Re: Impressionism and People Watching at the Getty
Grishny, on host 12.29.132.98
Friday, September 20, 2002, at 08:06:57
Impressionism and People Watching at the Getty posted by koalamom on Thursday, September 19, 2002, at 23:58:43:
> Back to the art: I found that it became overwhelming to try to look at *all* the art, so after a while I decided to just concentrate in detail just on one or two pictures in each gallery--sometimes the one that most grabbed my eye when I walked in, and sometimes the one that least did. This seemed much more satisfying. Anyone else do this?
I don't get out to art museums very frequently, so when I do, I think I tend to try to take everything in instead of carefully studying one or two works. As a result, it's more of a cursory looking and appreciating rather than really absorbing anything.
The one time this wasn't true was when I went to the Norman Rockwell Museum in Stockbridge, MA. I went there to specifically see the works of a particular artist, and it wasn't the museum's namesake, believe it or not. They had a collection of the works of J.C. Leyendecker (who was Rockwell's predecessor and mentor at the Saturday Evening Post), and although I did take advantage of the trip to see the entire museum, I spent more time looking at the Leyendecker exhibit. The thing I remember feeling the most was just plain amazement that I was so close to *original* works of art; close enough to reach out and touch (not that I would) the actual canvasses that the artist himself had labored over.
The Exhibit I Went to See
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