From Millet to Dali: Galerie Lareuse in Georgetown
Galerie Lareuse is in Georgetown, where Pennsylvania Avenue joins M Street. It is amazing how many art treasures are in a such a tiny room. You enter the small gallery, suddenly you are in a totally another world as the one you left on the street. You look around: enchanted discoveries surround you and you found yourself under a charming spell.
The curator of the gallery, Creg D. Kelley, is young and passionate, dedicated to his work. It is a pleasure to talk to him and to listen to his explanations about each art work there: 19th and 20th century European prints, contemporary American art, illustrated books, works on paper by original masters.
For the beginning, two photos that I tried to make there: Millet and Dali. Enjoy!
- A Drawing by Joan Miró
- Toulouse versus Lautrec
- Marcel Duchamp, Jacques Villon, Raymond Duchamp-Villon
- Rembrandt and Kandinsky
- Ceramic by Picasso - Visage, c. 1955
- Dali's Leonardo
- The Joyous Wondrous Magic of Marc Chagall
- Chagall - L'Automobiliste
- Kleine Welten
- Picasso: La Nana
- Kennedy by Dali
- An Etching by James McNeill Whistler
- Vlaminck at Galerie Lareuse
- Joan Miró - La Naissance du Jour
- Marc Chagall - Clown
- Pissarro at Galerie Lareuse
- Picasso: Picador
- Joan Miró: Japonaise
- Picasso, Chagall
- Henri Matisse: La Femme
- Magritte, inspired by Joseph Conrad
- Marc Chagall, Woman Juggler
- A Video Made at Galerie Lareuse
- Euterpe, the Muse of Music
(Washington, District of Columbia)
Labels: Dali, Georgetown, Millet
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