Featuring paintings including Sisley’s Early Snow at Louveciennes (about 1870–71), Millet’s Women Sewing by Lamplight (La Veillée) (1853–54), and Sir Edward Coley Burne Jones’s Study of a Young Woman's Head (about 1895), this gallery showcases works of landscape, interior scenes, and portraiture. Together, these sections demonstrate how artists represented differing effects of atmosphere, color, light, and shadow on the people and places around them. This presentation incorporates recent acquisitions as well as rarely seen examples from the European collection including Frits Thaulow’s Snow-covered Buildings along a Canal, Petit-Appeville (1895), Piet Mondrian’s Woman with a Spindle (about 1893-1896) and his Beach with Five Piers at Domburg (1909), and Eugène Carrière’s Paul Verlaine (about 1891).
- Polly B. and Richard D. Hill Gallery (Gallery 253)