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American Impressionism 2014-15

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American Impressionism 2014-15

Terra loans to Une nouvelle lumière : les américains face à l’impressionnisme, Musée des impressionnismes Giverny: March 28–June 29, 2014; American Impressionism: a New Vision, 1880-1900, Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh, July 19–October 19, 2014; Impresionismo Americano, Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid, November 4, 2014–February 1, 2015

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Metadata embedded, 2017
John Leslie Breck
Date: 1891
Credit Line: Terra Foundation for American Art, Daniel J. Terra Collection
Object number: 1989.4.1
Text Entries: John Leslie Breck's early work was often large in scale and dark in color. He dramatically altered his artistic approach, however, after his sojourn to France in the mid-1880s. Executed over a period of three days in the Normandy village of Giverny, Breck's small studies are an analysis of atmospheric changes from dawn to dusk. They were first shown in Boston in 1893 unframed and side-by-side in an exhibition along with the much larger "Morning Fog and Sun." Most likely begun in the outdoors but finished in the studio, these paintings were left unvarnished by the artist, enhancing the freshness and immediacy of Breck's subject matter: the natural cycle of time, movement, and change.
Metadata embedded, 2017
John Leslie Breck
Date: 1891
Credit Line: Terra Foundation for American Art, Daniel J. Terra Collection
Object number: 1989.4.2
Text Entries: John Leslie Breck's early work was often large in scale and dark in color. He dramatically altered his artistic approach, however, after his sojourn to France in the mid-1880s. Executed over a period of three days in the Normandy village of Giverny, Breck's small studies are an analysis of atmospheric changes from dawn to dusk. They were first shown in Boston in 1893 unframed and side-by-side in an exhibition along with the much larger "Morning Fog and Sun." Most likely begun in the outdoors but finished in the studio, these paintings were left unvarnished by the artist, enhancing the freshness and immediacy of Breck's subject matter: the natural cycle of time, movement, and change.
Studies of an Autumn Day
John Leslie Breck
Date: 1891
Credit Line: Terra Foundation for American Art, Daniel J. Terra Collection
Object number: 1989.4.3
Text Entries: John Leslie Breck's early work was often large in scale and dark in color. He dramatically altered his artistic approach, however, after his sojourn to France in the mid-1880s. Executed over a period of three days in the Normandy village of Giverny, Breck's small studies are an analysis of atmospheric changes from dawn to dusk. They were first shown in Boston in 1893 unframed and side-by-side in an exhibition along with the much larger "Morning Fog and Sun." Most likely begun in the outdoors but finished in the studio, these paintings were left unvarnished by the artist, enhancing the freshness and immediacy of Breck's subject matter: the natural cycle of time, movement, and change.
Metadata embedded, 2017
John Leslie Breck
Date: 1891
Credit Line: Terra Foundation for American Art, Daniel J. Terra Collection
Object number: 1989.4.4
Text Entries: John Leslie Breck's early work was often large in scale and dark in color. He dramatically altered his artistic approach, however, after his sojourn to France in the mid-1880s. Executed over a period of three days in the Normandy village of Giverny, Breck's small studies are an analysis of atmospheric changes from dawn to dusk. They were first shown in Boston in 1893 unframed and side-by-side in an exhibition along with the much larger "Morning Fog and Sun." Most likely begun in the outdoors but finished in the studio, these paintings were left unvarnished by the artist, enhancing the freshness and immediacy of Breck's subject matter: the natural cycle of time, movement, and change.
Metadata embedded, 2017
John Leslie Breck
Date: 1891
Credit Line: Terra Foundation for American Art, Daniel J. Terra Collection
Object number: 1989.4.5
Text Entries: John Leslie Breck's early work was often large in scale and dark in color. He dramatically altered his artistic approach, however, after his sojourn to France in the mid-1880s. Executed over a period of three days in the Normandy village of Giverny, Breck's small studies are an analysis of atmospheric changes from dawn to dusk. They were first shown in Boston in 1893 unframed and side-by-side in an exhibition along with the much larger "Morning Fog and Sun." Most likely begun in the outdoors but finished in the studio, these paintings were left unvarnished by the artist, enhancing the freshness and immediacy of Breck's subject matter: the natural cycle of time, movement, and change.
Metadata Embedded, 2019
John Leslie Breck
Date: 1891
Credit Line: Terra Foundation for American Art, Daniel J. Terra Collection
Object number: 1989.4.6
Text Entries: John Leslie Breck's early work was often large in scale and dark in color. He dramatically altered his artistic approach, however, after his sojourn to France in the mid-1880s. Executed over a period of three days in the Normandy village of Giverny, Breck's small studies are an analysis of atmospheric changes from dawn to dusk. They were first shown in Boston in 1893 unframed and side-by-side in an exhibition along with the much larger "Morning Fog and Sun." Most likely begun in the outdoors but finished in the studio, these paintings were left unvarnished by the artist, enhancing the freshness and immediacy of Breck's subject matter: the natural cycle of time, movement, and change.
Metadata Embedded, 2019
John Leslie Breck
Date: 1891
Credit Line: Terra Foundation for American Art, Daniel J. Terra Collection
Object number: 1989.4.7
Text Entries: John Leslie Breck's early work was often large in scale and dark in color. He dramatically altered his artistic approach, however, after his sojourn to France in the mid-1880s. Executed over a period of three days in the Normandy village of Giverny, Breck's small studies are an analysis of atmospheric changes from dawn to dusk. They were first shown in Boston in 1893 unframed and side-by-side in an exhibition along with the much larger "Morning Fog and Sun." Most likely begun in the outdoors but finished in the studio, these paintings were left unvarnished by the artist, enhancing the freshness and immediacy of Breck's subject matter: the natural cycle of time, movement, and change.
Metadata Embedded, 2019
John Leslie Breck
Date: 1891
Credit Line: Terra Foundation for American Art, Daniel J. Terra Collection
Object number: 1989.4.8
Text Entries: John Leslie Breck's early work was often large in scale and dark in color. He dramatically altered his artistic approach, however, after his sojourn to France in the mid-1880s. Executed over a period of three days in the Normandy village of Giverny, Breck's small studies are an analysis of atmospheric changes from dawn to dusk. They were first shown in Boston in 1893 unframed and side-by-side in an exhibition along with the much larger "Morning Fog and Sun." Most likely begun in the outdoors but finished in the studio, these paintings were left unvarnished by the artist, enhancing the freshness and immediacy of Breck's subject matter: the natural cycle of time, movement, and change.
Metadata Embedded, 2019
John Leslie Breck
Date: 1891
Credit Line: Terra Foundation for American Art, Daniel J. Terra Collection
Object number: 1989.4.9
Text Entries: John Leslie Breck's early work was often large in scale and dark in color. He dramatically altered his artistic approach, however, after his sojourn to France in the mid-1880s. Executed over a period of three days in the Normandy village of Giverny, Breck's small studies are an analysis of atmospheric changes from dawn to dusk. They were first shown in Boston in 1893 unframed and side-by-side in an exhibition along with the much larger "Morning Fog and Sun." Most likely begun in the outdoors but finished in the studio, these paintings were left unvarnished by the artist, enhancing the freshness and immediacy of Breck's subject matter: the natural cycle of time, movement, and change.
Metadata embedded, 2017
John Leslie Breck
Date: 1891
Credit Line: Terra Foundation for American Art, Daniel J. Terra Collection
Object number: 1989.4.10
Text Entries: John Leslie Breck's early work was often large in scale and dark in color. He dramatically altered his artistic approach, however, after his sojourn to France in the mid-1880s. Executed over a period of three days in the Normandy village of Giverny, Breck's small studies are an analysis of atmospheric changes from dawn to dusk. They were first shown in Boston in 1893 unframed and side-by-side in an exhibition along with the much larger "Morning Fog and Sun." Most likely begun in the outdoors but finished in the studio, these paintings were left unvarnished by the artist, enhancing the freshness and immediacy of Breck's subject matter: the natural cycle of time, movement, and change.
Metadata embedded, 2017
John Leslie Breck
Date: 1891
Credit Line: Terra Foundation for American Art, Daniel J. Terra Collection
Object number: 1989.4.11
Text Entries: John Leslie Breck's early work was often large in scale and dark in color. He dramatically altered his artistic approach, however, after his sojourn to France in the mid-1880s. Executed over a period of three days in the Normandy village of Giverny, Breck's small studies are an analysis of atmospheric changes from dawn to dusk. They were first shown in Boston in 1893 unframed and side-by-side in an exhibition along with the much larger "Morning Fog and Sun." Most likely begun in the outdoors but finished in the studio, these paintings were left unvarnished by the artist, enhancing the freshness and immediacy of Breck's subject matter: the natural cycle of time, movement, and change.
Metadata embedded, 2017
John Leslie Breck
Date: 1891
Credit Line: Terra Foundation for American Art, Daniel J. Terra Collection
Object number: 1989.4.12
Text Entries: John Leslie Breck's early work was often large in scale and dark in color. He dramatically altered his artistic approach, however, after his sojourn to France in the mid-1880s. Executed over a period of three days in the Normandy village of Giverny, Breck's small studies are an analysis of atmospheric changes from dawn to dusk. They were first shown in Boston in 1893 unframed and side-by-side in an exhibition along with the much larger "Morning Fog and Sun." Most likely begun in the outdoors but finished in the studio, these paintings were left unvarnished by the artist, enhancing the freshness and immediacy of Breck's subject matter: the natural cycle of time, movement, and change.