Marie Selby Botanical Gardens to Showcase Pop Art Icon Roy Lichtenstein’s Take on Monet’s Garden

  • SARASOTA, Florida
  • /
  • January 12, 2021

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Roy Lichtenstein, Water Lilies with Willows, 1992. Screen print enamel on stainless steel, 58 x 104 in. Collection Pérez Art Museum Miami, gift from the Collection of Mary M. and Sash A. Spencer. © Estate of Roy Lichtenstein

Roy Lichtenstein made his name by applying his Pop Art interpretation to cultural icons like Mickey Mouse and images from American advertising. He was also fascinated by landscapes and the popular art form of Impressionism. Starting in the 1960s, he paid homage to – and radically reimagined – French painter Claude Monet’s Impressionist works.

On view exclusively at Marie Selby Botanical Gardens’ Downtown Sarasota campus from Feb. 13-June 27, 2021, Roy Lichtenstein: Monet’s Garden Goes Pop! will showcase the legendary Pop artist’s take on several staples of the public imagination: Monet’s paintings of his garden and environs at Giverny. The display of these large-scale, rarely seen prints will be accompanied by a complete transformation of the Downtown Sarasota campus’s 15 acres into Monet’s garden at Giverny – as imagined through the aesthetic of Lichtenstein.

Laurie Lambrecht, Photograph of Roy working on a collage for his Water Lilies with Japanese Bridge, 1992, in his Southampton studio. Photograph, 1992. © Laurie Lambrecht, 1992

“It will be like stepping into Lichtenstein’s world – if he had created a world based on Monet,” says Jennifer Rominiecki, president and CEO of Selby Gardens. “Our horticultural team is taking the principles that Lichtenstein used in his artwork and applying them to our interpretation of Monet’s garden at Giverny. It will be a unique perspective that has never been explored before.”

An avid gardener, Monet once said, “My garden is my most beautiful masterpiece.” That garden is still renowned in both art and horticultural circles. But looking at it through Lichtenstein’s eyes creates an interpretation that is a bit off-the-wall and slightly tongue-in-cheek.

“We’re basically saying that if Lichtenstein had created Monet’s garden, this is what he would have done,” says Rominiecki. “Giving our gardens the Monet treatment – with an innovative Pop Art twist – will let our guests explore Lichtenstein’s interpretation of Monet in a variety of ways.”

Familiar components of Monet’s garden at Giverny will appear at Selby Gardens – but with a new spin. The iconic Japanese Bridge will span Selby Gardens’ koi pond but look as if Lichtenstein painted it. A mix of 2D and 3D elements will playfully reimagine Monet’s home or his much-painted water lilies. These surprising intersections between Impressionism and Pop Art will engage visitors as they move through the gardens en route to the Museum of Botany & the Arts.

At the Museum, viewers will be able to admire Lichtenstein’s Water Lilies with Reflections series, a limited edition of large-screen prints, created in the latter years of his career, that reinterprets the extreme painterly sensibilities of Monet’s famous Water Lilies. Printed on metal, Lichtenstein’s Water Lilies series uses flat areas of color, Ben-Day dots and the reflective qualities of the material to imply motion and the movement of light. Earlier works from Lichtenstein’s Haystack series and archival photographs of Lichtenstein at work and at home will also be on view.

Roy Lichtenstein, Water Lilies with Clouds, 1992. Screenprint on enamel on stainless steel, 65.41 x 44.76 in. Norton Museum of Art. © Estate of Roy Lichtenstein

These imaginative works highlight both Lichtenstein’s Pop Art sensibilities and his late-career shift into subtler explorations of color, light and materials. “Using the medium of screen printing, in which Lichtenstein displayed his greatest originality, these works steep us in the rich theme and variation of serial imagery,” says Dr. Carol Ockman, curator-at-large for Selby Gardens and Robert Sterling Clark Professor of Art History Emerita at Williams College. “By converting the premier Impressionist’s work into a vernacular form – like that seen in comic books – through his use of industrial materials with glossy surfaces, Lichtenstein playfully eviscerates Monet’s personal style.”

The exhibition is the latest installment in Selby Gardens’ immersive Jean & Alfred Goldstein Exhibition Series, which explores the use of nature and flowers by major artists. Viewing world-renowned works of art in a garden setting awakens new comparisons in viewers’ minds. The most recent exhibition in the series was Salvador Dalí: Gardens of the Mind.

Artworks featured in Roy Lichtenstein: Monet’s Garden Goes Pop! are on loan from the Norton Museum of Art (West Palm Beach), the Pérez Art Museum (Miami), and the Roy Lichtenstein Foundation (New York) and private collectors.

Visitor guidelines and program info can be found at www.selby.org.

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