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Orangerie, Paris, France.
El Museo de la Orangerie es una galería de arte de pinturas impresionistas y postimpresionistas y de arte moderno de principios de siglo ubicada en el Jardín de las Tullerías en París. Alberga obras de Paul Cézanne, Henri Matisse, Amedeo Modigliani, Claude Monet, Pablo Picasso, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Henri Rousseau, Chaïm Soutine, Alfred Sisley y Maurice Utrillo entre otros.
La galería está a orillas del Sena en la antigua orangerie del Palacio de las Tullerías en el Jardín de las Tullerías, del lado Este de la Plaza de la Concordia, cerca de las estaciones «Concorde» y «Tuileries» del metro de París.
Según su sitio web, el edificio fue construido originalmente en 1852 por el arquitecto Firmin Bourgeois y completado por su sucesor, Louis Visconti, para proteger los naranjos del jardín de las Tullerías. Fue utilizado durante la III República como depósito de bienes, sala de examen y lugar de alojamiento para soldados movilizados; también sirvió para albergar eventos deportivos, musicales y patrióticos. Además, era un lugar de exhibiciones de la industria, animales, plantas, así como muestras raras de pintura.
Como afirma el historiador de arte Michel Hoog: "En 1921, la administración de Bellas Artes decidió asignar a la Dirección de Museos Nacionales (como se llamaba entonces) los dos edificios que daban a la Plaza de la Concordia, el Jeu de Paume, y la Orangerie, que hasta entonces había sido utilizada para su propósito original. La Orangerie se convirtió en un anexo del Museo de Luxemburgo , criticado por unanimidad por ser demasiado pequeño, mientras que el Jeu de Paume iba a ser utilizado para exposiciones temporales y para albergar la pintura extranjera contemporánea."
El pintor impresionista Claude Monet había decidido donar paneles decorativos para el gobierno francés, como un homenaje al final de la Primera Guerra Mundial. El ex primer ministro de Francia y gran amigo de Monet, Georges Clemenceau, sugirió que Monet instalara las pinturas en la Orangerie, recientemente disponible, en lugar de hacerlo en el museo del Jeu de Paume, que tenía un espacio de pared más pequeño o, como se había planeado anteriormente, en un anexo al Museo Rodin.
El 12 de abril de 1922, Claude Monet firmó un contrato para donar la serie de paneles decorativos "Les Nymphéas", pintados sobre lienzo, al gobierno francés, que se alojarían en unas habitaciones ovales en la Orangerie, rediseñadas. Con el aporte de Monet, la arquitecta jefe del Louvre, Camille Lefèvre, elaboró nuevos planos y alzados en 1922, para albergar los grandes lienzos "Les Nymphéas" de Monet, que incorporan luz natural, paredes lisas y escasa decoración interior. Según la investigación de Hoog, "los fondos estuvieron disponibles el 17 de agosto de 1922, el trabajo comenzó en octubre y parece haber finalizado en [el] año siguiente". Poco dispuesto a renunciar a sus últimas obras de arte, estas pinturas se quedaron con Monet hasta su muerte, el 5 de diciembre de 1926. El 31 de enero de 1927 la compañía Laurent-Fournier acordó instalar y montar los paneles, en un proceso que involucraba pegar el lienzo directamente a las paredes. Las pinturas estuvieron en su lugar el 26 de marzo de ese año. El 17 de mayo de 1927 "Les Nymphéas" de Monet se abrieron al público, en el Museo de l'Orangerie.
Según Hoog, "En agosto de 1944, durante la batalla por la liberación de París, cinco proyectiles cayeron sobre las salas de las ninfas, dos paneles (los situados en la pared entre las dos habitaciones) sufrieron daños, pero inmediatamente se restauraron. Este trabajo de restauración se renovó y se realizó una limpieza general".
La viuda de Paul Guillaume, la señora Jean Walter, donó su colección de arte moderno a los Museos Nacionales de Francia, en 1958. L'Orangerie ha albergado la colección Walter-Guillaume de pintura impresionista, de los siglos XIX y XX, desde 1965.
En enero de 2000, el museo fue cerrado por trabajos de renovación, completamente revisado y restaurado, y se volvió a abrir al público en mayo de 2006. En los meses previos a su cierra hubo una exhibición especial de Les Nympheas de Monet que estaban dispersadas por museos de todo el mundo. Se incluyeron más de 60 de las 250 pinturas que hizo de los nenúfares de su jardín. Las paredes fueron repintadas en tonos púrpuras y violetas para esta exposición en particular. Tras la renovación, se trasladaron Les Nympheas a la planta superior del edificio. Ahora están dispuestas bajo una luz difusa, tal como inicialmente pretendió Monet. Las ocho pinturas se muestran en dos salas.
The Musée de l'Orangerie is an art gallery of Impressionist and Post-Impressionist paintings and modern art from the turn of the century located in the Tuileries Garden in Paris. It houses works by Paul Cézanne, Henri Matisse, Amedeo Modigliani, Claude Monet, Pablo Picasso, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Henri Rousseau, Chaïm Soutine, Alfred Sisley and Maurice Utrillo among others.
The gallery is on the banks of the Seine in the old orangery of the Tuileries Palace in the Tuileries Garden, on the east side of Place de la Concorde, near the "Concorde" and "Tuileries" stations of the Paris metro.
According to its website, the building was originally built in 1852 by architect Firmin Bourgeois and completed by his successor, Louis Visconti, to protect the orange trees in the Tuileries garden. It was used during the Third Republic as a deposit of goods, examination room and place of accommodation for mobilized soldiers; it also served to host sporting, musical and patriotic events. Furthermore, it was a place for exhibitions of industry, animals, plants, as well as rare samples of paint.
As the art historian Michel Hoog states: "In 1921, the Fine Arts administration decided to assign to the Directorate of National Museums (as it was called then) the two buildings that led to Place de la Concorde, the Jeu de Paume, and the Orangerie, which until then had been used for its original purpose. The Orangerie became an annex to the Luxembourg Museum, unanimously criticized for being too small, while the Jeu de Paume was to be used for temporary exhibitions and to house contemporary foreign painting. "
Impressionist painter Claude Monet had decided to donate decorative panels to the French government, as a tribute to the end of the First World War. Former Prime Minister of France and Monet's close friend Georges Clemenceau suggested that Monet install the paintings in the recently available Orangerie, rather than in the Jeu de Paume museum, which had a smaller wall space or, as previously planned, in an annex to the Rodin Museum.
On April 12, 1922, Claude Monet signed a contract to donate the "Les Nymphéas" series of decorative panels, painted on canvas, to the French government, to be housed in oval rooms in the redesigned Orangerie. With the contribution of Monet, the Louvre's chief architect, Camille Lefèvre, produced new plans and elevations in 1922, to house Monet's large "Les Nymphéas" canvases, which incorporate natural light, smooth walls, and poor interior decoration. According to Hoog's research, "the funds were available on August 17, 1922, the work began in October and appears to have been completed in [the] following year." Unwilling to give up his latest works of art, these paintings remained with Monet until his death on December 5, 1926. On January 31, 1927 the Laurent-Fournier company agreed to install and assemble the panels, in a process which involved gluing the canvas directly to the walls. The paintings were in place on March 26 of that year. On May 17, 1927 Monet's "Les Nymphéas" were opened to the public at the Musée de l'Orangerie.
According to Hoog, "In August 1944, during the battle for the liberation of Paris, five shells fell on the nymph rooms, two panels (those on the wall between the two rooms) were damaged, but were immediately restored. This restoration work was renewed and a general cleaning was carried out. " I don't know
Paul Guillaume's widow, Mrs. Jean Walter, donated her collection of modern art to the National Museums of France in 1958. L'Orangerie has housed the Walter-Guillaume collection of Impressionist painting, from the 19th and 20th centuries, since 1965.
In January 2000, the museum was closed for renovation work, completely overhauled and restored, and reopened to the public in May 2006. In the months leading up to its closure there was a special exhibition of Les Nympheas de Monet which were scattered by museums around the world. More than 60 of the 250 paintings she made of the water lilies in her garden were included. The walls were repainted in purple and violet tones for this particular exhibition. Following the renovation, Les Nympheas was moved to the top floor of the building. They are now arranged in a diffused light, just as Monet originally intended. The eight paintings are displayed in two rooms.
Orangerie, Paris, France.
El Museo de la Orangerie es una galería de arte de pinturas impresionistas y postimpresionistas y de arte moderno de principios de siglo ubicada en el Jardín de las Tullerías en París. Alberga obras de Paul Cézanne, Henri Matisse, Amedeo Modigliani, Claude Monet, Pablo Picasso, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Henri Rousseau, Chaïm Soutine, Alfred Sisley y Maurice Utrillo entre otros.
La galería está a orillas del Sena en la antigua orangerie del Palacio de las Tullerías en el Jardín de las Tullerías, del lado Este de la Plaza de la Concordia, cerca de las estaciones «Concorde» y «Tuileries» del metro de París.
Según su sitio web, el edificio fue construido originalmente en 1852 por el arquitecto Firmin Bourgeois y completado por su sucesor, Louis Visconti, para proteger los naranjos del jardín de las Tullerías. Fue utilizado durante la III República como depósito de bienes, sala de examen y lugar de alojamiento para soldados movilizados; también sirvió para albergar eventos deportivos, musicales y patrióticos. Además, era un lugar de exhibiciones de la industria, animales, plantas, así como muestras raras de pintura.
Como afirma el historiador de arte Michel Hoog: "En 1921, la administración de Bellas Artes decidió asignar a la Dirección de Museos Nacionales (como se llamaba entonces) los dos edificios que daban a la Plaza de la Concordia, el Jeu de Paume, y la Orangerie, que hasta entonces había sido utilizada para su propósito original. La Orangerie se convirtió en un anexo del Museo de Luxemburgo , criticado por unanimidad por ser demasiado pequeño, mientras que el Jeu de Paume iba a ser utilizado para exposiciones temporales y para albergar la pintura extranjera contemporánea."
El pintor impresionista Claude Monet había decidido donar paneles decorativos para el gobierno francés, como un homenaje al final de la Primera Guerra Mundial. El ex primer ministro de Francia y gran amigo de Monet, Georges Clemenceau, sugirió que Monet instalara las pinturas en la Orangerie, recientemente disponible, en lugar de hacerlo en el museo del Jeu de Paume, que tenía un espacio de pared más pequeño o, como se había planeado anteriormente, en un anexo al Museo Rodin.
El 12 de abril de 1922, Claude Monet firmó un contrato para donar la serie de paneles decorativos "Les Nymphéas", pintados sobre lienzo, al gobierno francés, que se alojarían en unas habitaciones ovales en la Orangerie, rediseñadas. Con el aporte de Monet, la arquitecta jefe del Louvre, Camille Lefèvre, elaboró nuevos planos y alzados en 1922, para albergar los grandes lienzos "Les Nymphéas" de Monet, que incorporan luz natural, paredes lisas y escasa decoración interior. Según la investigación de Hoog, "los fondos estuvieron disponibles el 17 de agosto de 1922, el trabajo comenzó en octubre y parece haber finalizado en [el] año siguiente". Poco dispuesto a renunciar a sus últimas obras de arte, estas pinturas se quedaron con Monet hasta su muerte, el 5 de diciembre de 1926. El 31 de enero de 1927 la compañía Laurent-Fournier acordó instalar y montar los paneles, en un proceso que involucraba pegar el lienzo directamente a las paredes. Las pinturas estuvieron en su lugar el 26 de marzo de ese año. El 17 de mayo de 1927 "Les Nymphéas" de Monet se abrieron al público, en el Museo de l'Orangerie.
Según Hoog, "En agosto de 1944, durante la batalla por la liberación de París, cinco proyectiles cayeron sobre las salas de las ninfas, dos paneles (los situados en la pared entre las dos habitaciones) sufrieron daños, pero inmediatamente se restauraron. Este trabajo de restauración se renovó y se realizó una limpieza general".
La viuda de Paul Guillaume, la señora Jean Walter, donó su colección de arte moderno a los Museos Nacionales de Francia, en 1958. L'Orangerie ha albergado la colección Walter-Guillaume de pintura impresionista, de los siglos XIX y XX, desde 1965.
En enero de 2000, el museo fue cerrado por trabajos de renovación, completamente revisado y restaurado, y se volvió a abrir al público en mayo de 2006. En los meses previos a su cierra hubo una exhibición especial de Les Nympheas de Monet que estaban dispersadas por museos de todo el mundo. Se incluyeron más de 60 de las 250 pinturas que hizo de los nenúfares de su jardín. Las paredes fueron repintadas en tonos púrpuras y violetas para esta exposición en particular. Tras la renovación, se trasladaron Les Nympheas a la planta superior del edificio. Ahora están dispuestas bajo una luz difusa, tal como inicialmente pretendió Monet. Las ocho pinturas se muestran en dos salas.
The Musée de l'Orangerie is an art gallery of Impressionist and Post-Impressionist paintings and modern art from the turn of the century located in the Tuileries Garden in Paris. It houses works by Paul Cézanne, Henri Matisse, Amedeo Modigliani, Claude Monet, Pablo Picasso, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Henri Rousseau, Chaïm Soutine, Alfred Sisley and Maurice Utrillo among others.
The gallery is on the banks of the Seine in the old orangery of the Tuileries Palace in the Tuileries Garden, on the east side of Place de la Concorde, near the "Concorde" and "Tuileries" stations of the Paris metro.
According to its website, the building was originally built in 1852 by architect Firmin Bourgeois and completed by his successor, Louis Visconti, to protect the orange trees in the Tuileries garden. It was used during the Third Republic as a deposit of goods, examination room and place of accommodation for mobilized soldiers; it also served to host sporting, musical and patriotic events. Furthermore, it was a place for exhibitions of industry, animals, plants, as well as rare samples of paint.
As the art historian Michel Hoog states: "In 1921, the Fine Arts administration decided to assign to the Directorate of National Museums (as it was called then) the two buildings that led to Place de la Concorde, the Jeu de Paume, and the Orangerie, which until then had been used for its original purpose. The Orangerie became an annex to the Luxembourg Museum, unanimously criticized for being too small, while the Jeu de Paume was to be used for temporary exhibitions and to house contemporary foreign painting. "
Impressionist painter Claude Monet had decided to donate decorative panels to the French government, as a tribute to the end of the First World War. Former Prime Minister of France and Monet's close friend Georges Clemenceau suggested that Monet install the paintings in the recently available Orangerie, rather than in the Jeu de Paume museum, which had a smaller wall space or, as previously planned, in an annex to the Rodin Museum.
On April 12, 1922, Claude Monet signed a contract to donate the "Les Nymphéas" series of decorative panels, painted on canvas, to the French government, to be housed in oval rooms in the redesigned Orangerie. With the contribution of Monet, the Louvre's chief architect, Camille Lefèvre, produced new plans and elevations in 1922, to house Monet's large "Les Nymphéas" canvases, which incorporate natural light, smooth walls, and poor interior decoration. According to Hoog's research, "the funds were available on August 17, 1922, the work began in October and appears to have been completed in [the] following year." Unwilling to give up his latest works of art, these paintings remained with Monet until his death on December 5, 1926. On January 31, 1927 the Laurent-Fournier company agreed to install and assemble the panels, in a process which involved gluing the canvas directly to the walls. The paintings were in place on March 26 of that year. On May 17, 1927 Monet's "Les Nymphéas" were opened to the public at the Musée de l'Orangerie.
According to Hoog, "In August 1944, during the battle for the liberation of Paris, five shells fell on the nymph rooms, two panels (those on the wall between the two rooms) were damaged, but were immediately restored. This restoration work was renewed and a general cleaning was carried out. " I don't know
Paul Guillaume's widow, Mrs. Jean Walter, donated her collection of modern art to the National Museums of France in 1958. L'Orangerie has housed the Walter-Guillaume collection of Impressionist painting, from the 19th and 20th centuries, since 1965.
In January 2000, the museum was closed for renovation work, completely overhauled and restored, and reopened to the public in May 2006. In the months leading up to its closure there was a special exhibition of Les Nympheas de Monet which were scattered by museums around the world. More than 60 of the 250 paintings she made of the water lilies in her garden were included. The walls were repainted in purple and violet tones for this particular exhibition. Following the renovation, Les Nympheas was moved to the top floor of the building. They are now arranged in a diffused light, just as Monet originally intended. The eight paintings are displayed in two rooms.
Italian postcard by Vetta Traldi, Milano, no. 70. Gérard Philipe in La chartreuse de Parme/The Charterhouse of Parma (Christian-Jaque, 1948).
The legendary idol of the French cinema Gérard Philipe (1922–1959) was adored for his good looks, but he was also a very talented actor. He played roles as diverse as Faust and Modigliani and he was sought out by France's preeminent directors for his versatility and professionalism.
Gérard Philipe (sometimes written as Philippe) was born Gérard Philip in Cannes, France in 1922. In 1940, Gérard left school and his parents wanted him to become a lawyer. His mother noticed that he was only interested in acting, but his father was against the idea. Gérard's father, a successful businessman, was a right-wing extremist and collaborated with the Nazis. After the war, he was forced to exile to Spain to escape a death sentence. Gérard himself was his whole life a staunch social liberal politically wise. Actor Claude Dauphin introduced the young Philippe in 1942 to the stage. One of his first parts was as the angel in 'Sodome et Gomorrhe' by Jean Giraudoux in 1943. Director Marc Allégret decided that he showed some promise and gave him a small part in his film Les petites du quai aux fleurs/The Girls From the Quai aux Fleurs (Marc Allégret, 1944) starring Odette Joyeux. With the support of his admirer Jean Cocteau, he entered the Paris Conservatory where, under the tutelage of Georges Le Roy he discovered his passion for live theatre. In 1945 he received rave reviews for his performance in the stage production of Albert Camus’ 'Caligula'. This success further opened the doors to the cinema. His first leading part in Le pays sans étoiles/Land Without Stars (Georges Lacombe, 1946) opposite Jany Holt got so many favourable reviews that he became a star.
In 1947, Gérard Philipe exploded upon the European film scene in Le diable au corps/Devil in the Flesh (Claude Autant-Lara, 1947), playing Francois Jaubert, a callow youth in love with much older and very married Micheline Presle. Superstardom followed almost immediately: female filmgoers doted upon Philippe's sensitive, handsome features and strapping physique, while men identified with his soulfulness and introspection. Next, he would take on prominent roles in such classic films as Une si jolie petite plage/Such a Pretty Little Beach (Yves Allégret, 1949), and La beauté du diable/Beauty and the Devil (René Clair, 1950) as Faust. He was an international success as the tongue-in-cheek titular swashbuckler Fanfan la Tulipe/Fan-Fan the Tulip (Christian-Jaque, 1952), one of the most popular historical-adventure films made in France. At Films de France, James Travers reviews: "Not only is the film impeccably made, with lavish production values, stunning cinematography and impressively choreographed fight scenes, but it has a timeless quality which will no doubt ensure it will remain a popular classic for years to come. Philipe excels in this film in what is regarded by many as his finest film role, the indefatigable womaniser and agile swordsman Fanfan la Tulipe. Philipe is simply brilliant in the role, tackling the numerous swordfights and Henri Jeanson’s sparkling dialogue with equal relish." He appeared with such great stars of the European cinema as Italian beauty Gina Lollobrigida in Les belles de nuit/Beauties of the Night (René Clair, 1952), with Michèle Morgan in both Les orgueilleux/The Proud Ones (Yves Allégret, 1953) and Les grandes manœuvres/The Grand Maneuver (René Clair, 1955). In 1956, Philipe starred in and directed a filmization of the old folk tale Till Eulenspiegel, Les Aventures de Till L'Espiègle/Bold Adventure (Gérard Philipe, Joris Ivens, 1956). The French-East-German coproduction was not a success. He simultaneously pursued his stage career, with a keen involvement in the Théatre National de Paris, which would endure up until his death. Whilst working at the TNP, Philipe, a strong believer in egalitarianism, would draw exactly the same salary as junior actors. He would also become president of the French actors union, actively promoting the rights of actors.
Gérard Philipe continued his string of film successes throughout the 1950s. Among these films were the Fyodor Dostoevsky adaptation Le joueur/The Gambler (Claude Autant-Lara, 1958) with Liselotte Pulver, and Les liaisons dangereuses/Dangerous Liaisons (Roger Vadim, 1959) opposite Jeanne Moreau. In 1959 doctors told Philippe that he had liver cancer. On 25 November that year, while working on Luis Buñuel's Le Fievre Monte a El Pao/Fever Mounts at El Pao (Luis Buñuel, 1959), he died at the peak of his popularity. He was just 36 years old. The news provoked an immediate and intense outpouring of grief. His early death elevated him to a near-legendary status in France. Since 1951, Philipe was married to actress and writer Nicole Fourcade, with whom he had two children, writer and actor Anne-Marie Philipe (1954) and Olivier Philipe (1957). Nicole adopted the pseudonym Anne Philipe, and wrote two books about her husband, Souvenirs (1960) and Le Temps d'un soupir (1963, No Longer Than a Sigh). In 1961, Gérard's portrait appeared on a French commemorative postage stamp. There is a film festival named in his honour as well as a number of theatres, schools and colleges in various parts of France. He was also very popular in Germany, and a Berlin theatre has been named after him.
Sources: James Travers (Le Film Guide), AllMovie, Films de France, Wikipedia, and IMDb.
And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.
Blue Eyes Lady
青い瞳の女新作で僕の大好きなモディリアーニの画風を取り入れて、現代によみがえったモディリアーニの作品の様にお絵描きしました、僕が中学生の頃勉強の為有名画家の模写していて、セザンヌの青い花瓶の静物画やモディリアーニのネクタイの女を油絵で模写しました、その頃を思い出しながらお絵描きしました、この絵は贋作とも模写ともパロディー風とも言えませんが、モディリアーニの現代によみがえった幻の作品の様にお絵かきしました、ちなみに中学時代に模写したモディリアーニのネクタイをした女は、姉の家グランドピアノの上の壁に飾られていて、来客からこの絵は本物ですかと聞かれているそうです。(笑)
アメデオ・クレメンテ・モディリアーニ/Amedeo Clemente Modigliani
Beautiful Amazing
以前にお絵描きした作品の中から、お気に入りを色編集加工してアップしております。
#DigitalArt #painting #Illustration #Beautiful #Amazing #Cat #Art #youtu.be #Happy #Heartfull #Song #Dog #Healing #Love #BestFriend #TiAmo #ToiPoodle #Moonlight #College #Football #Soccer #Lovely #Star #BayemMunchen #ArjenRobben #Gool #France #Amedeo Clemente Modigliani #模写 #贋作 #油絵 #印象派絵画
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トイプードル Ti Amo 滑り台
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デビット・ソウ Singer & Com edian
ウィ・ア.ザ・ワールド
明日に架ける橋♪サイモン&ガーファンクル
シャーリー・バッシー
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@nodasanta #nodasanta
Orangerie, Paris, France.
El Museo de la Orangerie es una galería de arte de pinturas impresionistas y postimpresionistas y de arte moderno de principios de siglo ubicada en el Jardín de las Tullerías en París. Alberga obras de Paul Cézanne, Henri Matisse, Amedeo Modigliani, Claude Monet, Pablo Picasso, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Henri Rousseau, Chaïm Soutine, Alfred Sisley y Maurice Utrillo entre otros.
La galería está a orillas del Sena en la antigua orangerie del Palacio de las Tullerías en el Jardín de las Tullerías, del lado Este de la Plaza de la Concordia, cerca de las estaciones «Concorde» y «Tuileries» del metro de París.
Según su sitio web, el edificio fue construido originalmente en 1852 por el arquitecto Firmin Bourgeois y completado por su sucesor, Louis Visconti, para proteger los naranjos del jardín de las Tullerías. Fue utilizado durante la III República como depósito de bienes, sala de examen y lugar de alojamiento para soldados movilizados; también sirvió para albergar eventos deportivos, musicales y patrióticos. Además, era un lugar de exhibiciones de la industria, animales, plantas, así como muestras raras de pintura.
Como afirma el historiador de arte Michel Hoog: "En 1921, la administración de Bellas Artes decidió asignar a la Dirección de Museos Nacionales (como se llamaba entonces) los dos edificios que daban a la Plaza de la Concordia, el Jeu de Paume, y la Orangerie, que hasta entonces había sido utilizada para su propósito original. La Orangerie se convirtió en un anexo del Museo de Luxemburgo , criticado por unanimidad por ser demasiado pequeño, mientras que el Jeu de Paume iba a ser utilizado para exposiciones temporales y para albergar la pintura extranjera contemporánea."
El pintor impresionista Claude Monet había decidido donar paneles decorativos para el gobierno francés, como un homenaje al final de la Primera Guerra Mundial. El ex primer ministro de Francia y gran amigo de Monet, Georges Clemenceau, sugirió que Monet instalara las pinturas en la Orangerie, recientemente disponible, en lugar de hacerlo en el museo del Jeu de Paume, que tenía un espacio de pared más pequeño o, como se había planeado anteriormente, en un anexo al Museo Rodin.
El 12 de abril de 1922, Claude Monet firmó un contrato para donar la serie de paneles decorativos "Les Nymphéas", pintados sobre lienzo, al gobierno francés, que se alojarían en unas habitaciones ovales en la Orangerie, rediseñadas. Con el aporte de Monet, la arquitecta jefe del Louvre, Camille Lefèvre, elaboró nuevos planos y alzados en 1922, para albergar los grandes lienzos "Les Nymphéas" de Monet, que incorporan luz natural, paredes lisas y escasa decoración interior. Según la investigación de Hoog, "los fondos estuvieron disponibles el 17 de agosto de 1922, el trabajo comenzó en octubre y parece haber finalizado en [el] año siguiente". Poco dispuesto a renunciar a sus últimas obras de arte, estas pinturas se quedaron con Monet hasta su muerte, el 5 de diciembre de 1926. El 31 de enero de 1927 la compañía Laurent-Fournier acordó instalar y montar los paneles, en un proceso que involucraba pegar el lienzo directamente a las paredes. Las pinturas estuvieron en su lugar el 26 de marzo de ese año. El 17 de mayo de 1927 "Les Nymphéas" de Monet se abrieron al público, en el Museo de l'Orangerie.
Según Hoog, "En agosto de 1944, durante la batalla por la liberación de París, cinco proyectiles cayeron sobre las salas de las ninfas, dos paneles (los situados en la pared entre las dos habitaciones) sufrieron daños, pero inmediatamente se restauraron. Este trabajo de restauración se renovó y se realizó una limpieza general".
La viuda de Paul Guillaume, la señora Jean Walter, donó su colección de arte moderno a los Museos Nacionales de Francia, en 1958. L'Orangerie ha albergado la colección Walter-Guillaume de pintura impresionista, de los siglos XIX y XX, desde 1965.
En enero de 2000, el museo fue cerrado por trabajos de renovación, completamente revisado y restaurado, y se volvió a abrir al público en mayo de 2006. En los meses previos a su cierra hubo una exhibición especial de Les Nympheas de Monet que estaban dispersadas por museos de todo el mundo. Se incluyeron más de 60 de las 250 pinturas que hizo de los nenúfares de su jardín. Las paredes fueron repintadas en tonos púrpuras y violetas para esta exposición en particular. Tras la renovación, se trasladaron Les Nympheas a la planta superior del edificio. Ahora están dispuestas bajo una luz difusa, tal como inicialmente pretendió Monet. Las ocho pinturas se muestran en dos salas.
The Musée de l'Orangerie is an art gallery of Impressionist and Post-Impressionist paintings and modern art from the turn of the century located in the Tuileries Garden in Paris. It houses works by Paul Cézanne, Henri Matisse, Amedeo Modigliani, Claude Monet, Pablo Picasso, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Henri Rousseau, Chaïm Soutine, Alfred Sisley and Maurice Utrillo among others.
The gallery is on the banks of the Seine in the old orangery of the Tuileries Palace in the Tuileries Garden, on the east side of Place de la Concorde, near the "Concorde" and "Tuileries" stations of the Paris metro.
According to its website, the building was originally built in 1852 by architect Firmin Bourgeois and completed by his successor, Louis Visconti, to protect the orange trees in the Tuileries garden. It was used during the Third Republic as a deposit of goods, examination room and place of accommodation for mobilized soldiers; it also served to host sporting, musical and patriotic events. Furthermore, it was a place for exhibitions of industry, animals, plants, as well as rare samples of paint.
As the art historian Michel Hoog states: "In 1921, the Fine Arts administration decided to assign to the Directorate of National Museums (as it was called then) the two buildings that led to Place de la Concorde, the Jeu de Paume, and the Orangerie, which until then had been used for its original purpose. The Orangerie became an annex to the Luxembourg Museum, unanimously criticized for being too small, while the Jeu de Paume was to be used for temporary exhibitions and to house contemporary foreign painting. "
Impressionist painter Claude Monet had decided to donate decorative panels to the French government, as a tribute to the end of the First World War. Former Prime Minister of France and Monet's close friend Georges Clemenceau suggested that Monet install the paintings in the recently available Orangerie, rather than in the Jeu de Paume museum, which had a smaller wall space or, as previously planned, in an annex to the Rodin Museum.
On April 12, 1922, Claude Monet signed a contract to donate the "Les Nymphéas" series of decorative panels, painted on canvas, to the French government, to be housed in oval rooms in the redesigned Orangerie. With the contribution of Monet, the Louvre's chief architect, Camille Lefèvre, produced new plans and elevations in 1922, to house Monet's large "Les Nymphéas" canvases, which incorporate natural light, smooth walls, and poor interior decoration. According to Hoog's research, "the funds were available on August 17, 1922, the work began in October and appears to have been completed in [the] following year." Unwilling to give up his latest works of art, these paintings remained with Monet until his death on December 5, 1926. On January 31, 1927 the Laurent-Fournier company agreed to install and assemble the panels, in a process which involved gluing the canvas directly to the walls. The paintings were in place on March 26 of that year. On May 17, 1927 Monet's "Les Nymphéas" were opened to the public at the Musée de l'Orangerie.
According to Hoog, "In August 1944, during the battle for the liberation of Paris, five shells fell on the nymph rooms, two panels (those on the wall between the two rooms) were damaged, but were immediately restored. This restoration work was renewed and a general cleaning was carried out. " I don't know
Paul Guillaume's widow, Mrs. Jean Walter, donated her collection of modern art to the National Museums of France in 1958. L'Orangerie has housed the Walter-Guillaume collection of Impressionist painting, from the 19th and 20th centuries, since 1965.
In January 2000, the museum was closed for renovation work, completely overhauled and restored, and reopened to the public in May 2006. In the months leading up to its closure there was a special exhibition of Les Nympheas de Monet which were scattered by museums around the world. More than 60 of the 250 paintings she made of the water lilies in her garden were included. The walls were repainted in purple and violet tones for this particular exhibition. Following the renovation, Les Nympheas was moved to the top floor of the building. They are now arranged in a diffused light, just as Monet originally intended. The eight paintings are displayed in two rooms.
Portrait intitulé "La Chevelure noire", dit aussi "Jeune fille brune, assise"
Exposé au musée de l'Orangerie
Du 20 septembre 2023 au 15 janvier 2024
www.musee-orangerie.fr/fr/agenda/expositions/amedeo-modig...
Portrait intitulé "La Chevelure noire", dit aussi "Jeune fille brune, assise"
Exposé au musée de l'Orangerie
Du 20 septembre 2023 au 15 janvier 2024
www.musee-orangerie.fr/fr/agenda/expositions/amedeo-modig...
Corona-No 15
Amedeo Modigliani - video conference Portrait No C-3
Portrait of Jean Cocteau [1916] -
Princeton University AM
Thème "Double Exposure" de Macro Mondays.
Première image : la statuette de Tintin
Deuxième image : deux statuettes de femmes d'après Modigliani (la 2ème est floue)
J'ai voulu combiner les deux en faisant comme si Tintin voyait son reflet dans un tableau de Modigliani sous verre... superposition de calques avec Photoshop et désaturation de la photo des statuettes des femmes.
J'ai ajouté le cadre pour rendre l'image plus lisible.
Le titre rend hommage à l'ultime album de Tintin.
HMM !
1917. Oli sobre tela. 60,6 x 92,7 cm. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Nova York. 1997.149.9. Obra no exposada.
Amedeo Modigliani (1884-1920) - Head of a Young Woman (1915) - Pinacoteca di Brera - Milan
L’opera, insieme al Ritratto di Moisè Kisling, appartenne in un primo tempo a Paul Guillaume, critico d’arte, mercante e soprattutto scopritore di Modigliani, di cui fu, all’inizio, l’unico collezionista. I dipinti giunsero in Italia in seguito all’incredibile successo ottenuto dalla retrospettiva dell’artista alla Biennale di Venezia del 1930, e furono acquistati dalla galleria Il Milione di Milano; pervennero alla raccolta di Emilio Jesi nell’immediato dopoguerra.
Modigliani si era trasferito definitivamente a Parigi nel 1909, dove si legò ai circuiti culturali legati alla figura di Guillame Apollinaire. Eseguì la maggior parte della sua produzione, per lo più costituita da ritratti, tra il 1915 e il 1918, raffigurando soprattutto gli amici della sua cerchia bohémienne: Testa di giovane donna, ritrae probabilmente la scrittrice inglese Beatrice Hastings con cui Modigliani ebbe una tumultuosa relazione.
The work, together with the Portrait of Moisè Kisling, belonged initially to Paul Guillaume, art critic, merchant and above all the discoverer of Modigliani, of which he was, at the beginning, the only collector. The paintings arrived in Italy after the incredible success obtained by the artist's retrospective at the Venice Biennale of 1930, and were purchased by the Galleria Il Milione in Milan; they came to Emilio Jesi's collection in the immediate post-war period.
Modigliani had moved permanently to Paris in 1909, where he linked himself to the cultural circuits linked to the figure of Guillame Apollinaire. He made most of his production, mostly made up of portraits, between 1915 and 1918, mainly depicting friends of his bohemian circle: Testa di giovane donna, probably portrays the English writer Beatrice Hastings with whom Modigliani had a tumultuous relationship.
Oil on canvas; 100 x 65 cm.
Modigliani was born into a Jewish family of merchants. As a child he suffered from pleurisy and typhus, which prevented him from receiving a conventional education. In 1898 he began to study painting. After a brief stay in Florence in 1902, he continued his artistic studies in Venice, remaining there until the winter of 1906, when he left for Paris. His early admiration for Italian Renaissance painting—especially that of Siena—was to last throughout his life. In Paris Modigliani became interested in the Post-Impressionist paintings of Paul Cézanne. His initial important contacts were with the poets André Salmon and Max Jacob, with the artist Pablo Picasso, and—in 1907—with Paul Alexandre, a friend of many avant-garde artists and the first to become interested in Modigliani and to buy his works. In 1908 the artist exhibited five or six paintings at the Salon des Indépendants. In 1909 Modigliani met the Romanian sculptor Constantin Brancusi, on whose advice he seriously studied African sculpture. To prepare himself for creating his own sculpture, he intensified his graphic experiments. In his drawings Modigliani tried to give the function of limiting or enclosing volumes to his contours. In 1912 he exhibited at the Salon d’Automne eight stone heads whose elongated and simplified forms reflect the influence of African sculpture. Modigliani returned entirely to painting about 1915, but his experience as a sculptor had fundamental consequences for his painting style. The characteristics of Modigliani’s sculptured heads—long necks and noses, simplified features, and long oval faces—became typical of his paintings. He reduced and almost eliminated chiaroscuro (the use of gradations of light and shadow to achieve the illusion of three-dimensionality), and he achieved a sense of solidity with strong contours and the richness of juxtaposed colors.
The outbreak of World War I in 1914 increased the difficulties of Modigliani’s life. Alexandre and some of his other friends were at the front, his paintings did not sell, and his already delicate health was deteriorating because of his poverty, feverish work ethic, and abuse of alcohol and drugs. He was in the midst of a troubled affair with the South African poet Beatrice Hastings, with whom he lived for two years, from 1914 to 1916. He was assisted, however, by the art dealer Paul Guillaume and especially by the Polish poet Leopold Zborowski, who bought or helped him to sell a few paintings and drawings.
Modigliani was not a professional portraitist; for him the portrait was only an occasion to isolate a figure as a kind of sculptural relief through firm and expressive contour drawing. He painted his friends, usually personalities of the Parisian artistic and literary world (such as the artists Juan Gris and Jacques Lipchitz, the writer and artist Jean Cocteau, and the poet Max Jacob), but he also portrayed unknown people, including models, servants, and girls from the neighborhood. In 1917 he began painting a series of about 30 large female nudes that, with their warm, glowing colors and sensuous, rounded forms, are among his best works. In December of that year Berthe Weill organized a solo show for him in her gallery, but the police judged the nudes indecent and had them removed.
In 1917 Modigliani began a love affair with the young painter Jeanne Hébuterne, with whom he went to live on the Côte d’Azur. Their daughter, Jeanne, was born in November 1918. His painting became increasingly refined in line and delicate in colour. A more tranquil life and the climate of the Mediterranean, however, did not restore the artist’s undermined health. After returning to Paris in May 1919, he became ill in January 1920; 10 days later he died of tubercular meningitis. Little-known outside avant-garde Parisian circles, Modigliani had seldom participated in official exhibitions. Fame came after his death, with a solo exhibition at the Bernheim-Jeune Gallery in 1922 and later with a biography by André Salmon. For decades critical evaluations of Modigliani’s work were overshadowed by the dramatic story of his tragic life, but he is now acknowledged as one of the most significant and original artists of his time.
Nu assis à la chemise
Œuvre d'Amedeo Modigliani (Italie, 1884 - France, 1920)
1917
Peinture
92 x 67,5 cm
Donation de Geneviève et Jean Masurel en 1979
LaM Lille métropole / musée d’art moderne d’art contemporain et d’art brut
Grenoble was first mentioned in 43 BC. The city lies at a strategic point on the Roman road and was fortified under Diocletian. A diocese is attested from at least 381.
After the collapse of the Roman Empire, the city became part of the first Kingdom of Burgundy in the 5th century, and later the Kingdom of Burgundy until 1032, when it was incorporated into the Holy Roman Empire. In 1242 it received city rights. The university was founded in 1339. In 1349 Grenoble came with the entire Dauphiné by sale to the Dauphin of France, who thereby became a de jure vassal of the Holy Roman Emperor.
In 1219, Grenoble experienced its worst flood, a veritable deluge due to the breach of the natural barrier at Lac de Saint-Laurent in the Romanche Valley. The resulting tidal wave killed about half of Grenoble's population.
Today Grenoble has about 160.000 inhabitants and is seen here from the Grenoble-Bastille cable car that takes the tourist within minutes to the top of the mountain where the Fort de la Bastille is located.
-
The Museum of Grenoble was already founded in 1798. For decades up to the 1950s, it was considered the very first museum of modern art in France. In 1982 a plan to construct a new building was announced, the construction began in 1990, and four years later the new building housing the collections was inaugurated.
Amedeo Modigliani (1884 - 1920)
Femme au col blanc / Woman with white collar
1917
In 1920, after not hearing from him for several days, a neighbour checked on the family and found Modigliani in bed delirious and holding onto Hébuterne. A doctor was summoned, but little could be done because Modigliani was in the final stage of his disease, tubercular meningitis. He died on 24 January 1920, at the Hôpital de la Charité.
There was an enormous funeral, attended by many from the artistic communities in Montmartre and Montparnasse. When Modigliani died, twenty-one-year-old Hébuterne was eight months pregnant with their second child.
A day later, Hébuterne was taken to her parents' home. There, inconsolable, she threw herself out of a fifth-floor window, two days after Modigliani's death, killing herself and her unborn child. Modigliani was buried in Père Lachaise Cemetery. Hébuterne was buried at the Cimetière de Bagneux near Paris, and it was not until 1930 that her embittered family allowed her body to be moved to rest beside Modigliani. A single tombstone honors them both. His epitaph reads: "Struck down by death at the moment of glory". Hers reads: "Devoted companion to the extreme sacrifice".
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amedeo_Modigliani
Père Lachaise Cemetery (French: Cimetière du Père-Lachaise [simtjɛʁ dy pɛʁ laʃɛːz]; formerly cimetière de l'Est, "Cemetery of the East") is the largest cemetery in Paris, France (44 hectares or 110 acres). With more than 3.5 million visitors annually, it is the most visited necropolis in the world.
The Père Lachaise is located in the 20th arrondissement and was the first garden cemetery, as well as the first municipal cemetery in Paris. It is also the site of three World War I memorials. The cemetery is located on the Boulevard de Ménilmontant. The Paris Métro station Philippe Auguste on Line 2 is next to the main entrance, while the station Père Lachaise, on both Line 2 and Line 3, is 500 meters away near a side entrance.
Maternité
Œuvre d'Amedeo Modigliani (Italie, 1884 - France, 1920)
1919
Peinture
129,8 x 81 cm
Dation en 1994
Ancienne Donation Geneviève et Jean Masurel
Musée national d'art moderne / Centre de création industrielle
Dépôt au LaM, Lille métropole / musée d'art moderne, d'art contemporain et d'art brut, Villeneuve d'Ascq
Credit to HolliewoodStudio, FinecraftedDesign and SharingTubes. Oh, and Modigliani who did a particularly clever likeness of me.
Thank you for looking.
Modigliani dans son atelier, rue Ravignan
Auteur inconnu
Vers 1915
Photographie
Paris, musée de l'Orangerie
www.musee-orangerie.fr/fr/oeuvres/modigliani-dans-son-ate...
Œuvre présentée dans l'exposition : "Modigliani / Zadkine. Une amitié interrompue"..
Musée Zadkine, Paris
Cette exposition est la première à s’intéresser à une amitié artistique jamais explorée jusqu’alors, celle qui unit le sculpteur Ossip Zadkine au peintre Amedeo Modigliani. À travers près de 90 œuvres, peintures, dessins, sculptures mais également documents et photographies d’époque, elle propose de suivre les parcours croisés de Modigliani et Zadkine, dans le contexte mouvementé et fécond du Montparnasse des années 1910 à 1920... (Extrait du site de l'exposition)
Costant Lepoutre. 1916
(92 x 65 cm.)
The painter, born in Livorno, 1884, died in Paris on January 24, 2020, exactly 1 century ago.
To celebrate the centenary of the death of his most illustrious son, 26 of his masterpieces belonging to the two greatest collectors who supported the artist in his lifetime, and more than 100 other masterpieces created by contemporary artists have been brought together in an extraordinary exhibition at the Museum of the City of Livorno.
Livorno, Museo della Città, until next February 16.
Orangerie, Paris, France.
El Museo de la Orangerie es una galería de arte de pinturas impresionistas y postimpresionistas y de arte moderno de principios de siglo ubicada en el Jardín de las Tullerías en París. Alberga obras de Paul Cézanne, Henri Matisse, Amedeo Modigliani, Claude Monet, Pablo Picasso, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Henri Rousseau, Chaïm Soutine, Alfred Sisley y Maurice Utrillo entre otros.
La galería está a orillas del Sena en la antigua orangerie del Palacio de las Tullerías en el Jardín de las Tullerías, del lado Este de la Plaza de la Concordia, cerca de las estaciones «Concorde» y «Tuileries» del metro de París.
Según su sitio web, el edificio fue construido originalmente en 1852 por el arquitecto Firmin Bourgeois y completado por su sucesor, Louis Visconti, para proteger los naranjos del jardín de las Tullerías. Fue utilizado durante la III República como depósito de bienes, sala de examen y lugar de alojamiento para soldados movilizados; también sirvió para albergar eventos deportivos, musicales y patrióticos. Además, era un lugar de exhibiciones de la industria, animales, plantas, así como muestras raras de pintura.
Como afirma el historiador de arte Michel Hoog: "En 1921, la administración de Bellas Artes decidió asignar a la Dirección de Museos Nacionales (como se llamaba entonces) los dos edificios que daban a la Plaza de la Concordia, el Jeu de Paume, y la Orangerie, que hasta entonces había sido utilizada para su propósito original. La Orangerie se convirtió en un anexo del Museo de Luxemburgo , criticado por unanimidad por ser demasiado pequeño, mientras que el Jeu de Paume iba a ser utilizado para exposiciones temporales y para albergar la pintura extranjera contemporánea."
El pintor impresionista Claude Monet había decidido donar paneles decorativos para el gobierno francés, como un homenaje al final de la Primera Guerra Mundial. El ex primer ministro de Francia y gran amigo de Monet, Georges Clemenceau, sugirió que Monet instalara las pinturas en la Orangerie, recientemente disponible, en lugar de hacerlo en el museo del Jeu de Paume, que tenía un espacio de pared más pequeño o, como se había planeado anteriormente, en un anexo al Museo Rodin.
El 12 de abril de 1922, Claude Monet firmó un contrato para donar la serie de paneles decorativos "Les Nymphéas", pintados sobre lienzo, al gobierno francés, que se alojarían en unas habitaciones ovales en la Orangerie, rediseñadas. Con el aporte de Monet, la arquitecta jefe del Louvre, Camille Lefèvre, elaboró nuevos planos y alzados en 1922, para albergar los grandes lienzos "Les Nymphéas" de Monet, que incorporan luz natural, paredes lisas y escasa decoración interior. Según la investigación de Hoog, "los fondos estuvieron disponibles el 17 de agosto de 1922, el trabajo comenzó en octubre y parece haber finalizado en [el] año siguiente". Poco dispuesto a renunciar a sus últimas obras de arte, estas pinturas se quedaron con Monet hasta su muerte, el 5 de diciembre de 1926. El 31 de enero de 1927 la compañía Laurent-Fournier acordó instalar y montar los paneles, en un proceso que involucraba pegar el lienzo directamente a las paredes. Las pinturas estuvieron en su lugar el 26 de marzo de ese año. El 17 de mayo de 1927 "Les Nymphéas" de Monet se abrieron al público, en el Museo de l'Orangerie.
Según Hoog, "En agosto de 1944, durante la batalla por la liberación de París, cinco proyectiles cayeron sobre las salas de las ninfas, dos paneles (los situados en la pared entre las dos habitaciones) sufrieron daños, pero inmediatamente se restauraron. Este trabajo de restauración se renovó y se realizó una limpieza general".
La viuda de Paul Guillaume, la señora Jean Walter, donó su colección de arte moderno a los Museos Nacionales de Francia, en 1958. L'Orangerie ha albergado la colección Walter-Guillaume de pintura impresionista, de los siglos XIX y XX, desde 1965.
En enero de 2000, el museo fue cerrado por trabajos de renovación, completamente revisado y restaurado, y se volvió a abrir al público en mayo de 2006. En los meses previos a su cierra hubo una exhibición especial de Les Nympheas de Monet que estaban dispersadas por museos de todo el mundo. Se incluyeron más de 60 de las 250 pinturas que hizo de los nenúfares de su jardín. Las paredes fueron repintadas en tonos púrpuras y violetas para esta exposición en particular. Tras la renovación, se trasladaron Les Nympheas a la planta superior del edificio. Ahora están dispuestas bajo una luz difusa, tal como inicialmente pretendió Monet. Las ocho pinturas se muestran en dos salas.
The Musée de l'Orangerie is an art gallery of Impressionist and Post-Impressionist paintings and modern art from the turn of the century located in the Tuileries Garden in Paris. It houses works by Paul Cézanne, Henri Matisse, Amedeo Modigliani, Claude Monet, Pablo Picasso, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Henri Rousseau, Chaïm Soutine, Alfred Sisley and Maurice Utrillo among others.
The gallery is on the banks of the Seine in the old orangery of the Tuileries Palace in the Tuileries Garden, on the east side of Place de la Concorde, near the "Concorde" and "Tuileries" stations of the Paris metro.
According to its website, the building was originally built in 1852 by architect Firmin Bourgeois and completed by his successor, Louis Visconti, to protect the orange trees in the Tuileries garden. It was used during the Third Republic as a deposit of goods, examination room and place of accommodation for mobilized soldiers; it also served to host sporting, musical and patriotic events. Furthermore, it was a place for exhibitions of industry, animals, plants, as well as rare samples of paint.
As the art historian Michel Hoog states: "In 1921, the Fine Arts administration decided to assign to the Directorate of National Museums (as it was called then) the two buildings that led to Place de la Concorde, the Jeu de Paume, and the Orangerie, which until then had been used for its original purpose. The Orangerie became an annex to the Luxembourg Museum, unanimously criticized for being too small, while the Jeu de Paume was to be used for temporary exhibitions and to house contemporary foreign painting. "
Impressionist painter Claude Monet had decided to donate decorative panels to the French government, as a tribute to the end of the First World War. Former Prime Minister of France and Monet's close friend Georges Clemenceau suggested that Monet install the paintings in the recently available Orangerie, rather than in the Jeu de Paume museum, which had a smaller wall space or, as previously planned, in an annex to the Rodin Museum.
On April 12, 1922, Claude Monet signed a contract to donate the "Les Nymphéas" series of decorative panels, painted on canvas, to the French government, to be housed in oval rooms in the redesigned Orangerie. With the contribution of Monet, the Louvre's chief architect, Camille Lefèvre, produced new plans and elevations in 1922, to house Monet's large "Les Nymphéas" canvases, which incorporate natural light, smooth walls, and poor interior decoration. According to Hoog's research, "the funds were available on August 17, 1922, the work began in October and appears to have been completed in [the] following year." Unwilling to give up his latest works of art, these paintings remained with Monet until his death on December 5, 1926. On January 31, 1927 the Laurent-Fournier company agreed to install and assemble the panels, in a process which involved gluing the canvas directly to the walls. The paintings were in place on March 26 of that year. On May 17, 1927 Monet's "Les Nymphéas" were opened to the public at the Musée de l'Orangerie.
According to Hoog, "In August 1944, during the battle for the liberation of Paris, five shells fell on the nymph rooms, two panels (those on the wall between the two rooms) were damaged, but were immediately restored. This restoration work was renewed and a general cleaning was carried out. " I don't know
Paul Guillaume's widow, Mrs. Jean Walter, donated her collection of modern art to the National Museums of France in 1958. L'Orangerie has housed the Walter-Guillaume collection of Impressionist painting, from the 19th and 20th centuries, since 1965.
In January 2000, the museum was closed for renovation work, completely overhauled and restored, and reopened to the public in May 2006. In the months leading up to its closure there was a special exhibition of Les Nympheas de Monet which were scattered by museums around the world. More than 60 of the 250 paintings she made of the water lilies in her garden were included. The walls were repainted in purple and violet tones for this particular exhibition. Following the renovation, Les Nympheas was moved to the top floor of the building. They are now arranged in a diffused light, just as Monet originally intended. The eight paintings are displayed in two rooms.
West German postcard by Rüdel Verlag, Hamburg-Bergedorf, no. 467. Photo: Allianz- Film. Gérard Philipe in Fanfan la Tulipe/Fan-Fan the Tulip (Christian-Jacque, 1952).
The legendary idol of the French cinema Gérard Philipe (1922–1959) was adored for his good looks, but he was also a very talented actor. He played roles as diverse as Faust and Modigliani and he was sought out by France's preeminent directors for his versatility and professionalism.
Gérard Philipe (sometimes written as Philippe) was born Gérard Philip in Cannes, France in 1922. In 1940, Gérard left school and his parents wanted him to become a lawyer. His mother noticed that he was only interested in acting, but his father was against the idea. Gérard's father, a successful businessman, was a right-wing extremist and collaborated with the Nazis. After the war, he was forced to exile to Spain to escape a death sentence. Gérard himself was his whole life a staunch social liberal politically wise. Actor Claude Dauphin introduced the young Philippe in 1942 to the stage. One of his first parts was as the angel in 'Sodome et Gomorrhe' by Jean Giraudoux in 1943. Director Marc Allégret decided that he showed some promise and gave him a small part in his film Les petites du quai aux fleurs/The Girls From the Quai aux Fleurs (Marc Allégret, 1944) starring Odette Joyeux. With the support of his admirer Jean Cocteau, he entered the Paris Conservatory where under the tutelage of Georges Le Roy he discovered his passion for live theatre. In 1945 he received rave reviews for his performance in the stage production of Albert Camus’ 'Caligula'. This success further opened the doors to the cinema. His first leading part in Le pays sans étoiles/Land Without Stars (Georges Lacombe, 1946) opposite Jany Holt got so many favourable reviews that he became a star.
In 1947, Gérard Philipe exploded upon the European film scene in Le diable au corps/Devil in the Flesh (Claude Autant-Lara, 1947), playing Francois Jaubert, a callow youth in love with much older and very married Micheline Presle. Superstardom followed almost immediately: female filmgoers doted upon Philippe's sensitive, handsome features and strapping physique, while men identified with his soulfulness and introspection. Next, he would take on prominent roles in such classic films as Une si jolie petite plage/Such a Pretty Little Beach (Yves Allégret, 1949), and La beauté du diable/Beauty and the Devil (René Clair, 1950) as Faust. He was an international success as the tongue-in-cheek titular swashbuckler Fanfan la Tulipe/Fan-Fan the Tulip (Christian-Jaque, 1952), one of the most popular historical-adventure films made in France. At Films de France, James Travers reviews: "Not only is the film impeccably made, with lavish production values, stunning cinematography and impressively choreographed fight scenes, but it has a timeless quality which will no doubt ensure it will remain a popular classic for years to come. Philipe excels in this film in what is regarded by many as his finest film role, the indefatigable womaniser and agile swordsman Fanfan la Tulipe. Philipe is simply brilliant in the role, tackling the numerous swordfights and Henri Jeanson’s sparkling dialogue with equal relish." He appeared with such great stars of the European cinema as Italian beauty Gina Lollobrigida in Les belles de nuit/Beauties of the Night (René Clair, 1952), with Michèle Morgan in both Les orgueilleux/The Proud Ones (Yves Allégret, 1953) and Les grandes manœuvres/The Grand Maneuver (René Clair, 1955). In 1956, Philipe starred in and directed a filmization of the old folk tale Till Eulenspiegel, Les Aventures de Till L'Espiègle/Bold Adventure (Gérard Philipe, Joris Ivens, 1956). The French-East-German coproduction was not a success. He simultaneously pursued his stage career, with a keen involvement in the Théatre National de Paris, which would endure up until his death. Whilst working at the TNP, Philipe, a strong believer in egalitarianism, would draw exactly the same salary as junior actors. He would also become president of the French actors union, actively promoting the rights of actors.
Gérard Philipe continued his string of film successes throughout the 1950s. Among these films were the Fyodor Dostoevsky adaptation Le joueur/The Gambler (Claude Autant-Lara, 1958) with Liselotte Pulver, and Les liaisons dangereuses/Dangerous Liaisons (Roger Vadim, 1959) opposite Jeanne Moreau. In 1959 doctors told Philippe that he had liver cancer. On 25 November that year, while working on Luis Buñuel's Le Fievre Monte a El Pao/Fever Mounts at El Pao (Luis Buñuel, 1959), he died at the peak of his popularity. He was just 36 years old. The news provoked an immediate and intense outpouring of grief. His early death elevated him to a near-legendary status in France. Since 1951, Philipe was married to actress and writer Nicole Fourcade, with whom he had two children, writer and actor Anne-Marie Philipe (1954) and Olivier Philipe (1957). Nicole adopted the pseudonym Anne Philipe and wrote two books about her husband, Souvenirs (1960) and Le Temps d'un soupir (1963, No Longer Than a Sigh). In 1961, Gérard's portrait appeared on a French commemorative postage stamp. There is a film festival named in his honour as well as a number of theatres, schools and colleges in various parts of France. He was also very popular in Germany, and a Berlin theatre has been named after him.
Sources: James Travers (Le Film Guide), AllMovie, Films de France, Wikipedia, and IMDb.
And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.
French postcard by Edition Delta-Productions, Saint Jean-De-Vedas, no CP-24.
The legendary idol of the French cinema Gérard Philipe (1922–1959) was adored for his good looks, but he was also a very talented actor. He played roles as diverse as Faust and Modigliani and he was sought out by France's preeminent directors for his versatility and professionalism.
Gérard Philipe (sometimes written as Philippe) was born Gérard Philip in Cannes, France in 1922. In 1940, Gérard left school and his parents wanted him to become a lawyer. His mother noticed that he was only interested in acting, but his father was against the idea. Gérard's father, a successful businessman, was a right-wing extremist and collaborated with the Nazis. After the war, he was forced to exile to Spain to escape a death sentence. Gérard himself was his whole life a staunch social liberal politically wise. Actor Claude Dauphin introduced the young Philipe in 1942 to the stage. One of his first parts was as the angel in 'Sodome et Gomorrhe' by Jean Giraudoux in 1943. Director Marc Allégret decided that he showed some promise and gave him a small part in his film Les petites du quai aux fleurs/The Girls From the Quai aux Fleurs (Marc Allégret, 1944) starring Odette Joyeux. With the support of his admirer Jean Cocteau, he entered the Paris Conservatory where under the tutelage of Georges Le Roy he discovered his passion for live theatre. In 1945 he received rave reviews for his performance in the stage production of Albert Camus’ 'Caligula'. This success further opened the doors to the cinema. His first leading part in Le pays sans étoiles/Land Without Stars (Georges Lacombe, 1946) opposite Jany Holt got so many favourable reviews that he became a star.
In 1947, Gérard Philipe exploded upon the European film scene in Le diable au corps/Devil in the Flesh (Claude Autant-Lara, 1947), playing Francois Jaubert, a callow youth in love with much older and very married Micheline Presle. Superstardom followed almost immediately: female filmgoers doted upon Philippe's sensitive, handsome features and strapping physique, while men identified with his soulfulness and introspection. Next, he would take on prominent roles in such classic films as Une si jolie petite plage/Such a Pretty Little Beach (Yves Allégret, 1949), and La beauté du diable/Beauty and the Devil (René Clair, 1950) as Faust. He was an international success as the tongue-in-cheek titular swashbuckler Fanfan la Tulipe/Fan-Fan the Tulip (Christian-Jaque, 1952), one of the most popular historical-adventure films made in France. At Films de France, James Travers reviews: "Not only is the film impeccably made, with lavish production values, stunning cinematography and impressively choreographed fight scenes, but it has a timeless quality which will no doubt ensure it will remain a popular classic for years to come. Philipe excels in this film in what is regarded by many as his finest film role, the indefatigable womaniser and agile swordsman Fanfan la Tulipe. Philipe is simply brilliant in the role, tackling the numerous swordfights and Henri Jeanson’s sparkling dialogue with equal relish." He appeared with such great stars of the European cinema as Italian beauty Gina Lollobrigida in Les belles de nuit/Beauties of the Night (René Clair, 1952), with Michèle Morgan in both Les orgueilleux/The Proud Ones (Yves Allégret, 1953) and Les grandes manœuvres/The Grand Maneuver (René Clair, 1955). In 1956, Philipe starred in and directed a filmization of the old folk tale Till Eulenspiegel, Les Aventures de Till L'Espiègle/Bold Adventure (Gérard Philipe, Joris Ivens, 1956). The French-East-German coproduction was not a success. He simultaneously pursued his stage career, with a keen involvement in the Théatre National de Paris, which would endure up until his death. Whilst working at the TNP, Philipe, a strong believer in egalitarianism, would draw exactly the same salary as junior actors. He would also become president of the French actors union, actively promoting the rights of actors.
Gérard Philipe continued his string of film successes throughout the 1950s. Among these films were the Fyodor Dostoevsky adaptation Le joueur/The Gambler (Claude Autant-Lara, 1958) with Liselotte Pulver, and Les liaisons dangereuses/Dangerous Liaisons (Roger Vadim, 1959) opposite Jeanne Moreau. In 1959 doctors told Philippe that he had liver cancer. On 25 November that year, while working on Luis Buñuel's Le Fievre Monte a El Pao/Fever Mounts at El Pao (Luis Buñuel, 1959), he died at the peak of his popularity. He was just 36 years old. The news provoked an immediate and intense outpouring of grief. His early death elevated him to a near-legendary status in France. Since 1951, Philipe was married to actress and writer Nicole Fourcade, with whom he had two children, writer and actor Anne-Marie Philipe (1954) and Olivier Philipe (1957). Nicole adopted the pseudonym Anne Philipe and wrote two books about her husband, Souvenirs (1960) and Le Temps d'un soupir (1963, No Longer Than a Sigh). In 1961, Gérard's portrait appeared on a French commemorative postage stamp. There is a film festival named in his honour as well as a number of theatres, schools and colleges in various parts of France. He was also very popular in Germany, and a Berlin theatre has been named after him.
Sources: James Travers (Le Film Guide), AllMovie, Films de France, Wikipedia, and IMDb.
And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.