Art

Camille Pissarro Famous Works

Fall is a vibrant and busy season for art in the city. With EXPO Chicago just behind us, enticing exhibitions can be spotted at many galleries and L’Alliance Française de Chicago (AFC) is in on the festivities. The cultural institution is currently hosting a one-week-only exhibition featuring rare works on paper by French Impressionist Camille Pissarro.

L’Alliance acquired a loan of Pissarro’s important works on paper from a private Midwestern collection through the R.S. Johnson Fine Art Gallery, whose president R. Stanley Johnson is an AFC board member.

Director of programs at AFC Aimée Laberge spoke with Newcity about the works that they find to be the most captivating and significant: “I know Stanley thinks the self-portrait ‘Camille Pissarro par lui-même’ (circa 1890) is the most important piece in the collection, but I personally prefer the lightness and joyousness in the ‘Kew Gardens’ (London, circa 1892) watercolor.”

Camille Pissarro

Pissarro studied in Paris as did other important Impressionists such as Monet and Renoir, the latter of whom once called Pissarro’s work “revolutionary.” He is also classified as a father figure for Post-Impressionist artists like Cézanne, Van Gogh and Seurat.

A collective of twenty rare prints, watercolors and pastels are on view at the Alliance Française through September 24, only a short while. Considering that almost all of Pissarro’s works are now permanently housed in museums, this exhibition is exceptionally rare. (Mahjabeen Syed)


Interesting fact

The iconic Volkswagen Beetle car differed from others by its windscreen washer was driven not by electricity but by the pressure of spare wheel located under the hood, so that it had to constantly be over-inflated. It means that if a car got a flat tyre, the driver could not use the windscreen washer until the spare wheel returned under the hood. Read tempe towing for more information.

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