Off Topic Hull City Centre Public Realm Strategy

  • Please bear with us on the new site integration and fixing any known bugs over the coming days. If you can not log in please try resetting your password and check your spam box. If you have tried these steps and are still struggling email [email protected] with your username/registered email address
  • Log in now to remove adverts - no adverts at all to registered members!
Just been in ferens to see the Claude Monet they’ve just put in

Delve into Claude Monet’s world of composition and colour, and experience his work as never before with sound, smell and touch transporting you into his artwork.

Monet’s The Petit Bras of the Seine at Argenteuil (1872) is presented at the Ferens Art Gallery in a multi-sensory exhibition inspired by the artist and his work.



On loan to the Ferens as part of The National Gallery Masterpiece Tour 2025–27, the Monet will be shown alongside paintings from the Ferens’ own collection. Flourish, a group of disabled and/or neurodivergent children and young people from Hull, have created multisensory artworks including canvases inspired by Monet. They have also contributed to an immersive soundscape, produced by local music practitioner, Donna Smith.

Free entry
 
Just been in ferens to see the Claude Monet they’ve just put in

Delve into Claude Monet’s world of composition and colour, and experience his work as never before with sound, smell and touch transporting you into his artwork.

Monet’s The Petit Bras of the Seine at Argenteuil (1872) is presented at the Ferens Art Gallery in a multi-sensory exhibition inspired by the artist and his work.



On loan to the Ferens as part of The National Gallery Masterpiece Tour 2025–27, the Monet will be shown alongside paintings from the Ferens’ own collection. Flourish, a group of disabled and/or neurodivergent children and young people from Hull, have created multisensory artworks including canvases inspired by Monet. They have also contributed to an immersive soundscape, produced by local music practitioner, Donna Smith.

Free entry
It's great that Ferens is free entry. I do like Monet's 'Petite Bras' although I prefer his follow up, 'massive boobies'. Yes I know I am childish
 
Just been in ferens to see the Claude Monet they’ve just put in

Delve into Claude Monet’s world of composition and colour, and experience his work as never before with sound, smell and touch transporting you into his artwork.

Monet’s The Petit Bras of the Seine at Argenteuil (1872) is presented at the Ferens Art Gallery in a multi-sensory exhibition inspired by the artist and his work.



On loan to the Ferens as part of The National Gallery Masterpiece Tour 2025–27, the Monet will be shown alongside paintings from the Ferens’ own collection. Flourish, a group of disabled and/or neurodivergent children and young people from Hull, have created multisensory artworks including canvases inspired by Monet. They have also contributed to an immersive soundscape, produced by local music practitioner, Donna Smith.

Free entry
Whilst I think it’s absolutely great that they’re doing this sort of thing, and the exhibition in general was good and interesting, sadly for me it’s a really ordinary painting. He’s undoubtedly a great artist but this is nowhere near his best and ‘masterpiece’ is pushing it a bit.

I remember seeing it at the National Gallery previously and being pretty underwhelmed then too. As I said the exhibition is decent though and well worth a visit.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Chazz Rheinhold
Whilst I think it’s absolutely great that they’re doing this sort of thing, and the exhibition in general was good and interesting, sadly for me it’s a really ordinary painting. He’s undoubtedly a great artist but this is nowhere near his best and ‘masterpiece’ is pushing it a bit.

I remember seeing it at the National Gallery previously and being pretty underwhelmed then too. As I said the exhibition is decent though and well worth a visit.
You must log in or register to see images
 
Whilst I think it’s absolutely great that they’re doing this sort of thing, and the exhibition in general was good and interesting, sadly for me it’s a really ordinary painting. He’s undoubtedly a great artist but this is nowhere near his best and ‘masterpiece’ is pushing it a bit.

I remember seeing it at the National Gallery previously and being pretty underwhelmed then too. As I said the exhibition is decent though and well worth a visit.
I often think about the classic painters and that I don't know what makes a great painting. I wanted to post about David Hockney last week but wasn't the right time. But his work generally looks like one of my grandkids has painted it. I don't think he would have passed his O Level Art in my class.
 
I often think about the classic painters and that I don't know what makes a great painting. I wanted to post about David Hockney last week but wasn't the right time. But his work generally looks like one of my grandkids has painted it. I don't think he would have passed his O Level Art in my class.
I know nothing about art appreciation but if I see a painting, i could guess if it was a hockney, or at least someone copying his style. So I guess it's the originality and individual way of painting he created.

Apparently his back catalogue is valued at over a billion, so someone knows something you or I don't...
 
  • Like
Reactions: Kempton tiger
I often think about the classic painters and that I don't know what makes a great painting. I wanted to post about David Hockney last week but wasn't the right time. But his work generally looks like one of my grandkids has painted it. I don't think he would have passed his O Level Art in my class.
There’s nothing wrong with that. Everyone’s free to like what they like.

And without meaning to be rude as you’ve hinted at it anyway I think, I imagine most of us could be ‘trained’ to appreciate art that we don’t by better understanding why / how it came about and what it means (which is not to say that some of it really just isn’t very good), which the exhibition does a great job of in principle.

Monet was a genius and I’ve been to Giverny and loved it. But It’s more the idea that anything painted by him or any other great artist must be a masterpiece that winds me up - I can broadly accept that Lionel Messi was the best footballer of the last few years, but if he skies a penalty way over the bar then I’d be allowed to think it was a **** penalty and move on, but in the art world there’s this mystique that if I think it’s poor then I must have just not understood what the maestro meant by kicking the ball over the bar.