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Word: rouen (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...slippage in the stripes and Benday dots. Its flat, posterish colors will read with infrangible aplomb. It will parody other art, as in the past Lichtenstein's work has parodied everything from Art Deco to synthetic Cubism, from Franz Marc's horses to Monet's versions of Rouen Cathedral, from Mondrian's squares to the generic brushstroke of late Abstract Expressionism. It will have a number of concealed jokes for the art-initiated, often genuinely funny ones -- as when, redoing Matisse's Still Life with "Dance" in 1974, Lichtenstein inserted a comic-strip blast of musical notes to give...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Image Duplicator | 11/8/1993 | See Source »

...subtlety of its address to the world. One can hardly get enough of late Monet, which is why the exhibition currently on view at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, "Monet in the '90s: The Series Paintings," is so rewarding. It samples all his series in depth -- notably grainstacks, Rouen Cathedral, Japanese bridges, poplars -- except the Water Lilies, which come after 1900 anyhow...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Letting Nature Reign Resplendent | 3/26/1990 | See Source »

...climax of this show is, inevitably, the Cathedrals, Monet's repeated views of the west front of the Gothic Cathedral of Rouen: art about art. Between 1892 and 1895 he produced 30 of them; ten are lined up in Boston. Some critics have shied away from them as pictorial near absurdities, Gothic rendered as melting ice cream, architecture without a line anywhere. It would be hard to argue this for long in front of the paintings themselves. How could such an endlessly complicated form as this Gothic facade, with all its peaks, hollows, spires, bosses and moldings, be so fully...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Letting Nature Reign Resplendent | 3/26/1990 | See Source »

...superb show of the artist's serial works of the 1890s -- depicting, among other things, grainstacks, poplars and Rouen Cathedral -- proves how much more than "only...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Time Magazine Contents Page | 3/26/1990 | See Source »

Upriver is Rouen, capital of Upper Normandy, where Flaubert was reared, Joan of Arc burned and Monet inspired. The great Gothic cathedral of Notre Dame miraculously survived the wartime bombings, but all the city's old bridges and many buildings were destroyed. Farther south and east the Normandie slips beneath the cliffs high above Les Andelys, where Richard the Lion-Hearted's Chateau Gaillard stands watch over the valleys below. Perhaps the most haunting of all the stops is Monet's retreat at Giverny, where the painter lived for 43 years until his death in 1926. In his calendar, June...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Travel: Cruisin' Up the River | 6/26/1989 | See Source »

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