
Claude Monet
1840–1926 · Frankreich · Impressionismus
Die Geschichte
In April 1874 a group of painters, tired of being turned away by the official Salon, hung their own show in a photographer's old studio on the Boulevard des Capucines in Paris. Monet sent a loose harbour scene of his home town, Le Havre, at dawn, and called it Impression, Sunrise. A critic seized on that one word to mock the whole room, and the insult stuck as a label: Impressionism. Monet was 33, and he would spend the next 50 years making the joke look like a prophecy.
The pull was always the same thing, light on a surface as it actually changed, minute to minute. He painted the same haystack, the same cathedral front, again and again at different hours, chasing the moment before it moved. In 1883 he rented a house at Giverny, a village north-west of Paris, and over years turned its grounds into the motif he never had to leave, a pond fed by a diverted arm of a small river, a Japanese bridge, and water lilies. He had to petition local officials for the water rights, and some neighbours worried his strange plants would poison the stream. For the last two decades of his life that pond was almost his only subject, and he made around 250 paintings of it.
Those final years were hard. His second wife Alice died in 1911, his eldest son Jean in 1914, and his own eyes were clouding with cataracts that dragged his colours toward muddy red and brown. He kept painting the lilies anyway, the canvases growing wilder as he saw less. After an operation partly restored his sight he looked at some of what he had made half-blind and burned it. The huge water-lily panels he gave to the French state still hang in two oval rooms of the Orangerie in Paris, set low and curved so a viewer stands inside the pond he could barely see.
Werke
139 Werke
Impression, SonnenaufgangClaude Monet, 1872
Garten in Sainte-AdresseClaude Monet, 1867
Frau mit Sonnenschirm – Madame Monet und ihr SohnClaude Monet, 1875
Frauen im GartenClaude Monet, 1866
Die ElsterClaude Monet, 1868
Das Frühstück im GrünenClaude Monet, 1865
Frau im GartenClaude Monet, 1867
La GrenouillèreClaude Monet, 1869
Madame Monet im Kimono (La Japonaise)Claude Monet, 1876
Regatta bei ArgenteuilClaude Monet, 1872
Regatta bei Sainte-AdresseClaude Monet, 1867
Der Garten des Künstlers in GivernyClaude Monet, 1900
San Giorgio Maggiore in der DämmerungClaude Monet, 1908
Der Strand von PourvilleClaude Monet, 1882
FrühlingClaude Monet, 1872
Mohnfeld bei ArgenteuilClaude Monet, 1873
Bootsfahrt auf der EpteClaude Monet, 1890
Boulevard des CapucinesClaude Monet, 1873
Ein Karren auf der verschneiten Straße bei HonfleurClaude Monet, 1867
CamilleClaude Monet, 1866
Häuser am AchterzaanClaude Monet, 1871
Landschaft. Die Seine bei AsnièresClaude Monet, 1873
Schnee in ArgenteuilClaude Monet, 1875
Der Canal GrandeClaude Monet, 1908
Das MittagessenClaude Monet, 1873