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14 May

Renoir’s Enduring Importance to Guernsey – Contact magazine

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Renoir’s Enduring Importance to Guernsey - Contact magazine Art for Guernsey

When Art for Guernsey put together the Renoir Walk in the Moulin Huet valley in 2019, it was just the start of an exciting journey which will result in a trailblazing international exhibition curated on Guernsey soil in 2023.

The French Impressionist painter Pierre-Auguste Renoir spent just over a month in Guernsey in 1883
and worked on 15 paintings during his stay, most of which depict views of Moulin Huet. The Renoir
Walk, which was opened in the summer of 2019, is a self-guided alfresco exhibition that allows
participants to see the bay from the same perspectives as the artist did. Bespoke ornate picture frames
capture the views, and QR codes on the panels beside each frame can be scanned with a smartphone
to play an audioguide by Cyrille Sciama, Director of the Musée des Impressionnismes in Giverny and a
world authority on Renoir.

The opening of the Renoir Walk also featured an exhibition in a cottage in the valley, with an original
Renoir drawing and panels providing information on his visit to the island. The week of the exhibition
was a huge success, attracting more than 2,500 visitors, including hordes of schoolchildren. Last year
planning permission was granted to make the Renoir Walk a permanent fixture, and the Lieutenant-
Governor, His Excellency Vice Admiral Sir Ian Corder, joined the extended Art for Guernsey family to
officially declare it open.

Cyrille Sciama, guest of honour in 2019, delivered a lecture on Renoir and the Art for Guernsey team
was stunned to find out that the inspiration that the artist found in the island constituted a real inflection
point in his career, as the scenes that he witnessed of nude bathers on the beach reminded him of
antiquity, Renaissance and Watteau, and motivated him to move away from portraiture and to paint
nudes in landscapes. Taking the significance of Cyrille’s opinion on board, in early 2020 Art for
Guernsey gathered together a group of like-minded collectors and successfully acquired ‘Rocher de
Guernesey avec personnages’, one of only five remaining artworks that Renoir painted in Guernsey still
held in private hands. Art for Guernsey sees this artwork as a valuable piece of national heritage for
Guernsey and surely an ambassador for the island, with a key role to play in their cultural diplomacy
strategy.

Keen to share and celebrate the return of the artwork in an inclusive way, in September 2020 Art for
Guernsey curated a groundbreaking exhibition held at Beau Sejour. It attracted more than 3,000 visitors
in just six days and served as a platform for the team to publicly announce their plans to curate what is
believed to be the only international Renoir exhibition in 2023, on Guernsey soil.

‘Renoir 2023’, a collaboration between Art for Guernsey and the Musée des Impressionnismes de
Giverny, a direct antenna of the Musée d’Orsay, will showcase the impact Guernsey had on Renoir’s
career and will include 15 to 20 masterpieces borrowed from international museums and collections. It
will also touch upon 19 th -century photography as Renoir viewed it as a source of competition that he felt
compelled to respond to. Whilst the Impressionists were at the cutting edge of painting, this novel
medium was making an impact on the art world; however, there was one thing that photographers could
not capture and that was the movement of the light, which has a particular quality in the Moulin Huet
valley which is captivating to artists.

Under the patronage of His Excellency Vice Admiral Sir Ian Corder KBE, Art for Guernsey recently held
a digital conference which helped to secure the support of key Guernsey stakeholders for this project, as
they share the charitable initiative’s vision to create a systemic opportunity for the island to develop its
country brand and support local tourism.

For the three months of the exhibition in 2023, the whole island will be able to embrace Renoir’s
heritage, with lots of exciting initiatives planned. The project will allow various steps to be taken to build
cultural, economic and diplomatic relationships with France. Art for Guernsey and the Giverny Museum
will also be organising a cultural diplomacy event in 2022 at the Musée des Impressionismes de
Giverny, where decision-makers from both sides will meet to discuss ways to enhance collaborations
and connections between the juridictions. Cyrille Sciama and Art for Guernsey are very much aligned on
the role that art should play in children’s education, so the project will involve twinning the town of
Giverny with a Guernsey parish and putting in place two-way cultural trips for schoolchildren between
France and Guernsey.

Renoir’s Enduring Importance to Guernsey - Contact magazine Art for Guernsey
Renoir’s Enduring Importance to Guernsey - Contact magazine Art for Guernsey

The team hopes that the entire community will get behind Art for Guernsey’s Renoir journey, which
presents an opportunity for the public, cultural and business community to get behind an important
legacy project and a very high-profile piece of cultural diplomacy.

David Ummels, founder of Art for Guernsey, said: ‘I am so looking forward to this wonderful project
realising its potential. All the planets are aligned to make it a resounding popular success, inspire the
community, collaborate with the schools, provide a real boost to our tourism industry and impact our
country brand very positively across the world. Renoir 2023 is expected to be the only Renoir exhibition
in the world that year and will be vastly collaborative, and I hope will set a benchmark of efficient and
harmonious collaborations between the key private and public stakeholders in Guernsey. We look
forward to working with the Guernsey Museums, Guernsey Arts Commission, VisitGuernsey, the States
of Guernsey, Aurigny, Condor Ferries, the Guernsey Chamber of Commerce, the IoD, Hiscox, the
French Consulate, the tourism and hospitality industries, the corporate sponsors and benefactors and,
most importantly, the schools and the wider community as Art for Guernsey’s sole remit, as a charitable
initiative, is to work passionately for Guernsey’s common good.’

To view the full article, please click here and visit page 72 – 73

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