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Sights Of 'Rome, Italy And Europe' At Benton

Natalie Abreu

Issue date: 11/7/07 Section: Focus
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The Benton's newest exhibit, which includes the painting above  will go from Nov. 6 to May 11.
Media Credit: Jamie Dee Fish
The Benton's newest exhibit, which includes the painting above will go from Nov. 6 to May 11.

Luminous landscapes with rocky mountains, winding trails, full foliage bushes and vines, rushing waters, and a sky full of heavenly clouds that seem to look as if they had been plucked from the sky seem to be a thing of beauty that artistic works not only try to emulate, but try to capture the very tranquil essence of. They engage viewers and make them think about the art work and feel the emotion of the painting in their very souls.

Artistic works of this caliber might sound like they come out of such prestigious museums like the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York or the Louvre in Paris; however, one would find such extraordinary paintings only a stone's throw away at UConn's very own Benton Museum of Art.

The Benton's new art exhibition "Rome, Italy and Europe," began its run on Tuesday and will run until May 11, 2008.

The exhibition focuses on Rome's artistic influence as "the source of the western European classical tradition" throughout the art of Italy and Europe in the 17th century to the early 19th century and also "reflects the various ways the classical tradition and the Roman landscape influenced European art."

Dr. Thomas Bruhn, the curator of the Benton Museum of Art, described how the exhibition was inspired by a single 17th century painting entitled "Italianate Landscape with Sleeping Youth and Sculpture" by Dutch Baroque Era painter Jan Weenix which came to the museum last spring. In the painting, influences in Italian architecture can be seen with the Castel Sant' Angelo, ancient ruins of Rome and a classical 16th century style sculptural group. It is apparent that this painting represents the whole ardent feeling behind the exhibition.

The exhibition, located in the Evelyn Simon Gillman Gallery, is comprised of various paintings and prints made from wood block etchings both from the museum's own collections and from private collections that all focus on how Northern Europe was fascinated by the Italian landscape through the 17th to early 19th centuries. Paintings include works from Dutch, Flemish, French and English artists who were all drawn to Italy, which was still the center of the classical world and admired aspects of the Italian landscape and Roman Classicism. This utilization of Roman Classicism can also be seen in the use of classical literature such as the Bible or Plato's "Symposium" to inspire artwork.
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