Monet at Giverny
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Monet at Giverny
Prestel, c1994
- : English ed.
- Other Title
-
Pegasus library (Prestel)
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Note
Bibliography: p. 113-114
Translated from the French and from the German by John Brownjohn ; biography translated by Anne Heritage
Description and Table of Contents
Description
In May 1883 the French Impressionist painter Claude Monet settled with his family in Giverny, a small village on the Seine northwest of Paris. There, amidst the romantic garden landscape that Monet himself helped to design - including his own house and studio, greenhouses, ponds, and a Japanese-style bridge - the most fascinating and mature works of his last forty years came into being. In this volume Sagner-Duchting examines three important series that Monet painted in the immediate vicinity of Giverny: the Grain Stacks, the Poplars, and the Early Morning on the Seine series. In addition to providing a fascinating look at the influence of Giverny and its surroundings on his work, the author discusses Monet's innovative "open form, " exemplified by the paintings in his famous Waterlilies series. With these late works, Monet diverged from traditional pictorial ideas and came to be recognized as a pioneer of modern art.
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