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Release Date: June 22, 2004

NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART OFFERS
SUMMER LECTURE SERIES ON LANDSCAPE PAINTING

In conjunction with the exhibition Hudson River School Visions: The Landscapes of Sanford R. Gifford, on view June 27 through September 26, 2004, the National Gallery of Art, Washington, is offering an eight-part series of lectures on the theme of landscape. Ranging in time from antiquity to the 20th century, but concentrating on Gifford’s era of the 19th century, the works discussed will reveal the continuing significance of the natural world to western civilization. Philosophy, literature, religion, and science are all forces shaping the artist’s imagination in interpreting this fascinating subject.

Lectures are given in the East Building Auditorium on Sundays at 2:00 p.m.

All lectures are free and open to the public.

July 11
Representing the Landscape in the Ancient World

Faya Causey, head, academic programs

July 18
Storms and Shipwrecks in the National Gallery of Art

J. Russell Sale, staff lecturer

July 25
The British Picturesque Landscape

Philip Leonard, staff lecturer

August 1
Modern Artists and the French Riviera

Diane Arkin, staff lecturer and adult docent coordinator

August 8
Caspar David Friedrich, Adolf von Menzel, and Arnold Böcklin:
Landscape as Metaphor in Nineteenth-Century German Painting

Christopher With, art information coordinating curator

August 15
The Urban Landscape: Prints of Paris in the Impressionist Era

Eric Denker, staff lecturer

August 22
Approaches to the American Landscape

Alan Fern, director emeritus, National Portrait Gallery

August 29
"Sur le motif": The Landscapes of Paul Cézanne

Sally Shelburne, staff lecturer

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