Skip to Main Content

Carl Blechen, View of the Colosseum in Rome, 1829, oil on paper, mounted on wood panel, Fondation Custodia, Collection Frits Lugt, Paris (detail)

Ann Lofquist, Palisades South View, 2015, oil on panel. Image courtesy of the artist (detail)

Painting in the Open Air: A Conversation with Ann Lofquist

Lectures and Book Signings

  • Sunday, February 23, 2020
  • 2:00 p.m.
  • West Building Lecture Hall
  • In-person

Mary Morton, curator and head of French paintings, National Gallery of Art and Ann Lofquist, artist

Mary Morton is joined in conversation with artist Ann Lofquist to discuss the exhibition True to Nature: Open-Air Painting in Europe, 1780–1870. Singling out particular paintings from the exhibition, Lofquist describes the influence of 19th-century artists, such as Camille Corot, on her own practice of sketching in oil paint outdoors. Like these European painters who were aesthetically energized by the light of Italy, Lofquist spent several years in California after a lifetime of painting in the northeast. The conversation highlights a tradition begun in the late 18th century that extends to contemporary painting.