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    Water lilies and more

    Monet’s garden blooms with surprises in new Fort Worth museum exhibition

    Stephanie Allmon Merry
    Jun 18, 2019 | 12:11 pm

    No one would have blamed a 73-year-old Claude Monet for wanting to putter in his garden instead of paint it. After all, cataracts were wearing down his eyesight, he was mourning the deaths of beloved family members, and hauling canvases in and out of his studio had become a physical challenge.

    Yet in his twilight years, Monet (1840-1926) managed to produce some of the most iconic paintings in history at his garden at Giverny. More than 50 examples have gone on display in the blockbuster exhibition "Monet: The Late Years" at the Kimbell Art Museum in Fort Worth.

    The exhibition charts the evolution of Monet’s practice from 1913 to his death in 1926. For the Kimbell, it's a continuation of the biographical sketch started with their 2016-17 exhibition “Monet: The Early Years.”

    Except it’s even more interesting. Because life makes people more interesting as they get older, and Monet was no exception.

    "We're meeting an artist when he's in his 70s, when many artists would be overwhelmed by the challenges of his life," says the Kimbell's George T.M. Shackelford, the curator of the exhibition. "But Monet, with great energy and incredible joy, begins to embark on a new work that is bigger and more ambitious than almost anything he’s ever done. It’s a period in Monet's life of incredible dedication and real bravery."

    Although the paintings in the exhibition all depict scenes from his garden — no beach scenes or self-portraits here — surprises abound in each gallery. "Surprise," in fact, is a word that Shackelford uses a lot in a walk-through of the show.

    "I think the combination of dedication and bravery, ambition and joy that you will see in these works of art will be one that will surprise and delight you," he says.

    A surprise at the start
    The very layout is meant to enchant visitors from the beginning. In the first gallery are works painted before 1907 — namely, those sublime water lilies that everyone knows and loves.

    "That is me trying to lull you into the mistaken apprehension that you’re already familiar with the show," Shackelford says slyly. "I want you to go in and feel like you’re in a nice, warm, cozy bath of a water lily pond and that everything is what you know already.

    "Because I want you, when you turn the corner into the next gallery, to be surprised by the transformation that takes place in Monet’s art in the summer 1914.”

    Suddenly, the canvases get big. Tall. Long. One of them is 6-foot-6; Monet was 5-foot-7.

    Here's why: After the death of his beloved second wife, Alice, in 1911, a grieving Monet went on hiatus, which lasted through his oldest son's death in 1914. Then suddenly, he picked up his paintbrushes again.

    "After a period of intense mourning, Monet in a way snaps out of it, and suddenly he is painting again with incredible enthusiasm and great joy — a kind of joy with a sense of being liberated from grief," Shackelford says.

    And with this "reawakening" came an idea — a really big idea. He would paint scenes from Giverny on a grand scale, a project called Grandes Decorations, which would be installed in France's Orangerie of the Tulleries Gardens in 1927, after his death.

    "Behind that line is an enormous number of paintings that were made as part of the process, and a lot of that is what we are showing you in this exhibition," the curator says.

    Growing flowers and growing restless
    Focus shifts from water lilies on the pond to the rest of the colorful riches in his garden — irises, daylilies, and agapanthus. Monet wasn't just a painter of gardens, he was a champion gardener himself.

    "By the 1920s, Monet was also known in gardening circles for his cultivation of agapanthus and irises," Shackelford says.

    Visitors are encouraged to get up close to the large paintings, to observe surfaces and brushstrokes and layers of paint this way and that; occasionally, spots of the white canvas peep through.

    Monet was known to paint and repaint over and over and was never fully satisfied with his work in his later years, the curator says. "They looked like many other things before Monet got finished with them," he says. "Actually, he only finished with them when he died."

    Going small again
    But just as guests adjust to viewing the larger-than-life canvases that fill two galleries — surprise! — they shrink back to "normal."

    In the final galleries are paintings of the garden's Japanese bridge, houses, and weeping willows. The Monet masterpiece that the Kimbell owns, Weeping Willow — the work that became the impetus for the whole show — appears in the final section. The fact that it was painted in 1918, toward the end of World War I, likely is no accident, Shackelford says.

    "If you're painting in fall of 1918, you don't know the war is going to end in November," he says. "When Monet is painting weeping willows, he's thinking about mourning. The weeping willow, in France just as it is in many other cultures, is a symbol of mourning."

    Many people from Monet's village had died, and Giverny was so close to Paris that he could hear the cannons and air raids bombing the city, he says. "Monet was not very far away from the sounds and the overwhelming visceral impact of the war going on at the same time," he says.

    Last strokes of genius
    The paintings in the final galleries look markedly different from the serene water lilies shown at the beginning. They use darker, more saturated colors, with intense, powerful brushstrokes that result in pictures that almost look chaotic. Monet was seeing differently, and painting differently.

    Despite undergoing three surgeries, the artist's cataracts had blurred his vision and shifted his perception of color. Only a genius, Shackelford said, could compensate the way that Monet did.

    "Look at the individual brushstrokes and you'll often see two and sometimes three colors he's mixing on the brush," the curator says. "This man who isn't seeing very well is able to touch his paint in two different spots of paint on his palette. That is not something you can do if you're not in control."

    "Even in the paintings that seem the most chaotic, there is a kind of brilliance that is the work of someone who fundamentally knows what he's doing, and he's willing to take risks."

    According to the exhibition catalog, as he entered his 80s, Monet had become something of a giant even though his physical capabilities had diminished. He viewed his final works as a culmination of a lifetime of studying nature, and his attitude toward the natural world that gave his younger works their magic was still there.

    "The final works are literally the last strokes of genius," Shackelford says, "of somebody who was capable of so much strength and bravery so late in his life."

    ---

    "Monet: The Late Years" is on view through September 15 at the Kimbell Art Museum, 3333 Camp Bowie Blvd., Fort Worth. Admission is $18 for adults, $16 for seniors and students, $14 for ages 6-11, and free for children under age 6. Admission is half-price all day on Tuesdays and after 5 pm on Fridays. Visit the website for more information and tickets.

    Claude Monet, The Japanese Footbridge, 1899, Oil on canvas

    Monet, Water Lily Pond
    Photo courtesy of Kimbell Art Museum
    Claude Monet, The Japanese Footbridge, 1899, Oil on canvas
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    Museum News

    2 Dallas museums partner on landmark Roy Lichtenstein acquisition

    Teresa Gubbins
    Nov 12, 2025 | 12:51 pm
    Roy Lichtenstein
    Courtesy
    Roy Lichtenstein

    The Dallas Museum of Art (DMA) and the Nasher Sculpture Center will present works from the joint acquisition of more than 50 artworks generously gifted by the Roy Lichtenstein Foundation in 2024, showing prints, drawings, and sculptures by the groundbreaking American artist at the two neighboring institutions in the Dallas Arts District.

    According to a release, the installations will be on view from January 31 to August 16, 2026 at the Nasher and from January 1 to July 5, 2026 at the DMA.

    The joint gift made by the Roy Lichtenstein Foundation to the DMA and the Nasher in Celebration of the Centennial of Roy Lichtenstein is comprised of a selection of prints, drawings, maquettes, and sculptures by Roy Lichtenstein (1923–1997), a leading figure in twentieth-century American art and a pioneer of the Pop Art movement.

    The works were specifically selected by the curatorial staff of both institutions and relate to objects already in their respective collections including sculptures, works on paper, and maquettes, along with tools and study objects.

    Organized by the Nasher Sculpture Center’s Senior Curator Dr. Catherine Craft, The Nancy and Tim Hanley Assistant Curator of Contemporary Art at the DMA Ade Omotosho, and The Allen and Kelli Questrom Assistant Curator of Prints and Drawings at the DMA Dr. Emily Friedman, the presentation is divided according to each institution’s strengths and will be shown in combination with objects by Lichtenstein already in their respective permanent collections.

    At the Nasher, works relating to three sculptures from the Raymond and Patsy Nasher Collection—Head with Blue Shadow, Peace through Chemistry, and Double Glass—will be accompanied by a selection from the Foundation's gift of more than two dozen drawings and maquettes associated with Lichtenstein’s Brushstroke sculptures.

    At the Dallas Museum of Art, the presentation features a set of Brushstroke sculptures carved from wood alongside various prints and studies that reveal the artist’s eclectic imagery.

    Events
    In addition to the exhibition, the DMA and the Nasher will co-host a Study Day focused on the artist on March 28, 2026, sponsored by the Roy Lichtenstein Foundation. This scholarly event will bring together a variety of curators, academics, and conservators to discuss Lichtenstein’s studio practice and the fabrication and conservation of his sculptures.

    Concluding the Study Day will be a public conversation held at the DMA between Nasher Director Carlos Basualdo and artist Alex Da Corte, regarding Da Corte’s work on the forthcoming Lichtenstein retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art.

    “In bestowing this generous gift, the Roy Lichtenstein Foundation established Dallas as a center for the study and display of Lichtenstein’s work,” Basualdo says in a statement. “This collaborative presentation of the gift and the corresponding programming is an important step in the direction of pursuing that goal, deepening the understanding of an artist who remains immensely influential to contemporary art and its relationship with mass media and today’s culture.”

    Roy Lichtenstein is made possible by support from the Roy Lichtenstein Foundation and the Dallas Tourism Public Improvement District (DTPID).

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