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CLAUDE
MONET During the 1860s, Monet divided his time between his
childhood-home on the Normandy coast, La Grenouillere was a riverside bathing and boating resort, popular among weekend trip-pers during the Second Empire (1852-1870) and after. It had a floating restaurant which is seen in another of the paintings executed by Monet during his two-month stay there in the late summer of 1869, and it appears in similar works by Renoir often painted sitting alongside Monet. The resort was situated on the Ile de Croissy, facing the left bank of the Seine. In Monet's picture, which looks north-easterly, the afternoon light falls from behind the artist - a lighting effect he would have seen in Manet's studio work. However, although this full-face light is used, it is not exploited for the overall brilliance it gives to more open scenery. Monet only turned to this device in the 18 70s. Instead, because of the close prox-imity of dense, overhanging trees, Monet has produced a study with alternating blocks of dark pierced by patches of dazzling sunlight, resulting in contrasts of light and shade remini-scent of Manet's work from the early 1860s. The juicy quality of Monet's paint is also similar to that found in Manet's work of this decade. Unlike Manet's work, this painting was exe-cuted outdoors, and the brushwork is a witness to the speed required to capture the transitory effects which such scenery offered. The paint layer is generally opaque and hides the white ground, except in the most sketchily executed area, the upper right-hand corner. However, the white ground has helped retain the brilli-ance of the paint layer, which has recently been cleaned. A letter from Monet to his friend, the artist Frederic Bazille (1841-1870) on 25 September 1869, when he was working at La Grenouillere, makes it clear that Monet was still working in the traditional manner, seeing studies like this as preparatory work for larger, possibly studio executed works. In this painting, Monet's brushwork is vigorous and the
individually distinguishable d brushmarks indicate that hog's hair brushes
between about l-2cm (2/5 - 4/5
in) wide were used. There is little variation between the size of e stroke
in foreground and background to sug-gest depth, although more uniformly
straight horizontal strokes and pastel shades on the distant water aid
the impression of depth and s recession. His brushwork is strongly descriptive,
catching the character of different forms. Long s unbroken strokes outline
the boats, short hori-zontal daubs indicate the foreground water, abrupt
jabs are used for flowers and foliage. Monet's palette for this picture was already I fairly limited, moving toward the restricted range of the Impressionists. Black - the absence l of light - appears to have been abandoned, confirming his move away from Manet's influ-ence. Most of the colors typically found in Monet's Impressionist palette are already in evidence. Vermilion, one of the few traditional colors used by Monet, has been identified virtually pure in the red flowers on the left, and mixed with other colors elsewhere. The greens were viridian, emerald and chrome, the latter a commercially produced mixture of Prussian blue and chrome yellow widely mark-eted in the period. All three greens were modern colors. Chrome yellow and lemon yellow mixed, were used in the brightest greens of the background trees. Because of their tendency to blacken in the presence of sulphides, the chrome yellows were abandoned by most of the Impressionists toward the end of the 1870s. Monet replaced them with the more stable cadmium yellows. Cobalt violet, available from 1859, was the first opaque pure violet pigment to appear on the market and was therefore rapidly adopted by artists. It was used here by Monet in mixtures, for example in the foreground water. The early eighteenth century invention, Prussian blue, was used by Monet in the darkest mixtures, such as the swimming costumes, while cobalt blue is the bright blue of the water. Lead white was con-sistently used by Monet throughout his career, but. as strong contrasts form the basis of this composition, its role in this picture was rela-tively limited. In his paintings from the 1870s on, lead white was liberally used in most of his color mixtures, bringing with it a new overall brilliance and pale pastel-like quality, as he sought to depict the light tones and minimal light-dark contrasts of full sunlit landscapes. Interestingly, a family of colors commonly I used by Monet from the early 1870s, the red alizarin lakes , has not been identified on this picture. The artificial alizarin, more permanent than the natural organic root derivative mad-der lake, was only discovered in 1868. which may account for its absence here. Both Prus-sian blue and probably chrome green were abandoned by Monet during the 1870s. Monet combined slurred wet-in-wet mixing on the canvas with premixed hues. For example, the somber colors on the boats are obtained by mixing complementaries, like red and green, which give darkish neutral hues that are more colorful than those made by sullying a color with black. The apparently accidental nature of the composition is deceptive. The striking horizon-tal of the duckboard, which cuts right across the picture surface, is placed almost exactly halfway up the picture. This was an uncon-ventional device at this date. The broad shapes of light and dark above and below that line echo each other, giving a flat decorative unity to the composition which is reinforced by the harmonizing colors and patterned brushwork. Thus. even at this early stage in his career, Monet was already preoccupied with contrasts of naturalistic illusion and flat pattern, which were to become a feature of Impressionism, and to remain with Monet throughout his life. This leisure scene is animated by Monet's lively brushwork. As well as descriptive of surface textures, the brushmarks, which are almost equal in scale throughout th epicture, unify the design. The overall opacity and thickness of the paint consistency add to this effect. The colors are premixed, and also slurred together on the surface. The canvas is a standard, squarish figure 30 format. |
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