Claude Monet Biography

in full Oscar-Claude Monet

(1840–1926)

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Related Works

  • 1865 View of the Coast at Le Havre (Minneapolis Institute of Arts, Minnesota)
  • 1866 Madame Gaudibert (Louvre, Paris)
  • 1866 The Terrace at Sainte-Adresse (Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City)
  • 1867 Women in a Garden (Musée d'Orsay, Paris)
  • 1870 The Beach at Trouville (Tate, London)
  • 1871 The Thames and the Houses of Parliament (Lord Astor of Hever Collection, London)
  • 1872 Impression: Fog (Musée Marmottan, Paris)
  • 1872 Impression: Sunrise (Musée Marmottan, Paris)
  • 1873 Wild Poppies (Louvre, Paris)
  • 1876 La Japonaise (Museum of Fine Arts, Boston)
  • 1880 The Artist's Garden at Vétheuil (National Gallery of Art, Washington DC)
  • 1887 La Gare St Lazare (National Gallery, London)
  • 1888 Poplars at Giverny, Sunrise (Museum of Modern Art, New York City)
  • 1890–1 Haystacks (Art Institute of Chicago)
  • 1903 Houses of Parliament, Sunlight Effect
  • 1914–17 Yellow and Lilac Water-Lilies
  • c.1920 Water Lilies (Museum of Modern Art, New York City)
  • c.1920–2 The Japanese Footbridge (Museum of Modern Art, New York City)
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Claude Monet

(born November 14, 1840, Paris, France—died December 5, 1926, Giverny) French painter who was the initiator, leader, and unswerving advocate of the Impressionist style. In his mature works, Monet developed his method of producing repeated studies of the same motif in series, changing canvases with the light or as his interest shifted. These series were frequently exhibited in groups—for example, his images of haystacks (1891) and the Rouen Cathedral (1894). At his home in Giverny, Monet created the water-lily pond that served as inspiration for his last series of paintings. His popularity soared in the second half of the 20th century, when his works traveled the world in museum exhibitions that attracted record-breaking crowds and marketed popular commercial items featuring imagery from his art.

Childhood and early works

When Claude, the eldest son of Adolphe Monet, a grocer, was five years old, the family moved to the Normandy coast, near Le Havre, where his father took over the management of his family's thriving ship-chandlering and grocery business. This event has more than biographical significance, for it was Monet's childhood, spent along the beaches, and the intimate knowledge he gained of the sea and the rapidly shifting Norman weather, that would one day give rise to his fresh vision of nature. Monet's first success as an artist came when he was 15, with the sale of caricatures that were carefully observed and well drawn. In these early years he also executed pencil sketches of sailing ships, which were almost technical in their clear descriptiveness. His aunt, Marie-Jeanne Lecadre, was an amateur painter, and, perhaps at her suggestion, Claude went to study drawing with a local artist. But his life as a painter did not begin until he was befriended by Eugène Boudin, who introduced the somewhat arrogant student to the practice—then uncommon—of painting in the open air. The experience set the direction for Monet, who for more than 60 years would concentrate on visible phenomena and on the innovation of effective methods to transform perception into pigment.

Although oil landscapes had been painted at least since the 16th century, they usually were produced in the studio—recollections, rather than direct impressions, of observations of nature. The English painters John Constable and J.M.W. Turner made small oil sketches out-of-doors before 1810, but it is unlikely that Monet knew these studies. He first visited Paris in 1859–60, where he was impressed by the work of the Barbizon-school painters Charles Daubigny and Constant Troyon. To his family's annoyance, he refused to enroll in the École des Beaux-Arts. Instead, he frequented the haunts of advanced artists and worked at the Académie Suisse, where he met Camille Pissarro. This informal training was interrupted by a call to military service; he served from 1861 to 1862 in Algeria, where he was excited by the African light and colour. Monet's choice of Algeria for service was perhaps a result of his admiration for the Romantic painter Eugène Delacroix, whose colouristic work had been influenced by a visit to Morocco in 1832.

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