by concentrating on the subtle relationship between lines, shapes and colours. Mondrian believed his nonrepresentational style, which he called Neoplasticism, expressed the unity and order possible in nature when opposing forces are in balance. He hoped his images of absolute harmony, clarity and order would point the way toward a future universal utopia.
Claude Monet, Water Lilies, c.1922
Plants, water and sky seem to merge in Claude Monets evocative painting of his lily pond at his home in Giverny. The disorienting reflections, bold brushstrokes and lack of horizon line or spatial depth make Water Lilies appear almost abstract. Painted about 1922, it belongs to a grand project that Monet had conceived as far back as 1897: Imagine a circular room whose wall
would be entirely filled by a horizon of water spotted with [water lilies]
the calm and silence of the still water reflecting the flowering display; the tones are vague, deliciously nuanced, as delicate as a dream. Monet began this ambitious project in 1914, finally completing it shortly before his death in 1926. Over those years he executed more than 60 paintings of his water garden, capturing the light conditions at different times of day and in different weather.
Paul Klee, Villas for Marionettes (Villen für Marionetten), 1922
Paul Klee, along with Joan Miró, helped to prove that Modern art did not always need to be self-consciously serious. What at first seems to be a sober meditation on form and colour, upon closer inspection reveals visual puns and a humorously literal take on the whimsical title. The fractured construction of the painting consists of arches, staircases, windows, roof gables and basic forms like circles, rectangles and squares. It is a collage of viewpoints - side-on and from above, close-up details and faraway glimpses. The colour scheme suggests a night scene. The repeated curved shape recalls curtains drawn to one side - simultaneously implying a window and a stage. An incisive caricaturist early in his career, Klee matured into an internationally respected artist. In 1921 he was appointed to the faculty of the prestigious Bauhaus School of design in Weimar, Germany. As the Nazis came to political power, he fled Germany and lived in Switzerland until his death in 1940.
Henri Matisse, Dancer Resting, 1940
Painted just before Henri Matisse abandoned painting for designs composed of paper cutouts, Dancer Resting incorporates interests that occupied him throughout his career: the human figure, bright colours, varied lines and patterns, all given equal attention. The woman, Lydia Delectorskaya, Matisses favourite model at the time, leans back in her chair, her legs casually splayed. She gazes out matter-of-factly at the viewer, at ease with herself. One of Matisses paintings of nudes rests on an easel in the upper right and provides a self-referential wink to the viewer. House plants and the large blocks of colour on the floor create patterns that reflect Matisses lifelong interest in decorative motifs. Delectorskaya remained with Matisse as a studio manager, model, secretary, and finally, caregiver, until his death in 1954. Enigmatically known only as Madame Lydia to studio visitors, she was pivotal in helping to produce his late work when his health was in rapid decline.
Helen Frankenthaler, Blue Jay, 1963
A line, colour, shapes, spaces, all do one thing for and within themselves, and yet do something else, in relation to everything that is going on within the four sides [of the canvas]. A line is a line, but [also] is a colour
It does this here, but that there. The canvas surface is flat and yet the space extends for miles. What a lie, what trickery - how beautiful is the very idea of painting. - Helen Frankenthaler. Abstract Expressionist painter Helen Frankenthaler was a significant figure in the postwar American art scene, rising to prominence in the 1950s. By the 1960s, Frankenthaler increasingly utilised a technique she referred to as soak stain, resulting in a watercolour-like appearance as seen in Blue Jay. This is achieved by painting directly onto an unprimed canvas with turpentine-diluted oil paints, which influenced artists such as Kenneth Noland and Morris Louis and led the way for Colour Field painting.
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