ART GALLERYMORETTI FINE ART

Ward Moretti Ltd. is a dealership between Emma Ward, former Managing Director of Dickinson Gallery, and partner Fabrizio Moretti, renowned Old Master Paintings and Sculpture dealer.

Focused primarily on high quality 19th and 20th Century artworks from the Impressionist, Post-Impressionist, Modern and Post-War periods, and covering all mediums from painting and sculpture to works on paper, Ward Moretti Ltd. has its own gallery entrance at 12 Duke Street, the right hand side of the newly renovated Moretti Fine Art gallery, on Duke Street St James's. Offering a bespoke, discreet, end-to-end service, Ward Moretti Ltd. works with collectors looking for trusted, knowledgeable advice on all aspects of buying, valuing, conserving and selling artworks, whether at auction, private sales, commercial galleries or fairs.

Open every day from 10am to 6pm during the Monaco Art Week


MORETTI FINE ART
27, Avenue de la Costa
98000 Monaco
www.morettigallery.com
monaco@morettigallery.com
tel. +377 99 99 09 70

EXHIBITIONImpressionism: Painting from Nature4-21 July

Ward Moretti presents, in collaboration with Moretti Gallery, a curated selling exhibition of Impressionist pictures at Moretti’s Monte Carlo premises, Impressionism: Painting from Nature. This show, opening during Monaco Art Week, coincides with the Grimaldi Forum’s summer exhibition Monet in Full Light, which celebrates the 140th anniversary of the artist’s first visit to the Riviera.

Impressionism: Painting from Nature, will feature works by some of the most prominent names from the Impressionist movement. The show is led by Pierre-Auguste Renoir’s Jeune Fille lisant (1890), a tender depiction of a young girl absorbed in a book. Other highlights include two landscapes by Renoir, and further bucolic views of the countryside by Jean-François Millet, and – from the other side of the Atlantic – Childe Hassam. Post-Impressionism is represented by Édouard Vuillard’s Madame Vuillard cousant (1895) and Pierre Bonnard’s glowing still life Fleurs rouges (1892).