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Henri Loyrette

Author of Degas: The Man and His Art

18+ Works 393 Members 1 Review

About the Author

Works by Henri Loyrette

Associated Works

The Louvre: All the Paintings (2011) — Preface — 334 copies, 4 reviews
Cézanne (1992) — Contributor — 209 copies, 2 reviews
Chicago architecture, 1872-1922 : birth of a metropolis (1987) — Contributor — 95 copies, 1 review
Degas (1988) 68 copies
Louvre Guide to the Masterpieces (2005) — Author, some editions — 67 copies
Roman Art from the Louvre (2007) — Foreword, some editions — 40 copies
Orsay (1987) — Introduction — 14 copies
Le verrou : Jean Honoré Fragonard (2007) — Préface — 4 copies
Belles du Louvre (2012) — Préface — 1 copy
Through My Window (2012) — Foreword — 1 copy
Comment les Gaules devinrent romaines (2010) — Preface — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1952-05-31
Gender
male
Occupations
art historian
museum administrator
Organizations
Musée du Louvre
Musée d'Orsay
Nationality
France
Associated Place (for map)
France

Members

Reviews

2 reviews
Exhibition at the the Musee d'Orsay, Spring/Summer 1994 and the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Fall 1994.

The following are excerpts from a review written by me in October 1994:

"A joint effort between the Metropolitan in New York and the Musée d'Orsay in Paris, with loans from museums around the world, the blockbuster exhibit brings together almost two hundred works, many for the first time. The exhibit follows the Impressionists in somewhat chronological order through the decade of the 1860s. show more There are eleven rooms in the exhibit, each devoted to themes that the Impressionists worked on, such as "History Painting", "Still Life", "the Nude", "Portraiture", "the Realist Landscape", "the Modern Landscape". The exhibit provides a basic introduction to these artists and their early influences and it shows how the Impressionists tried to develop a new style of painting while staying within traditional genres.

"One of the highlights of the exhibition is the reunion of such works as the four paintings of la Grenouillère -- works that haven't been seen together since they were painted ... For the first time, we can see Monet's three views of Paris that he painted from the balcony of the Louvre in 1867. There is also a group of paintings by Renoir, Bazille and Sisely that are together again. The three shared a studio in 1867, and Renoir painted a portrait of Bazille at his easel as he and Sisely were working on still lives of the Heron, which are also in the exhibit."
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Awards

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Statistics

Works
18
Also by
13
Members
393
Popularity
#61,673
Rating
4.1
Reviews
1
ISBNs
39
Languages
3

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