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Exhibition note.(Art)

New Criterion

| December 01, 2005 | Russell, John (English Bishop) | COPYRIGHT 2005 Foundation for Cultural Review. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

"Right under the Sun: Landscape in Provence, from Classicism to Modernism (1750-1920)" Montreal Museum of Fine Arts. September 22, 2005-January 8, 2006

This show at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts has an irresistible subject. At the very name of Provence, almost everyone by now breaks into smiles. Vincent van Gogh spoke for all of them when he said to Berthe Morisot that Provence was "the most beautiful country in the world. It is as if you had Italy and Greece and the country round Paris combined and put together."

It had long been so. Already in the early fourteenth century, when the poet Petrarch had professional duties at the Papal court in Avignon, he said, "Here I have my Rome, my Athens, my homeland." Today, Provence musters Monet, Renoir, Van Gogh, Degas, and Cezanne as its key figures, with Andre Derain, Raoul Dufy, and Georges Braque as their successors. (Derain lived till 1953, Dufy till 1954, and Braque till 1963).

There was also an American painter, born and raised in England, named Thomas Cole (1801-1848). His "Fountain of Vaucluse" (1841) takes rank in the show as the epitome of a certain Provence.

Both the status of Provence and its ambitions are defined briefly but aptly in its subtitle "From Classicism to Modernism." As early as 1850, people were talking about the "School of Marseilles." The poet Theophile Gautier said of the people of Marseilles that "they really are possessed. The sun beats up their brains and fills them with a feeling for color."

In 1876, when Cezanne had just began to settle in Provence, he wrote to Pissarro from L'Estaque: "The sun here is so tremendous that it is as if the objects were silhouetted not only in black and white but in blue, red, brown and violet."

In 1906 the harsh light and the color--which flared up at times "like sticks of dynamite"--were already notorious. After World War II there was a huge and enthusiastic public, worldwide, that thought of Provence in terms primarily of Impressionism. But this was always a ...

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Source: HighBeam Research, Exhibition note.(Art)

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