Image taken on March 8, 2014 shows China's largest ever show
of works by French Impressionist Claude Monet in Shanghai.
People line up for the opening of China's largest ever show
of works by French Impressionist Claude Monet in Shanghai on March 8, 2014.
In Shanghai, hundreds of art lovers lined up at a downtown shopping mall on
Saturday to get a glimpse of works by French Impressionist Claude Monet, as the
country's biggest ever exhibition of his paintings has just opened.
By 2 o'clock Saturday afternoon, the screen inside the K11 shopping center on
Huaihai Road showed more than 2,000 people had already entered the exhibition,
and 800 were waiting in line. Tickets are limited to two per person.
"I came from Hangzhou and arrived just in the morning. I will have to wait
for more than three hours. But it's worthwhile." Visitor Wen Yue said.
The 40 original Monets include the artist's childhood cartoons and paintings
from the last 40 years of life when he lived and worked at Giverny. The 2-meter
tall "Water Lilies" series and 3-meter-long Wisteria are the largest Monet
paintings that have ever come to the mainland.
"There is not only one Monet, there are several Monets in perpetual
evolution. So they discover the very beginning of impressionism, then the garden
of Giverny, and then the final works. All of them are different. And it is
representative of what is one of the most important French painters in art
history." Marianne Mathieu, asst. director of Marmottan Monet Museum, said.
"It's a completely different feeling from any printed publications of Monet's
paintings that I saw in the past. Subtle, delicate, and the powerful expression
of colour used inside. I'm really amazed." Visitor Lin Zhongli said.
The exhibition includes 12 other original paintings from impressionists such
as Renoir and three items from Monet's daily life - glasses, a pipe and color
palette. All are from the Marmottan Monet Museum in Paris. The 55 paintings are
worth an estimated 600 million euros.
It is rare for an exhibition of such prominent works to be held inside a
shopping mall. Organizers say they expect some 5,000 people on the opening day.
And some people are having to wait more than two hours to get inside.
Organizers say they chose a shopping mall in order to attract people who
don't usually visit museums. That means taking extra steps for environmental
control and security.
"An infrared ray system has been installed. It's quite sensitive, and will
set off an alarm if viewers are too close to the paintings. To better protect
the paintings, stable temperatures and humidity are strictly monitored." Jin
Xiaojing, media director of Tix-Media, said.
The exhibition coincides with the 50th anniversary of Sino-French diplomatic
relations. It will run until June 15.