Claude Monet’s garden at Giverny is one of the most popular once-private gardens in the world. While more than half a million people regularly descend upon this otherwise quiet corner of Normandy, countless more experience the lush natural beauty of his estate from around the world via the hundreds of paintings that he created of it during the last 43 years of his life.
A new exhibition at the Gemeentemuseum in the Netherlands is set to bring together many of the artist’s greatest late canvases from Giverny. Monet – The Garden Paintings will focus upon works produced from 1900 onwards and chart his search for abstraction in his own backyard.
Claude Monet first set eyes on what would be his new home in Giverny in April 1883 while idly looking out of a train window en route to Gasny.
The following month, he rented the house – known as Clos Normand – and two acres of land that he would purchase outright seven years later. Much like his paintings, Monet didn’t shy away from colour when it came to decorating his home, from the pink exterior to the Cerulean Blue kitchen and bright yellow dining room.
The garden was as meticulously composed as one of Monet’s canvases too. He gave daily notes and precise planting diagrams to a succession of gardeners who carried out the work. As Giverny resident Claire Joyes noted in her book, Claude Monet at Giverny, the French artist “established a number of basic principles to which he always adhered: bare earth was anathema to him; he avoided dark flowers; conversely, he could never get enough of blue... he abhored single flowers, permitting double blooms only in roses and herbaceous peonies; and he loathed variegated foliage.”
Bu hikaye Artists & Illustrators dergisinin October 2019 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye Artists & Illustrators dergisinin October 2019 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
Still life IN 3 HOURS
Former BP Portrait Award runner-up FELICIA FORTE guides you through a simple, structured approach to painting alla prima that tackles dark, average and light colours in turn
Movement in composition
Through an analysis of three masterworks, landscape painter and noted author MITCHELL ALBALA shows how you can animate landscape composition with movement
Shane Berkery
The Irish-Japanese artist talks to REBECCA BRADBURY about the innovative concepts and original colour combinations he brings to his figurative oil paintings from his Dublin garden studio
The Working Artist
Something old, something new... Our columnist LAURA BOSWELL has expert advice for balancing fresh ideas with completing half-finished work
Washes AND GLAZES
Art Academy’s ROB PEPPER introduces an in-depth guide to incorporating various techniques into your next masterpiece. Artwork by STAN MILLER, CHRIS ROBINSON and MICHELE ILLING
Hands
LAURA SMITH continues her new four-part series, which encourages you to draw elements of old master paintings, and this month’s focus is on capturing hands
Vincent van Gogh
To celebrate The Courtauld’s forthcoming landmark display of the troubled Dutch master’s self-portraits, STEVE PILL looks at the stories behind 10 of the most dramatic works on display
BRING THE drama
Join international watercolour maestro ALVARO CASTAGNET in London’s West End to paint a dramatic street scene
Serena Rowe
The Scottish painter tells STEVE PILL why time is precious, why emotional responses to colour are useful, and how she finds focus every day with the help of her studio wall
Bill Jacklin
Chatting over Zoom as he recovers from appendicitis, the Royal Academician tells STEVE PILL about classic scrapes in New York and his recent experiments with illustration