● On view now — Gallery 273
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
One of the first American artists to paint in Giverny, France (northwest of Paris), Theodore Robinson drew upon the teachings of the region’s most famous resident, Claude Monet, in his vibrant compositions. Using layered, broken brushwork, Robinson foregrounded the slope of the hill, leading the eye from the figure at right across the Valley of Arconville (southeast of Paris). Capturing the effects of light on the landscape like Monet and other progressive French painters, Robinson nonetheless rendered his forms with a measure of solidity that was more typical of American artists who worked in an Impressionist style.
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Paul Cezanne — Auvers, Panoramic View
Robert William Vonnoh — Spring in France
Berthe Morisot (French, 1841–1895) — Reading
Jean Charles Cazin — October Day
Camille Pissarro — The Banks of the Marne in Winter
Jean Baptiste Camille Corot — Arleux-Palluel, The Bridge of
Alexander H. Wyant (American, 1836–1892) — Arkville Landscap
Winslow Homer — Peach Blossoms
Camille Pissarro — A Cowherd at Valhermeil, Auvers-sur-Oise
Jean Charles Cazin — Landscape