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TENNESSEE STATE MUSEUM
TENNESSEE STATE MUSEUM

Nashville, TN

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May 1 - December 31, 2008 at the Military Museum located in the War Memorial Building

Colonel Samuel Beatty, 19th Ohio Volunteer Infantry,
H.S. Phillips

RENOIR, Alexandre, b. 1974

The Rose Vase

Oil on canvas

Strokes of Genius begins April 15
Mary Cassatt, 1844-1926

Sara Smiling, circa 1904

Drypoint on heavy wove paper
Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841-1919)

Paysage à Cagnes, 1895

oil on canvas laid on panel

2 5/8 by 5 1/2 inches

Indian Artifact

505 DEADERICK STREET
NASHVILLE TN 37243
615-741-2692
TOLL-FREE: 800-407-4324

Fifth and Deaderick Streets, in the lower level of the James K. Polk Cultural Center.

Visit the Tennessee State Museum website: www.tnmuseum.org

Tennessee State Museum:

Open: Tuesday - Saturday: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sunday: 1 to 5 p.m.
Closed: Mondays and four holidays: New Year's Day, Easter, Thanksgiving, and Christmas.

The Military Museum: Open Tuesday through Saturday10 a.m. through
5 p.m. Closed Sundays and Mondays and the same four holidays.

The State Capitol: Open for guided tours Monday - Friday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Closed holidays.

Admission: Admission to the museum's permanent exhibits, the Military Museum and the State Capitol is always free. Most temporary exhibits are also free although admission may be charged to some.


In 1937 the General Assembly created a state museum to house World War I mementoes and other collections from the state, the Tennessee Historical Society and other groups. This museum was located in the lower level of the War Memorial Building until it was moved into the new James K. Polk Center in 1981. The Tennessee State Museum currently occupies three floors, covering approximately 120,000 square feet with more than 60,000 square feet devoted to exhibits.
An exhibition featuring artworks by Alexandre Renoir and his ancestor, renowned French Impressionist Pierre-Auguste Renoir, opened at the Tennessee State Museum on April 15.

The exhibit, entitled Strokes of Genius: The Works of Pierre-Auguste & Alexandre Renoir —Art from Private Collections will include not only Alexandre Renoir’s work, and that of his great-grandfather, but seldom seen artwork from the private collections of Pierre-Auguste Renoir and friends. This includes Impressionist work from the great artists of that period — Mary Cassatt, Paul Cezanne, Edouard Manet, Camille Pissarro, and Jean-Fran Raffaelli.

Members of the Tennessee State Museum Foundation will have a chance to meet Alexandre Renoir and experience his ethereal work at the opening reception of Strokes of Genius on April 13 from 2 to 4 p.m. at the museum. Alexandre will return to Nashville on June 6, where he will be on hand for the final weekend of the Strokes of Genius exhibition, and a walking tour for museum visitors, as well as a workshop for children.

Selected works of the exhibit and works of Alexandre Renoir will be offered for purchase in a private offering on the evening of June 7 and afternoon of June 8.

Born in 1974 in Cagnes Sur Mer in the south of France, Alexandre Renoir and his family moved to Canada when he was four. He grew up surrounded by masterful art and creative artists. Alexandre Renoir’s works on paper and canvas are created with the same sense of ease and grace, which are reminiscent of the beauty and charm of his great-grandfather’s Impressionistic work.

Artistic from a young age, Alexandre attended various arts-oriented schools. In addition to his formal education, he also took classes at the Alberta Museum on Aboriginal Arts and Crafts, where he garnered experience in sculpture, pottery, woodworking, stone carving, photography and painting.

Although he was immersed in the arts and culture of his environment, Alexandre remained primarily an onlooker until his drawing abilities were tapped by his brother Emmanuel. During a visit to California, Emmanuel gave Alexandre some drawing paper and challenged him to draw with charcoal. The results were impressive, delighting both Alexandre and his brother.

From the first sheet, Alexandre could naturally draw in a variety of styles; his charcoal drawings exhibit a fluid sense often seen in works of the impressionism period. Alexandre’s paintings and drawings can be found in private collections in numerous cities throughout Canada including Edmonton, Calgary, Vancouver, Winnipeg and Montreal. Viewers can detect Alexandre’s great-grandfather’s artistic essence and techniques in the works he is creating today, which are augmented with his own original flair.

Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841-1919), Alexandre’s great-grandfather, is perhaps the best-loved of all the Impressionists, because his subjects — angelic children, gorgeous flowers, beautiful scenes, and lovely women — have universal appeal, which he rendered with directness and joy. “Why shouldn't art be pretty?” he said, “There are enough unpleasant things in the world.” As homage to his ancestor, Strokes of Genius will include several seldom seen works from the hand of this great French master.

In transferring their artistic theories to the lithographic stone or metal etching plate, artists such as Renoir, Pissarro, Cassatt, and Manet attempted to recreate the spontaneity and subtlety of their paintings with the aim of reaching a wider audience. Along with this endeavor came a period of brilliant experimentation that resulted in never before used techniques creating a more painterly print. Influenced by the past titans of etching, such as Rembrandt and Goya, the Impressionist artists gained a new spirit of freedom in the world of printmaking and elevated these works on paper to a higher art form.

Lithographs, sketches and prints from Mary Cassatt, Paul Cezanne, Edouard Manet, Camille Pissarro, and Jean-Fran Raffaelli, on loan from private collections, will complement this visually stimulating exhibit. Strokes of Genius: The Works of Pierre-Auguste & Alexandre Renoir —Art from Private Collections will offer visitors a glimpse at the Impressionist movement, as characterized by an artist’s ability to render a fleeting moment in time, creating candid compositions, and capturing an ‘impression’ of the ever-changing effects of light and atmospheric conditions. The exhibition opens to the public on April 15 and continues through June 8.


A sampling of diverse military artworks from the collection of the Tennessee State Museum is on display beginning May 1, 2008 at the Military Museum located in the War Memorial Building . The pieces are arranged in chronological order and feature such famous artists as Thure de Thulstrup, Benson Lossing, and Tennesseans Gilbert Gaul, David Wright, and Washington Cooper, as well as the lesser known works of common soldiers and amateur civilians. Yet, all the artworks have one unifying theme - to preserve a time, a place, and sense of America’s military past.

Since ancient times, artists have been fascinated by military themes and have used them to commemorate famous battles, celebrate heroes, mourn deceased warriors and to simply document the uniforms, weapons, and events of the martial activities which constantly changed their lives and culture. Artists have created works of historic military subjects in paintings, portraits, sculptures, engravings, lithographs, woodcuts, and photographs. These artists have attempted to capture the range of war-torn emotion; chaos, loss, courage and the full panoply of war. This is just the tip of the iceberg in terms of the museum’s military art collection. The permanent exhibitions of the museum are teeming with pieces of military-themed artwork that encourage the student of history in all of us. This exhibit continues through to December 31, 2008.

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