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Wednesday, January 10, 2018

@NationalGallery London's National Gallery Tells #WhomYouKnow @ManhattanPeachy #CulturedPeachy Monet and Architecture 9 April – 29 July 2018 Sainsbury Wing





9 April – 29 July 2018

Sainsbury Wing

Admission charge

In a landmark show at the National Gallery in spring 2018 – the first purely Monet exhibition to be staged in London for more than twenty years – there is a unique and surprising opportunity to discover the artist as we have never seen him before.

We typically think of Claude Monet as a painter of landscape, of the sea, and in his later years, of gardens – but until now there has never been an exhibition considering his work in terms of architecture.

Featuring more than seventy-five paintings by Monet, this innovative exhibition spans his long career from its beginnings in the mid-1860s to the public display of his Venice paintings in 1912. As a daring young artist, he exhibited in the Impressionist shows and displayed canvases of the bridges and buildings of Paris and its suburbs. Much later as an elderly man, he depicted the renowned architecture of Venice and London, reflecting them back to us through his exceptional vision. 

More than a quarter of the paintings in The Credit Suisse Exhibition: Monet & Architecture come from private collections around the world; works little-known and rarely exhibited.

Buildings played substantial, diverse, and unexpected roles in Monet’s pictures. They serve as records of locations, identifying a village by its church (Église de Varengeville, effet matinal, 1882, Private Collection), or a city such as Venice (The Doge’s Palace, 1908, Brooklyn Museum), or London (Cleopatra’s Needle and Charing Cross Bridge, about 1899–1901, Private Collection) by its celebrated monuments. Architecture offered a measure of modernity – the glass-roofed interior of a railway station, like the Gare Saint-Lazare (1877, National Gallery, London) – whilst a venerable structure, such as La Lieutenance de Honfleur, (1864, Private Collection), marked out the historic or picturesque. Architecture aided Monet with the business of painting. A red-tiled roof could offer a complementary contrast to the dominant green of the surrounding vegetation (The Cliffs at Dieppe, 1882, Kunsthaus Zürich).The textured surfaces of buildings provided him with screens on which light plays, solid equivalents to reflections on water (Rouen Cathedral, 1893–4, Private Collection).

A man-made structure helps the viewer engage with the experience of a Monet landscape. A distant steeple (The Church at Varengeville, 1882, The Barber Institute of Fine Arts) or nearby house (Gardener’s House at Antibes, 1888, The Cleveland Museum of Art), are marks of scale, responding to our instinct to read our physical surroundings in terms of distance, destination, and the passage of time involved in transit. Architecture can stand in for absent human presence and suggest mood, whether it be awe at the grandeur of a historical monument (San Giorgio Maggiore, 1908, Private Collection), thrill at the vitality of a teeming city street (The Pont Neuf, 1871, Dallas Museum of Art), or loneliness at the solitude of the clifftop cottage (The Douanier’s Cottage, 1888, Fogg Art Museum, USA). 

Monet & Architecture will be displayed in three sections – The Village and the Picturesque, The City and the Modern, andThe Monument and the Mysterious – and will explore how one of the world’s best-loved painters captured a rapidly changing society though his portrayal of buildings.

It will feature a rare gathering of some of Monet’s great ‘series’ paintings – five Dutch pictures from trips made in the early 1870s, 10 paintings of Argenteuil and the Parisian suburbs from the mid-1870s, seven Rouen Cathedrals from 1892–5, eight London paintings from 1899–1904, and nine Venice canvases from 1908.

Monet & Architecture will feature exceptional pairings, such as both paintings of the church at Vétheuil, which Monet made immediately on arrival in the village in late 1878 (one Scottish National Gallery, the other Private Collection). One was shown at the 4th Impressionist exhibition in 1879, and the other at the 7th in 1882, but they have never been seen together. The National Gallery's well-known Thames below Westminster (1871) will be seen alongside a picture of the beach at Trouville (1870, Private Collection), made only months before with the same size canvas and a very similar composition. 

Many world-famous and much-loved Monet pictures will be travelling to London: the Quai du Louvre (1867, Gemeente Museum, Den Haag), one of his first cityscapes; the Boulevard des Capucines (1873, The Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts, Moscow) shown at the first Impressionist exhibition in 1874 where it aroused controversy; and the flag-filled Rue Montorgeuil, 30 June 1878 (Musee d’Orsay) made to celebrate the celebration of a national holiday.

Through buildings Monet bore witness to his location, revelling in kaleidoscopic atmospherics and recording the play of sunshine, fogs, and reflections, using the characteristics of the built environment as his theatre of light. He said in an interview in 1895 “Other painters paint a bridge, a house, a boat … I want to paint the air that surrounds the bridge, the house, the boat – the beauty of the light in which they exist.”

The exhibition is curated by Monet scholar Richard Thomson, Watson Gordon Professor of Fine Art at the University of Edinburgh. He says “It is a guest curator's dream to be able to bring so many arresting paintings by such a great artist together and to combine them in groupings which bring out new ways of seeing his unrivalled work.”

Director of the National Gallery, Dr Gabriele Finaldi, says “Monet’s sensibility to the pull of light across buildings, bridges, and water continues to astound today’s audiences. His images of Rouen, Paris, and London have become part of the visual landscapes of our imagination.”

David Mathers, CEO of Credit Suisse International, said: “We are delighted to be sponsoring Monet & Architecture during the tenth anniversary of the partnership between Credit Suisse and the National Gallery. This landmark exhibition will showcase a bold reinterpretation of Monet’s paintings. With more than a quarter of the works in the exhibition drawn from private collections around the world, often little-known or rarely exhibited, this will provide a unique opportunity to experience these paintings in a very innovative and imaginative context.”


Image – Claude Monet, The Grand Canal (Le Grand Canal), 1908 © Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco. Gift of Osgood Hooker 1960.29

Open to public: 9 April 2018

Daily: 10am–6pm (last admission 5pm)

Fridays: 10am–9pm (last admission 8.15pm)

Admission charge

Members and under-12s (ticket required) FREE

Booking tickets

For advance tickets to The Credit Suisse Exhibition: Monet & Architecture, please visit nationalgallery.org.uk or call 0800 912 6958 (booking fee). You can also book tickets in person from the Gallery.

Overseas customers can contact us by dialling +44 020 7126 5573.

Book online and save.


Credit Suisse AG
Credit Suisse AG is one of the world's leading financial services providers and is part of the Credit Suisse group of companies (referred to here as 'Credit Suisse'). As an integrated bank, Credit Suisse offers clients its combined expertise in the areas of private banking, investment banking and asset management. Credit Suisse provides advisory services, comprehensive solutions and innovative products to companies, institutional clients and high-net-worth private clients globally, as well as to retail clients in Switzerland. Credit Suisse is headquartered in Zurich and operates in over 50 countries worldwide. The group employs approximately 46720 people. The registered shares (CSGN) of Credit Suisse's parent company, Credit Suisse Group AG, are listed in Switzerland and, in the form of American Depositary Shares (CS), in New York. Further information about Credit Suisse can be found at www.credit-suisse.com.
Peachy Deegan was once an employee of Credit Suisse in the USA.

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