La Japonaise (Madame Monet en costume japonais)

Claude Monet, Madame Monet wearing a kimono, 1876. Wikimedia Commons. · PD

La Japonaise (Madame Monet en costume japonais)


Détails

Année
1876
Technique
huile sur toile
Type
peinture
Dimensions
231,8 × 142,3 cm

L'histoire

By 1876 Paris was in the grip of a craze for all things Japanese, which had poured in after the country opened to Western trade a few years earlier. Monet was badly short of money, and he made this enormous canvas to catch the fashion and sell high. His wife Camille modelled, wrapped in a borrowed red kimono against a wall of fans. Her own hair was dark, so he sat a blonde wig on her head, making sure no one mistook her for anything but a Frenchwoman playing dress-up. It went into the second Impressionist exhibition that spring alongside 18 other pictures of his. He later called the thing a piece of filth, made for the money, and the money did come. It sold for over 2,000 francs, several times what his quieter landscapes were fetching.

La Japonaise (Madame Monet en costume japonais) — Claude Monet — MuseScope