NEW YORK -- Immersive exhibits continue to thrill New York City art lovers, and the latest one sets the work of Claude Monet to classical music with brilliant projections and high-tech interactions.
It is easy to imagine the settings in which Claude Monet, the revolutionary French impressionist painter, created: idyllic gardens, serene sunsets by the bay, and iconic landscapes that often feel so ...
Immersive exhibitions are back in a big way—heartening evidence that New York City and the world beyond are recovering from the stringent social restrictions of the past two years. Schessl pointed out ...
Unlock access to every one of the hundreds of articles published daily on BroadwayWorld by logging in with one click. Monet's Garden thrusts visitors into a multi-sensory and multimedia voyage that ...
If you ask most people to describe art you'd find at a museum, they'll likely talk about paintings and sculptures. Those engage our sense of sight. But could art also play on our sense of smell? The ...
Artist Michael Ball and art dealer John Tarantino examine the work of Monet. Gardens full of lush greens and deep red and brilliant purple swirls of flowers decorate the walls of the Columbus Museum ...
Awaken your senses and experience the world of Claude Monet at the brand-new immersive exhibition, *Monet’s Garden*, that broke attendance records in Europe. For a limited time only, you can go on a ...
Owned by the Cleveland museum, the Nelson Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, Missouri, and the St. Louis Art Museum, the three big paintings were finished in 1926, the year of the artist's death.
Staff members at Selby Botanical Gardens admit they may have gotten carried away with inspiration while designing their latest art-meets-nature exhibition “Roy Lichtenstein: Monet’s Garden Goes Pop!” ...
More info: Get tickets in advance and plan ahead, as most weekends – and many weekdays – are already sold out through November. Claude Monet painted while wading in the River Seine like a fly ...
Anyone who has stood before Claude Monet’s monumental water lily paintings may recall feeling dissolved into their world of ineffable light and seemingly perfect tranquility. A new book makes clear ...