Clark Art Exhibition on French Artists Who Challenged Realism

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WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The Clark Art Institute presents an exhibition on mid-nineteenth-century French artists who looked beyond realistic subject matter. 
 
Their work encompasses the Gothic nostalgia of architectural photography, the social critique embedded in searing allegorical illustrations, and the literary connections with fantastical art. "Shadow Visionaries: French Artists Against the Current, 1840–70" is on view Dec. 20, 2025 through March 8, 2026 in the Clark Center lower level.
 
According to a press release:
 
Although Realism is often seen as the dominant aesthetic of mid-nineteenth-century France, many artists working outside of painting embraced imagination, dreams, and allegory instead. Working against the grain, figures such as Victor Hugo (1802–1885), Charles Meryon (1821–1868), and Rodolphe Bresdin (1822–1885)—and a roster of early photographers—offered an alternate vision anchored in memory, fantasy, and longing. These "shadow visionaries" recognized the potential of prints and photographs to construct a spiritual consciousness in the art of mid-1800s France.
 
"This exhibition gives us a wonderful opportunity to explore some of the treasures in our works on paper collection, along with a wide group of special loans from key French and American museums, through a fascinating lens," said Olivier Meslay, Hardymon Director of the Clark. "The style and subject matter of the works included in the exhibition explore the strange and the surreal, but above all, they provide a rare opportunity to appreciate the singular beauty of the work these artists were producing."
 
The exhibition features some 95 prints, drawings, and photographs drawn from the Clark’s collection along with important loans from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; the Art Institute of Chicago; the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.; the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; the Yale University Art Gallery, and Musée des Arts Décoratifs, Paris among others.
 
"Realism has been a stubborn watchword for French art of the mid-1800s, so it is fascinating and surprising to examine a group of artists from that moment who embraced a radically different style. Despite (or maybe because of) feeling out of sync with their times, these artists found beautiful and original modes of expression, using printmaking and photography to represent interior visions rather than visible reality," said exhibition curator Anne Leonard, Manton Curator of Prints, Drawings, and Photographs.

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Williamstown Planning Board, Consultants Discuss Subdivision Bylaw

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The Planning Board met recently with consultants who are helping the body develop amendments to the town's subdivision bylaw.
 
In a conversation set to continue at a special Planning Board meeting on Tuesday, April 28, representatives of Northampton architecture and civil engineering firms Dodson and Flinker and Berkshire Design Group outlined some of the decision points for the board as it develops a major revision of the bylaw.
 
Unlike the zoning bylaw, for which the Planning Board makes recommendations to town meeting, the subdivision bylaw is under the direct authority of the five-member elected board.
 
The Subdivision Control Law, Article 170 in the town code, was first adopted by the Planning Board in 1959. The current board is looking to do the first major revision to the rules that "guide the development of land into lots served with adequate roads and utilities," since 1993.
 
The town hired the Northampton consultants with the proceeds of a grant administered by the Berkshire Regional Planning Commission.
 
Dillon Sussman, a senior associate at Dodson and Flinker, laid out the scope of the project and the objectives of the board as conveyed to the consultants.
 
"What we understand of your goals for the project is to make small subdivision projects more economically feasible," Sussman said. "We've heard that you think that small subdivision projects are more likely … that there's not much land remaining [in Williamstown] for large projects. And you've had some experience with a small subdivision project that was difficult to fit in your current subdivision regulations."
 
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