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IRMELI DESENBERG, an art historian who has...

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IRMELI DESENBERG, an art historian who has taught in Orange County and elsewhere in Southern California since 1958, most recently at Newport Harbor Art Museum.

* Gateway Arch, St. Louis, by Eero Saarinen: “It’s aesthetically enormously pleasing. It’s a piece of sculpture, but functions as architecture. It’s very, very large, just by the Mississippi River, so that you see the river in a little different context. . . . Saarinen succeeded in making a monument to a historic moment in time.”

* “Giovanni Arnolfini and His Bride” by Jan van Eyck, National Gallery, London: “It’s a Northern Italian Renaissance painting, which is much less flamboyant than (paintings from Southern Italy). It’s very gentle, the content is very touching. It’s a man and his wife holding hands after their wedding, and she holds a beautiful piece of silk in her hands and (the painting) makes her look as if she’s pregnant. There’s a mirror in the back (of the room), and he and his wife are reflected in the mirror and the colors are completely complimentary to each other. . . . It’s like a jewel, a small jewel.”

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* “Le Dejeuner sur l’herbe”, Edouard Manet, Galerie du Jeu de Paume, Paris: “That has twofold pleasure for me. It’s the beginning of the great break with the Renaissance vision, and it has a good outdoor feeling, and Manet has used color, both flesh color and blacks and greens, in the same rich manner that Goya and Velazquez did. . . . For me, it’s one of the high points of Manet’s art.”

* “The Dance,” Henri Matisse, The Hermitage, St. Petersburg: “I was there last summer, and I thought I’d never get to see (that painting) in my lifetime, and it almost made me cry. It’s a rendition of pure visual pleasure, delight and good things. He used these strong, very simple colors; it only has three colors, and yet it’s such a superb painting.”

* “Villa R.,” Paul Klee, Kunstmuseum, Basel, Germany: “It’s very small and very funny, and, of course, witty, and they are are very, very few witty paintings that aren’t caricatures or satirical. It’s not a (Paul) Conrad (political) cartoon! It’s delicate, it’s not sweet . . . Unlike the other three (paintings I listed), where the color predominates, Klee works with line. Since I grew up (nearby in Germany) during a period where he worked at the Bauhaus (School) in Germany, I have always known about him.”

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