Skip to content
OKCMOA Oklahoma City Museum of Art
  • Visit
  • Art
  • Film
  • Store & Bar
  • Search
  • Visit
  • Art
  • Film
  • Store & Bar
  • Search
icon hamburger menu black 1
icon hamburger menu black 1
  • Tickets
  • Membership
  • Donate
  • Tickets
  • Membership
  • Donate
This event has passed.View Current Events

Passport to Paris

April 30, 2009
- June 7, 2009

Exhibitions

All Events

Passport to Paris: Nineteenth-Century French Prints from the Georgia Museum of Art featured 46 works from the Georgia Museum of Art’s collection, highlighting a variety of printmaking techniques used by well-known artists of the nineteenth century. Particularly in France, these artists experimented with etching, lithography, and woodcut and adopted a range of themes and styles in portraying modern life. After the French Revolution, artists began to depict a greater variety of subjects, such as landscapes, portraits, and satires of everyday life.

Rural landscapes, a significant theme in art since the seventeenth century, experienced a rebirth in the hands of the Barbizon painter-printmakers. As seen in his etching Les Bêcheurs [The Diggers], Jean François Millet (1814-1875) centered his artistic life on the activities of rural life, particularly the lives of peasants, and he remained in Barbizon (near Fontainbleau, France) until his death in 1875. Charles François Daubigny (1817-1878), also associated with the Barbizon movement, captured rural life in the depiction of covered wagons in the etching Les Charettes de Roulage [Good Wagons]. Daubigny’s Voyage de Nuit [Night Journey] and other landscape etchings are often considered as precursors to later impressionist techniques.

Considered one of the greatest nineteenth-century etchers, Charles Meryon (1821-1868) traveled the world as a naval officer and was known to draw during his voyages. He resigned his naval commission in 1846 and moved to Paris to experiment with art. Chateau de Chenonceau [Castle of Chenonceau] captures his inspiration of the impressive architecture of the French castle in the finest details. Also considered one of the greatest etchers of the century, James Abbott McNeill Whistler (1834-1903), born in New England, studied in Paris before establishing himself in London and introducing the French practice of etching and lithography as a serious medium for painters.

Invented in 1798 in Germany, the process of lithography began as an inexpensive commercial process and became widely used by artists in the nineteenth century. This printing technique involves drawing on a stone surface with a crayon. The relative simplicity of the technique and the similarity in line and tonal quality to drawing appealed to artists such as Jean-Louis-André-Théodore Géricault (1791-1824), who is considered by some to be the father of the romantic movement of painting in France in the first half of the century. Honoré Daumier (1808-1879), a graphic satirist and master of the medium, was a prolific lithographer. One of Daumier’s prints from his Moeurs Conjugales [Marital Customs] series is included in the exhibition, as are prints by Paul Gavarni (1804-1866), who has been compared to Daumier.

The popularity of printmaking with impressionist artists contributed to the revival of the medium toward the end of the century. Edouard Manet’s (1832-1883) etchings titled L’Acteur Tragique [The Tragic Actor] and Olympia reflect the realistic, yet impressionistic style of his modern portraits. Mary Cassatt’s (1845-1926) La Coiffure [The Hairstyle], the only work in color in Passport to Paris, reflects the artist’s mastery of drypoint and aquatint in her prevalent theme of women and motherhood. James Jacques-Joseph Tissot’s (1836-1902) Le Hamoc [The Hammock] reflects an influence of Japanese prints in his depiction of a woman lying in her hammock. Other artists included in the exhibit are Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Odilon Redon, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, and Paul Gauguin.

Organized by the Georgia Museum of Art, University of Georgia, Athens, this exhibition was supported in part by the Georgia Council for the Arts through the appropriations of the Georgia General Assembly. The Council is a Partner Agency of the National Endowment for the Arts.

Back to Top

Back to Top

Explore

Plan Your
Visit Now

Loading...
OKC MOA Gallery 8234
icon arrow right@2x
Currently On View

Current Exhibitions

View our open exhibitions at the Oklahoma City Museum of Art. From delicate glass pieces to painted portraits, we have everything you are interested in.

Loading...
DSC8647 Enhanced NR
icon arrow right@2x
Upcoming

Calendar

Sign up for exhibition programming, film screenings in the Noble Theater, lively seasonal events, and more! There's always something exciting happening at OKCMOA.

Loading...
MoA Gift Shop LUX PRINT 13
icon arrow right@2x
Shop and Sip

Museum Store x Ganache

OKCMOA is pleased to invite you to Museum Store x Ganache, a partnership with Ganache Patisserie. In addition to the enhanced shopping experience in the new space, visitors can enjoy a full bar with coffee, cocktails, beer, wine, and grab-and-go options from Ganache, including sweet and savory items. 

Store

Shop Now

Adler Torino Bar lifestyle 1

Creative Gifts

Chihuly Spring Green Persian Glass

Chihuly Art

Phaidon multi book image

Books & Collectibles

icon search 2
OKCMOA Circle Logo transparent

415 Couch Drive
Oklahoma City, OK 73102

405.236.3100
Hours
Monday-TuesdayCLOSED
Wednesday:10 am-5 pm
Thursday:10 am-8 pm
Friday-Saturday:10 am-5 pm
Sunday:12-5 pm

CLOSED: Monday, Tuesday, and Major Holidays (Independence Day, Thanksgiving, Christmas Eve, Christmas Day, and New Year’s Day)

  • Visit
  • Art
  • Film
  • Store
  • Private Events

Support

  • Season Sponsors
  • Fundraisers
  • Annual Fund
  • Double Your Donation

Community

  • Moderns
  • Film Society
  • Outreach
  • Membership
  • Corporate Partnership

About

  • Departments
  • Contact
  • Annual Reports
  • History
  • Careers

Programs

  • Families
  • Educators
  • Adults
  • Outreach

News

  • Press
  • Blog
  • Films Blog

Select list(s) to subscribe to


By submitting this form, you are consenting to receive marketing emails from: . You can revoke your consent to receive emails at any time by using the SafeUnsubscribe® link, found at the bottom of every email. Emails are serviced by Constant Contact
Facebook Twitter Youtube Instagram Linkedin
Ratings BLK 4star
okcnp member badge black

Select list(s) to subscribe to


By submitting this form, you are consenting to receive marketing emails from: . You can revoke your consent to receive emails at any time by using the SafeUnsubscribe® link, found at the bottom of every email. Emails are serviced by Constant Contact

© Copyright OKCMOA

  • Visit
  • Art
  • Film
  • Shop
  • Visit
  • Art
  • Film
  • Shop
  • Get Tickets
  • Become a Member
  • Donate
  • Get Tickets
  • Become a Member
  • Donate
  • Calendar
  • Learn & Engage
  • FAQs
  • About
  • Support OKCMOA
  • Press
  • Calendar
  • Learn & Engage
  • FAQs
  • About
  • Support OKCMOA
  • Press
Instagram White Created with Lunacy Facebook White Created with Lunacy Twitter White Created with Lunacy
OKCMOA Circle Logo transparent

415 Couch Drive
Oklahoma City, OK 73102

405.236.3100
Hours
Monday-TuesdayCLOSED
Wednesday:10 am-5 pm
Thursday:10 am-8 pm
Friday-Saturday:10 am-5 pm
Sunday:12-5 pm

CLOSED: Monday, Tuesday, and Major Holidays (Independence Day, Thanksgiving, Christmas Eve, Christmas Day, and New Year’s Day)

Visit

Art

Exhibitions

Collection

Film

Store

Donate

Tickets

Membership

Calendar of Events

Learn & Engage

Private Events

About

  • Departments
  • Contact
  • Annual Reports
  • History
  • Careers

Support

  • Season Sponsors
  • Fundraisers
  • Annual Fund
  • Double Your Donation
  • Volunteer

Community

  • Membership
  • Moderns
  • Film Society
  • Corporate Partnership

Programs

  • Adults
  • Kids
  • Schools
  • Outreach

News

  • Press
  • Newsletters
  • Blog
  • Films Blog

Select list(s) to subscribe to


By submitting this form, you are consenting to receive marketing emails from: . You can revoke your consent to receive emails at any time by using the SafeUnsubscribe® link, found at the bottom of every email. Emails are serviced by Constant Contact
Facebook Twitter Youtube Instagram Linkedin
  • Artworks
  • Collections
  • Films
  • Events
  • Blog Posts

Admission

Exhibitions

Loading...

The Three Shades

Postwar Abstraction

Land Use: Humanity’s Interaction with Nature

Dale Chihuly: The Oklahoma Collection

Discovering Ansel Adams

CALENDAR

Exhibition Ticketing

Free

  • Members
  • Children (17 & Under)

$14.95 + tax

  • Adults

$12.95 + tax

  • Seniors (62+)
  • College Students

$9.95 + tax

  • Military
BUY TICKETS

Tours

(Per Person)

Free

  • p-12th Grade School Groups
    Children 17 & under

$11.95 + tax
/person

  • Adults (10 or More)

$9.95 + tax
/person

  • Senior Tours
    (10 or More)

$9.95+tax
/person

  • College Students (10 or more)
Schedule Tour

Film

Now Playing

Loading...
A Film Still from The Shrouds
May 9, 2025
- May 15, 2025
icon arrow right@2x

The Shrouds

View All Showtimes
FILM Tickets

Film Admission

$5

  • Film Society

$6

  • Military
  • Members
  • Adult groups of 15+ people
  • Children (12 and under)

$8

  • Seniors (62+)
  • School Tours
  • College Students
  • Teens (13-18)

$10

  • Adults

PLUS TAX

Current Screenings

Upcoming Screenings

Virtual Cinema