Arts & Culture

Impressionist And Modern Masters From the Cleveland Museum of Art

by The Clevel, Museum of Art | Aug. 28, 2007 | 4:00 AM

Oct 21- Jan 13 | The Cleveland Museum of Art
www.clevelandart.org
 
Akron Art Museum
Thru Sept. 30 | Building the New Akron Art Museum
A chronicle of the new building’s creation

Western Reserve Historical Society
Sept. 1-March 31 | Wings+Wheels: Crawford Memories in Motion
Crawford Auto-Aviation Museum’s most prized items

Maltz Museum of Jewish Heritage
Sept. 25-Jan. 20 | Deadly Medicine: Creating the Master Race
A chilling traveling exhibit from the United States Holocaust Museum

Cleveland Museum of Natural History
Sept. 29-Jan. 6 | Earth Works: Virtual Explorations of the Ancient Ohio Valley Virtual reconstructions of earthworks from 39 Ohio sites
Beijing, Tokyo, Seoul, Vancouver — some of The Cleveland Museum of Art’s most famous sculptures, drawings and paintings from the 19th and 20th centuries have done plenty of traveling during the past 16 months, while the museum’s $258 million expansion and renovation project continues.

Now, after logging thousands of miles, Impressionist and Modern Masters from The Cleveland Museum of Art is returning home so Clevelanders can reconnect with the museum. “It’s a chance for people in the city to become reacquainted with their favorite pieces and also see pieces being shown in a new way,” says William Robinson, the museum’s curator of modern European art.

Works by Claude Monet, Vincent Van Gogh, Henri Matisse and Pablo Picasso will be included in the 140-piece exhibition, as well as others that were kept safely stored rather than sent on tour. “We are showing, in Cleveland, [works] too fragile and light-sensitive to take on the road,” Robinson says, including pastels by Edgar Degas, Odilon Redon and Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, as well as graphic works by Picasso not usually seen by the public.

Get the Latest in Your Inbox

Whether you're looking for daily news bites, the latest bites or bite-sized adventures, the Cleveland Magazine Daily newsletter experiences have something for everyone.