Story Published:
Nov 28, 2005 at 8:44 PM PST
Story Updated:
Aug 31, 2006 at 1:08 AM PST
SEATTLE - Microsoft Corp. co-founder Paul Allen is planning
to display some of his private art collection - including works by
Monet, Renoir, Degas, van Gogh and Picasso - next spring at his
Experience Music Project.
The six-month exhibition, "DoubleTake," will pair the
Impressionist works with post-Impressionist ones. On display will
be two dozen of Allen's paintings, many of which have not been seen
publicly in 50 years.
"For the past 100 years, images by Impressionist masters like
Monet and Renoir have so penetrated the cultural landscape that
they've almost lost their meaning," curator Paul Hayes Tucker, an
art history professor at the University of Massachusetts-Boston,
said in a statement. "By pairing them side-by-side with great
contemporary and modern works, we can cast a new light on these
magnificent canvases and learn to see them in a new way."
For example, Tucker said he plans to pair Monet's "Rouen
Cathedral: Afternoon Effect," painted in 1894, with Jasper Johns'
"Numbers," painted in 1978. Though at first they appear to have
little in common, upon closer inspection they show similar concerns
with texture, relief, light and shade.
"EMP is a wonderful venue for this kind of show," said
artistic director Robert Santelli. "'DoubleTake' is an exhibition
all about unexpected pairings of art, and EMP as a cultural
institution celebrates such creativity."
The exhibition, scheduled to open in April, will also include
works by Mark Rothko and Roy Lichtenstein.
Tucker has previously served as a curator for Monet exhibits at
the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, the Royal Academy of Arts in
London, and the Bridgestone Museum in Tokyo, among others.
The Experience Music Project, founded by Allen as an interactive
museum of popular music history and memorabilia, has gone through a
series of layoffs since its first full year of operation in 2001.
Attendance was 800,000 that first year, but has since settled at
around 400,000 annually - about the same as the Rock and Roll Hall
of Fame in Cleveland.