1½ col Self Portrait Van Gogh
1½ col Self Portrait Van Gogh
Vincent van Gogh, âSelf-portrait,â 1887, oil on pasteboard, 18 by 21¼ inches, Amsterdam, Van Gogh Museum (Vincent van Gogh Foundation).
1½ col Self Portrait Renoir
Pierre-Auguste Renoir, âSelf Portrait,â circa 1875, oil on canvas, 153/8 by 12½ inches, Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute, Williamstown, Mass.
FOR 5-25
âDUTCH DIALOGUESâ WILL OPEN AT CLARK ART INSTITUTE JUNE 3 w/2 cuts
avv/gs set 5-15 #700118
WILLIAMSTOWN, MASS. â Dutch masterpieces will meet their matches at the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute during âDutch Dialogues,â on view June 3âSeptember 3.
The exhibit will showcase four iconic works by Vincent van Gogh, Pierre-Auguste Renoir and Jean-François Millet. In addition, two portraits by Frans Hals will be reunited for the first time in two centuries, and a work by contemporary Dutch artist Robert Scholte will be juxtaposed with the Clarkâs Impressionist paintings. Several fine Seventeenth Century Dutch paintings from the Clarkâs permanent collection will also be on view.
âDutch Dialoguesâ features works of art linked by a unique âdialogueâ allowing visitors to compare masterpieces by the Dutch artist Vincent van Gogh to works in the Clarkâs collection. Van Gogh will meet Renoir when their striking self-portraits are displayed side-by-side in the galleries. Exhibiting the Clark-owned Renoir next to van Goghâs âSelf-Portraitâ (Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam) underscores the shared stylistic and psychological relationships between the two artists.
The Clarkâs pastel by Jean-François Millet, âThe Sower,â will be joined with van Goghâs âSower (after Millet)â (Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam). Milletâs depictions of field laborers left an indelible impression on the artistic imagination of van Gogh, who returned to the motif repeatedly in later years.
The portrait of âPieter Jacobsz. Olycanâ (The John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art, Sarasota, Fla.) and âMaritge Vooght Claesdr., Wife of Pieter Jacobsz. Olycan, Mayor of Haarlemâ (Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam), both painted by Frans Hals in 1639, will once again face each other as Hals had intended.
This husband and wife duo were originally painted as a pair but have been separated at least since the Nineteenth Century. This will be the first time in centuries the two paintings by the Dutch artist will be reunited. Recent conservation of the painting of Maritge Vooght Claesdr. has led to startling surprises, including details that were added well after Halsâs death.
The final âdialogueâ will feature âChlamydiaâ (Williams College Museum of Art), a reinterpretation of Edouard Manetâs famous âOlympia,â by contemporary Dutch artist Robert Scholte. This imposing composition will be juxtaposed with works from the Clarkâs collection of Impressionist paintings.
Scholteâs large expanse of jet black canvas will provide shocking contrast among the roomâs pastel pinks, delicate nudes and serene landscapes. The title of Scholteâs painting, the name of a sexually transmitted disease, recalls the shock value Manetâs âOlympiaâ had when originally exhibited, thereby reminding viewers that the subject matter and style of the Impressionists frequently challenged traditional notions of what was âproperâ for art.
The works by Renoir, Millet, van Gogh, and Scholte will be displayed within the Impressionist Gallery in a special installation designed by Selldorf Architects, the firm recently selected for the renovation of the Clarkâs original museum building.
Also on view at the Clark this summer is âThe Unknown Monet: Pastels and Drawings.â The exhibit provides a look into the secret world of Claude Monet and allows viewers to discover his hidden life as a youthful caricaturist, masterful draftsman and talented pastel artist.
Newly discovered documentation of Monetâs formative years and the first comprehensive gathering of his rarely seen works on paper combine to make this a groundbreaking exhibition. âThe Unknown Monetâ will be on view June 24âSeptember 16.
For information, 413-458-2303 or www.clarkart.edu.