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*1840-1926

Europe

Monet

Claude

55

Artist ID:

The early work up to the mid-1860s comprises realistic paintings, some of which Monet exhibited at the Paris Salon. In the late 1860s Claude Monet began to paint Impressionist paintings. An example of his paintings from this creative period is Impression, Sunrise, a harbour view of Le Havre, which gave the name to the whole movement. He thus moved away from the taste of the time, influenced by the traditional art academies, which worsened his financial situation. In the 1870s Monet took part in some of the Impressionist exhibitions, which also included artists such as Pierre-Auguste Renoir and Edgar Degas, and was particularly encouraged by the art dealer Paul Durand-Ruel.

Claude Monet (* 14 November 1840 in Paris; † 5 December 1926 in Giverny, born Oscar-Claude Monet) was a French painter, a founder of French Impressionist painting and the most consistent and prolific exponent of that movement's philosophy of expressing one's perceptions in front of nature, particularly in relation to landscape painting in the open air. The term "Impressionism" derives from the title of his painting Impression, soleil levant (Impression, Sunrise), exhibited in 1874 at the first Salon des Refusés (Exhibition of the Committee), which Monet and his collaborators organised as an alternative to the Salon de Paris.

Claude Monet (* 14 November 1840 in Paris; † 5 December 1926 in Giverny, born Oscar-Claude Monet) was a French painter, a founder of French Impressionist painting and the most consistent and prolific exponent of that movement's philosophy of expressing one's perceptions in front of nature, particularly in relation to landscape painting in the open air. The term "Impressionism" derives from the title of his painting Impression, soleil levant (Impression, Sunrise), exhibited in 1874 at the first Salon des Refusés (Exhibition of the Committee), which Monet and his collaborators organised as an alternative to the Salon de Paris.

World of Art

Poppy Field

131

Art ID

1873

|

50,0 x 65,0 cm

Oil on canvas

85000000

$

Claude

Monet

World of Art

The Argenteuil Bridge

125

Art ID

1840-1926

|

60,5 x 80,0 cm

Oil on canvas

85000000

$

Claude

Monet

World of Art

Water Lilies

122

Art ID

1919

|

101,0 x 200,0 cm

Oil on canvas

120000000

$

Claude

Monet

World of Art

White Water Lilies

129

Art ID

1899

|

89,0 x 93,0 cm

Oil on canvas

85000000

$

Claude

Monet

World of Art

Water Lilies I

128

Art ID

1905

|

89,5 x 100,3 cm

Oil on canvas

65000000

$

Claude

Monet

World of Art

Haystacks, end of Summer

130

Art ID

1891

|

60,5 x 100,5 cm

Oil on canvas

112100000

$

Claude

Monet

World of Art

The Waterlily Pond, Harmony in Pink

123

Art ID

1900

|

101,0 x 112,0 cm

Oil on canvas

65000000

$

Claude

Monet

World of Art

The Magpie

127

Art ID

1868-1869

|

89,0 x 130,0 cm

Oil on canvas

110000000

$

Claude

Monet

World of Art

Bridge over a Pond of Water Lilies

124

Art ID

1899

|

93,0 x 74,0 cm

Oil on canvas

85000000

$

Claude

Monet

World of Art

Fields in spring

126

Art ID

1887

|

74,3 x 93,0 cm

Oil on canvas

85000000

$

Claude

Monet

World of Art

The Houses of Parliament, London, with the sun breaking through the fog

121

Art ID

1904

|

81,0 x 92,0 cm

Oil on canvas

85000000

$

Claude

Monet

Further Works of This Artist

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Monet's desire to document the French landscape led him to paint the same scene over and over again to capture the changing light and passing of the seasons. From 1883 Monet lived in Giverny, where he bought a house and land and began an extensive landscape project that included lily ponds, which would become the subject of his most famous works. He began painting the water lilies in 1899, first in vertical views with a Japanese bridge as the central feature, and later in the series of large-scale paintings that occupied him continuously for the next 20 years of his life. Monet's financial situation remained strained until the 1890s. It was during this period that Monet developed the concept of the series, according to which he painted a motif in different light moods. He also began to lay out his famous garden in Giverny, which he subsequently also used as a motif for his paintings.

The early work up to the mid-1860s comprises realistic paintings, some of which Monet exhibited at the Paris Salon. In the late 1860s Claude Monet began to paint Impressionist paintings. An example of his paintings from this creative period is Impression, Sunrise, a harbour view of Le Havre, which gave the name to the whole movement. He thus moved away from the taste of the time, influenced by the traditional art academies, which worsened his financial situation. In the 1870s Monet took part in some of the Impressionist exhibitions, which also included artists such as Pierre-Auguste Renoir and Edgar Degas, and was particularly encouraged by the art dealer Paul Durand-Ruel.

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