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Publié par
Date de parution
04 juillet 2023
Nombre de lectures
0
EAN13
9781781605905
Langue
English
Publié par
Date de parution
04 juillet 2023
Nombre de lectures
0
EAN13
9781781605905
Langue
English
Author: Nathalia Brodskaya
Text: Nina Kalitina
Layout: Baseline Co Ltd
61A - 63 A Vo Van Tan
4 th Floor
District 3 , Ho Chi Minh City,
Vietnam.
© Confidential Concepts, worldwide, USA
© Parkstone Press International, New York, USA
All rights reserved
No part of this publication may be reproduced or adapted without the permission of the copyright holder, throughout the world. Unless otherwise specified, copyright on the works reproduced lies with the respective photographers. Despite intensive research, it has not always been possible to establish copyright ownership. Where this is the case, we would appreciate notification.
ISBN: 978-1-78160-590-5
Nathalia Brodskaya
Claude
Monet
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
1. Towing a Boat. Honfleur , 1864.
2. Le Pavé de Chailly in the Forest of Fontainebleau , 1865.
3. The Mouth of the Seine at Honfleur , 1865.
4. Woman in a Green Dress (Camille) , 1866.
5. Ladies in the Garden , 1866.
6. Luncheon on the Grass , 1866.
7. Garden in Blossom , 1866.
8. Boats in the Harbour of Honfleur , 1866.
9. Lady in the Garden (Sainte-Adresse) , 1867.
10. The Luncheon , 1868.
11. Portrait of Madame Gaudibert , 1868.
12. On the Bank of the Seine, Bennecourt , 1868.
13. The Café “La Grenouillère” , 1869.
14. Bougival Bridge , 1870.
15. Entrance to the Port of Trouville , 1870.
16. The Thames and the Houses of Parliament , 1871.
17. Camille Monet at the Window , 1873.
18. The Poppy Field in Argenteuil , 1873.
19. Impression. Sunrise , 1873.
20. Boulevard des Capucines , 1873.
21. The Beach at Sainte-Adresse , 1867.
22. Road Bridge at Argenteuil , 1874.
23. The Studio Boat , 1874.
24. Turkeys , 1876.
25. La Japonaise (Camille Monet in Japanese Costume) (detail) , 1876.
26. The Walk. Woman with a Parasol, 1875.
27. Saint-Lazare Station , 1877.
28. Tracks Coming Out of Saint-Lazare Station , 1877.
29. Saint-Lazare Station, Outside , 1877.
30. Rue Saint-Denis, 30th of June 1878 Celebration , 1878.
31. Camille on her Deathbed , 1879.
32. Bouquet of Sunflowers , 1881.
33. Monet’s Garden in Vétheuil , 1881.
34. Etretat, Sunset , 1883.
35. Bordighera , 1884.
36. The Rocks at Belle-Ile , 1886.
37. Cliffs at Etretat , 1886.
38. Study of a Figure Outdoors (facing right) , 1886.
39. Study of a Figure Outdoors (facing left) , 1886.
40. Under the Poplars, Effect of Sunlight , 1887.
41. Landscape with Figures, Giverny, “Figures in the Sun” , 1888.
42. Haystacks in Giverny, Sunset , 1888-1889.
43. Poppy Field , 1890.
44. The Poplars, Effect of White and Yellow , 1891.
45. The Poplars, Three Purple Trees, Autumn , 1891.
46. Haystacks, End of an Autumn Day , 1891.
47. Rouen Cathedral in the Evening , 1892.
48. Rouen Cathedral, Symphony in Grey and Purple, 1892.
49. Rouen Cathedral , 1892.
50. Time The Portal, Fog in the Morning , 1893.
51. Branch of the Seine near Giverny at Daybreak , 1897.
52. Morning on the Seine, Clear Weather , 1897.
53. Branch of the Seine near Giverny , Fog, 1897.
54. Pond with Water-Lilies , 1897-1899.
55. Waterloo Bridge. Effect of Mist , 1903.
56. The Houses of Parliament, Sunset , 1900-1901.
57. Water-Lilies, Landscape of Water, the Clouds , 1903.
58. Purple Water-Lilies , 1897-1899.
59. Water-Lilies , 1903.
60. Water-Lilies , 1908.
61. Water-Lilies , 1908.
62. Water-Lilies , 1914-1917.
63. Water-Lilies , 1915.
64. The Grand Canal , 1908.
65. Palazzio Ducal , 1908.
66. Palazzio Dario , 1908.
1. Towing a Boat . Honfleur , 1864.
Oil on canvas, 55.5 x 82 cm.
Memorial Art Gallery of the
University of Rochester, Rochester, NY.
Numerous portraits of Monet have survived — self-portraits, the works of his friends (Manet and Renoir among others), photographs by Carjat and Nadar — all of them reproducing his features at various stages in his life. Many literary descriptions of Monet ’ s physical appearance have come down to us as well, particularly after he had become well-known and much in demand by art critics and journalists.
In 1919, when Monet was living almost as a recluse at Giverny, not far from Vernon-sur-Seine, he had a visit from Fernand L é ger, who saw him as “ a shortish gentleman in a panama hat and elegant light-grey suit of English cut … He had a large white beard, a pink face and little eyes that were bright and cheerful but with perhaps a slight hint of mistrust …” [1] Both the visual and the literary portraits of Monet depict him as an unstable, restless figure. Monet ’ s abrupt changes of mood, his constant dissatisfaction with himself, his spontaneous decisions, stormy emotions and cold meticulousness, his consciousness of himself as a personality moulded by the preoccupations of his age, set against his extreme individualism — taken together these features elucidate much in Monet ’ s creative processes and attitudes towards his own work. Claude-Oscar Monet was born in Paris on November 14th, 1840, but all his impressions as a child and adolescent were linked with Le Havre, the town where his family moved in about 1845. The surroundings in which the boy grew up were not conducive to artistic studies: Monet ’ s father ran a grocery business and turned a deaf ear to his son ’ s desire to become an artist. Le Havre boasted no museum collections of significance, no exhibitions, no school of art. The gifted boy had to content himself with the advice of his aunt, who painted merely for personal pleasure, and the directions of his school-teacher. The most powerful impression on the young Monet in Normandy was made by his acquaintance with the artist Eug è ne Boudin. It was Boudin who discouraged Monet from spending his time on the caricatures that brought him his initial success as an artist, and urged him to turn to landscape painting. Boudin recommended that Monet observe the sea and the sky and study people, animals, buildings and trees in the light, in the air. He said: “ Everything that is painted directly on the spot has a strength, a power, a sureness of touch that one doesn ’ t find again in the studio ” [2] . These words could serve as an epigraph to Monet ’ s work. Monet ’ s further development took place in Paris, and then again in Normandy, but this time in the company of artists.