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Art

June 2002

A celebration of painting in Boston

by Karen Wilkin

The most effective antidote to the dour astringency of the Gerhard Richter retrospective this spring was probably a trip to Boston to see “Impressionist Still Life.”[1] Before anyone says anything about the salutary effect of exhibitions with “Impressionist” in the title on museum revenues, I would like to point out that this one, at least, was not just another crowdpleasing potpourri of everyone’s favorite pictures, but a closely reasoned celebration of painting as painting, as intelligent as it was delectable. “Impressionist Still Life” could, admittedly, make even the most jaded museumgoer sigh with delight with its assembly of tasty textbook icons and unexpected zingers, but at the same time, it allowed (or forced) fresh considerations of the role of subject matter in modern painting, the relationship of perception to invention, and even the nature of modernity itself.< ...

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Karen Wilkin is an editor at The Hudson Review and on the faculty at the New York Studio School
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This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 20 June 2002, on page 59
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