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Modern Masterpieces from the Detroit Institute of Arts
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Pierre Auguste Renoir, Woman in an armchair, 1874 | Courtesy Detroit Institute of Art

The history of European modern art unfolds like a compact, luminous film through fifty-two masterpieces on loan from the Detroit Institute of Arts, one of the most visionary collections in the United States. The exhibition brings together artists who, between the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, revolutionized the way we see the world: Courbet, Renoir, Degas, Cézanne, Van Gogh, Matisse, Picasso, Modigliani, Kandinsky, Beckmann. A constellation of voices that, though diverse, forged a new visual language built from shifting light, rebellious perspectives, and reinvented bodies. The journey moves from the origins of Impressionism to the shocks of the avant-gardes. It jumps from the shimmering softness of Renoir’s Woman in an Armchair to the almost architectural construction of space in Cézanne’s Bathers, from Van Gogh’s interior tensions to Matisse’s chromatic audacity, all the way to the explosion of forms and geometries marking the arrival of Picasso and Kandinsky into full modernity.
It is a story of ruptures and revelations: light transforming into matter, the city replacing nature as the stage of experience, reality dissolving into abstraction. Each work captures a moment in which artists pushed beyond the visible, redefining what painting could be. Founded in the late nineteenth century and now home to over 65.000 works, the Detroit Institute of Arts was among the first American museums to recognize the revolutionary force of European modernism. The selection presented reflects this pioneering vision: a collection that not only documents an era but restores its energy, ambition, and creative urgency.
Viola Canova - © 2025 ARTE.it for Bvlgari Hotel Roma