Monet exhibition brings ray of hope in dark times

0 Comment(s)Print E-mail Xinhua, September 22, 2020
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The chief curator of a new Shanghai exhibition featuring a famous work by French impressionist painter Claude Monet has spoken of the cultural significance of the show in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Following the unveiling of Monet's masterpiece "Impression, Sunrise" at the Bund One Art Museum last week, Marianne Mathieu, who is the scientific director of the Marmottan-Monet Museum in Paris, said in an exclusive interview with Xinhua that the show was both a historic occasion and one replete with symbolic significance, given the current global health crisis.

Mathieu traveled to China specifically for the exhibition, becoming the first French cultural delegate to visit China since the interruption of international travel due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

"I not only witnessed the first exhibition of 'Impression, Sunrise' in China in the past 150 years," she said, "but also personally experienced the unity and courage of France and China in breaking through the haze of the epidemic with 'Impression, Sunrise'."

Mathieu left Paris in early September and underwent a 14-day quarantine on arrival in Shanghai, in accordance with Chinese regulations.

She said the hotel in which she was quarantined was located in the suburbs of Shanghai, and every morning, looking through the window, she could see rice fields, mist and cranes.

"This reminds me of Monet's creation of 'Impression, Sunrise' from the window, keenly grasping the rising sun, the moment it rose from the port fog. This gave me a very good feeling about the future," the curator said.

As soon as Mathieu finished her quarantine period on Sept. 15, she devoted herself to preparing the exhibition. She checked every detail and personally assisted in placing the French national treasure in the center of the u-shaped exhibition hall.

"As a curator, you must come to the scene and personally lay the narrative lines of the exhibition. This is not only out of responsibility for the exhibits, but also out of respect for the audience," Mathieu said.

"Impression, Sunrise" was created in 1872, and according to Mathieu, it represented a new departure in the world of art, having a subversive impact on French painting.

The exhibition is scheduled to last from Sept. 16 to Jan. 3, 2021.

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