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Claude Monet |
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Monet, Claude
(Claude-Oscar Monet). Born Feb. 14, 1840, in Paris; died Dec. 6, 1926, in Giverny, Normandy. French landscape painter. One of the founders of impressionism. Monet studied with L. E. Boudin in Le Havre from 1858 to 1859, at the Academic Suisse from 1859 to 1860, and at C. Gleyre’s atelier in Paris from 1862 to 1863. Building on the achievements of the masters of the Barbizon school and of Boudin in plein air painting, from the second half of the 1860’s Monet tried to use plein air techniques to capture changeable effects of light and air and the rich colors of the outdoors (The Picnic, 1866, the A. S. Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts, Moscow; La Grenouillere, 1869, the Metropolitan Museum, New York). Beginning in the late 1860’s, he devoted himself exclusively to landscapes, treating the human figure as one of the landscape’s natural elements. In his paintings he tried to achieve the impression of softly vibrating air and of forms enveloped by it by using small, fragmented strokes of pure colors not mixed on the palette. He intended that the colors coalesce when viewed. The landscape was re-created by him as an individual particle of eternal matter quivering with a perpetual inner movement, as if it had been snatched for a moment from the constantly changing stream of life (Boulevard des Capucines, 1873, and Rocks at Belle-Ile, 1886; both in the A. S. Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts). Seeking to capture the protean state of nature and the atmosphere at various times of day and in different kinds of weather, in the 1890’s Monet created several series of paintings, each depicting the same theme (the Haystacks, 1890–91, and Rouen Cathedral, 1893–95). Characteristic of his later works is a trend toward a greater dissolution of the material qualities of the objective world in a quivering, almost unreal environment (London Fog, 1903, the Hermitage, Leningrad), increasing conventional decorativeness, and a deliberately sketchy execution (the Water Lilies, a series of panels, 1914—22; the Orangerie, Paris). WORKS“Pis’ma.” [Translated from French; preface and commentary by N. V. lavorskaia.] In Mastera iskusstva ob iskusstve, vol. 5, book 1. Moscow, 1969. Pages 87–108.REFERENCESReutersvärd, O. Klod Mone. Moscow, 1965. (Translated from Swedish.)K. Mone. [Album of reproductions; author of text and compiler, I. Sapego.] Leningrad, 1969. Hoschedé, J.-P. Claude Monet, ce mal connu, 2 vols. Geneva, 1960. V. A. KALMYKOV Want to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit the webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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