I have been visiting art museums since I was a little girl. In my blog, I will be sharing some of the current, recent, and past exhibitions that I have attended and how they have impacted my creative life.
September of 1995 a dear friend Anne Hunter and I met up in Chicago for the weekend. The Art Institute of Chicago was having a major retrospective on “Claude Monet 1840-1926”. At that time it was the largest retrospective of his works ever held. The exhibition included 159 paintings and works on paper including some never viewed outside of private collections.
This was the first time I realized just what it takes to create this size of an exhibition. The curator of the exhibition, Charles F. Stuckey, spent years arranging with other museums and private collectors to bring these paintings to Chicago from all over the world. Never have all of those paintings been together in one location. Another first for me was being able to see the evolutions and changes in Monet’s work over his life. The curator chose to group some paintings by subject; wheatstacks and waterlilies. In those rooms, I was able to compare one painting to the other and see how he interpreted light and color differently over the years. I frequently review the 281-page exhibit catalog and take a memory walk through the exhibit. Each time I see things differently each time.