Hokusai | Monet
February 8, 2025 - August 10, 2025
Cargill Gallery
Free Exhibition
In 1897, the French painter Claude Monet made four paintings of the chrysanthemums in his garden in Giverny, capturing them not in a vase but en plein air—painting the flowers as they grew. He had been an avid collector of Japanese prints since the 1870s, and his unexpected, expressive use of space in this experiment recalls the Large Flowers series of prints made between 1833 and 1834 by Katsushika Hokusai. This exhibition brings the Large Flowers and Chrysanthemums series into conversation, exploring the symbiotic artistic connections between Japan and France in the nineteenth century.
Katsushika Hokusai (Japanese,1760–1849), Chrysanthemums and Horsefly, c. 1833–34, ink and color on paper. Bequest of Richard P. Gale, 74.1.210