Collections Winter 2013 Volume 94 | Page 4

moment in time, not atmosphere reduced to squares of blue and streaks of yellow. This is a laborious study of the surface of things observed as opposed to Monet’s dictum that you needn’t study these things—simply put down a patch of paint that gives an impressionism of that thing. And, this is why Fantin-Latour’s work is not impressionistic. He does not wish to convey an “impression” of the thing observed, he wants to convey a palpable and tangible representation of that thing— the measurable reality of a peach, not a swath of red orange. We would call FantinLatour’s work academic because it harks back to the schools of art that taught that 2 truth is in the perfect rendering of all that can be known about an object. It is fascinating that a Monet, with all of its various reductions of detail and simplistic strokes, almost always feels as real as an elegantly painted, highly detailed FantinLatour. One painting is not better than the other, but they are definitely different approaches to conveying something about the world. Monet’s art speaks to the tenuous shifting moment in time, while Fantin-Latour seeks a stillness and clarity that are forever unchanging. Pierre Auguste Renoir’s The Wave (pictured on the front cover) is highly Impressionistic with its rollicking and restless broken brush strokes of high-keyed color rushing across the canvas. Compare this with Gaston La Touche’s impressive The Joyous Festival (see page 10), a painting very carefully drawn and composed—not at all a quickly realized chance view such as Degas’ seated dancer. La Touche’s painting was done in a studio, whereas Impressionists most often worked outdoors, at the scene. Its lighting effects feel pulled right out of a movie set and its figures are staged like actors. The result is a cinematic image that is big, bold and action-packed. While it may seem to capture a moment in time, the artist’s methods are carefully calculated and painstakingly carried out. It is a riot of Claude Monet, French, 1840–1926, Port of Dieppe, Evening, 1882, oil on canvas. Collection of the Dixon Gallery and Gardens; Gift of Montgomery H.W. Ritchie in 1996. columbiamuseum.org