The Japanese Influence OnBelle Epoque Masters
The Japanese Influence On
Belle Epoque Masters
FAIRFIELD â Diana Mille, PhD, director of the Thomas J. Walsh Art Gallery at Fairfield University, will consider Japanese influences on Claude Monet, Mary Cassatt, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec and other Impressionists and post-Impressionists on Wednesday, April 30, at 12:30 pm. Dr Mille will be lecturing in the gallery in Fairfield Universityâs Regina A. Quick Center for the Arts.
Her talk, âJapanese and the âBelle Epoque,ââ is the last of four Directorâs Choice lectures on selected topics in modern and contemporary art scheduled for the 2002-03 season.
Japonisme, a term coined by French art critic Philippe Burty in 1876, refers to the influence of Japanese aesthetic ideas, particularly those found in woodcut prints, on western artists of that time. Many Impressionist and post-Impressionist artists incorporated Japanese themes and style into their work.
Dr Mille will discuss several of the masters of the era, including Honoré Daumier, Edgar Degas, James Tissot, Camille Pissaro, Cassatt, Monet and Toulouse-Lautrec.
âThe point of the talk is to divide the art of the âBelle Epoqueâ into themes, such as the café, circus, theater, boulevards, and discuss selected artists who painted these themes, paying particular attention to the influence of Japanese prints in these works,â said Dr Mille.
Admission to the one-hour lecture is $5 and participants are invited to bring a brown bag lunch. For more information call 203-254-4000 extension 2969.