Outdoor dining is the necessary rage in 2020, and Pierre-Auguste Renoir’s sumptuous The Luncheon of the Boating Party (1881) is one of the most idyllic images of its charms. Now in the Phillips ...
Cannes: The "Plan 75" director follows her debut with a cuter but similarly morbid story about a girl making sense of her father's imminent death in 1980s Japan. Her name is Fuki (gifted 11-year-old ...
A study for “The Judgment of Paris” ca. 1908 in black, red, and white chalk. - The Phillips Collection; Washington, DC/Courtesy The Morgan Library & Museum Pierre-Auguste Renoir was one of the leaders ...
The fact that paintings by renowned French Impressionist painter Pierre-Auguste Renoir are hanging in the museum. In April, Geller started a petition on the White House website urging President Obama ...
Why is Christian Science in our name? Our name is about honesty. The Monitor is owned by The First Church of Christ, Scientist, and we’ve always been transparent about that. The church publishes the ...
The early works of the French artist Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841-1919) are almost universally admired. So what to make of his later works? Martha Teichner examines an art world controversy: The art ...
The canon depends largely on availability, which is why many of the great films of Jean Renoir languish in undue obscurity. One of them, though, and one of the rarest—“Night at the Crossroads,” from ...
WILLIAMSTOWN - Pierre-Auguste Renoir always seemed to have a lighter-than-air touch. Sometimes too light. Even though he’s one of the most famous French Impressionist painters, some of his ...
It's not often that a parent and child become masters of two different art forms, but an exhibition at the Barnes Foundation in Philadelphia proves it's possible: Renoir: Father and Son explores the ...
The best movie in New York is playing at the Frick Museum, and it’s by Renoir—not the film director Jean Renoir but his father, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, the artist (or, as he preferred to call himself, ...
At the Clark Art Institute, when you tire of Renoir’s nudes, look at Ida Ten Eyck O’Keeffe’s quietly insistent art, some of which survived long enough to be rediscovered. By Roberta Smith WILLIAMSTOWN ...
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