On April 18, 2009, attendees of the Columbia Museum of Art’s Soiree du Soleil can purchase local art from members of the About Face Art group who have created a special atlier as part of the evening's festivities.
The “Art Salon” is being held in conjunction with the Museum’s exhibit “Turner to Cézanne: Masterpieces from the Davies Collection, National Museum Wales.” During the evening, Gala attendees will step back in time and meet with French Impressionist artists dressed in period costumes, visit their studios and be able to purchase works from the area's best artists for this one-night only event.
Throughout the evening, guests will delight in French baguettes, berets, Beaujolais and music, plus Champagne with a drop of Absinthe. The exhibit, which is on view for the first-time in the United States, showcases the personal collection of Gwendoline and Margaret Davies who began collecting art after receiving heir inheritance from their late grandfather David Davies
The two sisters collected French works from 1850–1914 as well as a smaller number of English works. The extraordinary collection they amassed was later bequeathed to National Museum Wales and includes the most important names in the Realist, Impressionist, and Post-Impressionist movements.
The exhibit provides a fresh insight into the story of European art from J.M.W. Turner to Paul Cézanne and celebrates the legacy of two pioneers of modern art. The collection is exceptionally strong in Impressionist and Post-Impressionist works and includes masterpieces by, among others, Cézanne, Corot, van Gogh, Monet, Daumier, Manet, Millet, Pissarro, Renoir, Turner and Whistler.
Turner to Cézanne features 53 stunning works of art, seen together in the United States for the first time. Some highlights of the exhibition are Renoir’s famous La Parisienne, which was included in the first show of Impressionism in 1874, a Monet Water Lilies, and van Gogh’s panoramic Rain–Auvers, painted during the last week of the artist’s life.
Exhibition Credit: The exhibition is organized by the American Federation of Arts and National Museum Wales. This exhibition is supported by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts and the Humanities. National Museum Wales: National Museum Wales, located in Cardiff, runs seven national museums in Wales and celebrated its centenary year in 2007. The art collections encompass both the fine and applied arts, from antiquity to the present. The museum is renowned for its internationally acclaimed Impressionist collections, bequeathed to the museum by the Davies sisters.
The “Art Salon” is being held in conjunction with the Museum’s exhibit “Turner to Cézanne: Masterpieces from the Davies Collection, National Museum Wales.” During the evening, Gala attendees will step back in time and meet with French Impressionist artists dressed in period costumes, visit their studios and be able to purchase works from the area's best artists for this one-night only event.
Throughout the evening, guests will delight in French baguettes, berets, Beaujolais and music, plus Champagne with a drop of Absinthe. The exhibit, which is on view for the first-time in the United States, showcases the personal collection of Gwendoline and Margaret Davies who began collecting art after receiving heir inheritance from their late grandfather David Davies
The two sisters collected French works from 1850–1914 as well as a smaller number of English works. The extraordinary collection they amassed was later bequeathed to National Museum Wales and includes the most important names in the Realist, Impressionist, and Post-Impressionist movements.
The exhibit provides a fresh insight into the story of European art from J.M.W. Turner to Paul Cézanne and celebrates the legacy of two pioneers of modern art. The collection is exceptionally strong in Impressionist and Post-Impressionist works and includes masterpieces by, among others, Cézanne, Corot, van Gogh, Monet, Daumier, Manet, Millet, Pissarro, Renoir, Turner and Whistler.
Turner to Cézanne features 53 stunning works of art, seen together in the United States for the first time. Some highlights of the exhibition are Renoir’s famous La Parisienne, which was included in the first show of Impressionism in 1874, a Monet Water Lilies, and van Gogh’s panoramic Rain–Auvers, painted during the last week of the artist’s life.
Exhibition Credit: The exhibition is organized by the American Federation of Arts and National Museum Wales. This exhibition is supported by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts and the Humanities. National Museum Wales: National Museum Wales, located in Cardiff, runs seven national museums in Wales and celebrated its centenary year in 2007. The art collections encompass both the fine and applied arts, from antiquity to the present. The museum is renowned for its internationally acclaimed Impressionist collections, bequeathed to the museum by the Davies sisters.
The paintings above, Meracages and Wisteria, by artist Alicia Leeke will be just two of over 100 paintings available for purchase during the event.
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