GIVERNY, FRANCE.- Musée d’Art Américain Giverny presents “Transatlantic Avant-Garde - American Artists in Paris, 1918-1939,” on view through November 30. Organized by the Musée d’Art Américain Giverny, this major exhibition focuses on a period marked by the shifting influence of Europe on American art. Three successive aspects of the Parisian avant-garde, as espoused by American artists active in Paris between the World Wars and undeniably influential in the history of transatlantic modernity, will be explored. The structure of the exhibition is defined by pairing influential transatlantic artists who were associated with different movements: Gerald Murphy and Fernand Léger for Purism, Alexander Calder and Piet Mondrian for Geometric Abstraction and Man Ray, who can be considered as both American and European, for Surrealism. The exhibition assembles over 130 works, drawn primarily from American and French collections, such as the Terra Foundation for the Arts collection, and includes a certain number of works by American artists as points of reference.