
Claude
Monet is generally considered to be the most outstanding figure
among Impressionists. The term Impressionism derives from his
picture Impression: Sunrise. A title was needed in a hurry for the
catalogue of the exhibition in 1874. Monet suggested simply
Impression, and the catalogue editor,
Renoir's brother Edouard,
added an explanatory Sunrise. The artist was not to know that
because of criticism which seized upon the first word he had given
the entire movement its name. Monet's concern was to reflect the
influence of light on a subject. He never abandoned his
Impressionist painting style until his death in 1926 when Fauvism
and Cubism were en vogue and when abstract painting came into
existence. Claude Monet was born on November 14, 1840 on the fifth floor of 45 rue Laffitte,
in the ninth arrondissement of Paris. He was the second son of Claude-Adolphe
and Louise-Justine Aubrée Monet, both of them second-generation Parisians.
In 1845, his family moved to
Le Havre in
Normandy.
His father wanted him to go into the family grocery business, but Monet wanted
to become an artist. On the first of April 1851, Monet entered the Le Havre secondary school of the
arts. He first became known locally for his charcoal caricatures, which he would
sell for ten to twenty
francs.
Close to his home was a little shop owned by a marine painter, Mr.
Eugene Boudin. He recognized the talent of the boy and gave him his
first painting lessons. On January 28, 1857 Claude Monet's mother
died. He was 16 years old when he left school and went to live with
his widowed childless aunt, Marie-Jeanne Lecadre. |
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"I want the unobtainable. Other artists paint a bridge, a house, a boat, and
that's the end. They are finished. I want to paint the air which surrounds the
bridge, the house, the boat, the beauty of the air in which these objects are
located, and that is nothing short of impossible." - Monet. Claude
Monet turned away from the traditional style of
painting inside a studio. With his new friends he went outside in
the Fontainebleau forest to paint in the open air. But the public
and art critics ridiculed these new paintings that looked so
different from any conventional art style. In a caricature published in a newspaper, they
were mocked with the proposal of chasing away the Prussian enemy by
showing them Impressionist paintings. When the Franco-Prussian war
of 1870-1871 broke out, Monet chose to go to London with his friend
Pissarro. There he saw the paintings of William Turner
in the
museums of London. After 1880 the public slowly begun to recognize
the value of impressionism. Claude Monet and his friends could
finally get some solid income from the sales of their paintings. In
1883 Monet rented a house in Giverny about 50 kilometers outside of
Paris. Later, in 1890, he bought the house where he would stay
until his death in 1926. |
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Monet
and his friend, artist Frédéric Bazille occupied a joint studio in
Paris in 1865. Monet showed two maritime paintings in the Salon and
encouraged by the positive reviews, he ambitiously started a
large-format figurative painting, "The Picnic". Here, he is first
reported to have met Camille Doncieux who works as a model for the
painting, together with Bazille. The Picnic is not completed in time for the Salon, so Monet paints the
life-sized portrait Camille. The critics praise the painting; for many, it calls
to mind the works of Edouard Manet. On account of his great success in the Salon, Monet’s relatives continue to back
him for a while, and he is able to paint without financial worries in the summer
of 1866. Soon though, Monet is once again in financial straits. Monet's family refuses to
support him any longer, and the painting "Women in the Garden "is
rejected by the jury of the Salon. In spring, it turns out that
Camille is expecting a child. The numerous pleas for help Monet
sends to Bazille give evidence of how hopeless his situation is.
Camille gives birth to their first child, Jean in 1867. In 1868, due to financial
reasons, Monet attempted suicide by throwing himself into the Seine.
Despite the boldness of his color and the extreme
simplicity of his compositions, Monet was recognized as a master of
meticulous observation and an artist who sacrificed neither the true
complexities of nature nor the intensity of his own feelings.
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In the 1880s and 1890s,
Monet began "series" painting, repetitive paintings of one subject
in varying light and viewpoints.
The first
subject were the haystacks behind his house. As the light changed
during the day faster than he could paint, he worked simultaneously
on several canvases. At the end he had painted 25 different versions
of the hay stacks.
In his late years Claude Monet suffered from
physical problems. After 1907 his bad eyesight and rheumatism made
it more and more impossible for him to paint. But he continued until
the year of his death. The great project over the last years was
centered around his garden with a pond of water lilies and a
Japanese bridge. He had even constructed a studio in his garden, so
that he could paint more easily without being exposed to the weather
outside. In February 1926, at the age of 83, he could
finish the last great challenge of his life - a commission by the
French government for 22 mural paintings of water lilies. On
December 5, 1926 Claude Monet died from lung cancer. |
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