A Grand Look At Some Grand Old Friends

Sometimes old friends look different, sometimes even better, when you meet them again.  And so, seeing the Museum of Modern Art’s famous study of “Water Lilies†by Claude Monet in a new gallery and hung the way Monet intended is almost like seeing it for the first time.

   Monet lived the second half of his life in the little French town of Giverny, where he built his iconic studio and — along with six full-time gardeners — created extensive gardens and a large lily pond with a bridge. From the 1880s he painted series of works depicting the same subject in varying light and times of day and year.  The water lily paintings are surely the most famous.

   While MoMA has but one of the large, multi-panel works (there are 22 in the Musee de l’Orangerie in Paris), it is gorgeous. And now it hangs in a modest-sized room along with the museum’s other, smaller paintings from the lily and pond series.

   The three panels of the work are hung slightly concave, as Monet instructed.  You now look at the picture and are drawn into it, which is remarkable since there is no single vantage point:  Monet painted a whole; the water’s surface fills the canvas with the lilies and reflections of sky and trees.  On the opposite wall, another not-as-large work is pale, infused with a silvery light — perhaps from the moon.

   There are a number of much smaller paintings also. These Monet considered studies for the larger works, but several are just as remarkable.  There is a lovely piece showing feathery agapanthus along the pond’s bank.  And another from 1920-22 is one of Monet’s last paintings of the pond and the Japanese footbridge over it.  It is unusual in its singular coloration:  maroon, orange, rust.  Colors not seen elsewhere in the many lily works.

     MoMA is at 11 West 53rd St. in New York City.  It is open every day except Tuesday, from 10:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., and until 8 p.m. on Fridays. Call 212-708-9400 or go to MoMA.org.  The Monet show runs through April 12.

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