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(1832 - 1883)
Self-Portrait with Palette (French: Autoportrait à la palette) is an 1878–79 oil-on-canvas painting by the French artist Édouard Manet. This late impressionistic work is one of his two self-portraits. Velasquez's self-portrait in Las Meninas was a particular inspiration for Manet's painting which despite its allusion to the previous artist's work is very modern in its focus upon the personality of the artist and loose paint handling.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-Po...

Selfportrait 1879
1879
Oil on canvas
83 x 67 cm
Private collection (Sold at Sotheby’s on 22 June 2010)

(1840 - 1926)
At Giverny Monet and his family worked and built up the gardens, and Monet's fortunes began to change for the better as Durand-Ruel had increasing success in selling his paintings. The gardens were Monet's greatest source of inspiration for 40 years. In 1890, Monet purchased the house. During the 1890s, Monet built a greenhouse and a second studio, a spacious building well lit with skylights.
Monet wrote daily instructions to his gardener, precise designs and layouts for plantings, and invoices for his floral purchases and his collection of botany books. As Monet's wealth grew, his garden evolved. He remained its architect, even after he hired seven gardeners. Monet purchased additional land with a water meadow. White water lilies local to France were planted along with imported cultivars from South America and Egypt, resulting in a range of colours including yellow, blue and white lilies that turned pink with age. In 1902, he increased the size of his water garden by nearly 4000 square metres; the pond was enlarged in 1901 and 1910 with easels installed all around to allow different perspectives to be captured.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claude_...

Flowers in a Vase
1888
Oil on canvas
80 x 45 cm
Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia, U.S.
https://philamuseum.org/collection/ob...

(1832 - 1883)
In his mid-forties Manet's health deteriorated, and he developed severe pain and partial paralysis in his legs. In 1879 he began receiving hydrotherapy treatments at a spa near Meudon intended to improve what he believed was a circulatory problem, but in reality he was suffering from locomotor ataxia, a known side-effect of syphilis.
Manet's last paintings were of flowers in glass vases. There are 20 such paintings known, with the last one painted in March 1883, barely two months before his death. Quoted in Venice thirteen years later, Manet is credited with stating that an artist can say everything he has to say with "flowers, fruit, and clouds." His last flower paintings are a demonstration of that belief.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Édouard...
Flowers in a Crystal Vase (French - Œillets et clématites dans un vase de cristal) is an 1882 painting by Édouard Manet, in the Musée d'Orsay in Paris since 1986. It shows clematis and 'oeillets', a French word used for several kinds of cut flowers, many from the Dianthus genus. It was probably executed in July 1882 at Rueil and forms part of a set of still life paintings produced by Manet at the end of his life, mainly showing flowers.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flowers...

Flowers in a Crystal Vase
1882
Oil on canvas
32 x 24 cm
Musée d’Orsay, Paris
https://www.musee-orsay.fr/en/artwork...

(1840 - 1926)
Monet painted more than thirty views of Rouen Cathedral in 1892–93. Moving from one canvas to another as each day progressed, he painted the facade with highly textured brushstrokes that convey the aspect of sculpted stone and make the atmosphere and light palpable. Monet later finished the works in his studio at Giverny, carefully adjusting the pictures both independently and in relation to each other. Hence, most are signed and dated 1894, as is this example. In 1895, Monet exhibited twenty of his cathedral pictures at Galerie Durand-Ruel in Paris. This one was titled Le Portail (Soleil), or The Portal (Sunlight).
https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collect...
When Monet painted the Rouen Cathedral series, he had long since been impressed with the way light imparts to a subject a distinctly different character at different times of the day and the year and as atmospheric conditions change. For Monet, the effects of light on a subject became as important as the subject itself. Like his other series (such as the famous Water Lilies) in which Monet painted many views of the same subject under different lighting conditions, these works are an attempt to illustrate the importance of light in our perception of a subject at a given time and place.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rouen_C...

Rouen Cathedral: The Portal (Sunlight)
1894
Oil on canvas
99.7 x 65.7 cm
The MET, N.Y.
https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collect...

(1832 - 1883)
Spring is a 1881 oil-on-canvas painting by Édouard Manet. It debuted at the Paris Salon of 1882 and was considered the greatest and final public success of Manet's Salon career.[1] It depicts Parisian actress Jeanne DeMarsy in a floral dress with parasol and bonnet against a background of lush foliage and blue sky, as the embodiment of Spring. The painting also became the first work of art ever to be published in color.
Spring was the first of a planned quartet of allegorical works using chic Parisian women to depict the four seasons. The idea came from Manet's friend, Antonin Proust, who suggested a series of seasons personified by contemporary ideals of women, fashion and beauty. The series was never finished and Manet died a year after finishing only the second of the series, Autumn.
In November 2014, the J. Paul Getty Museum paid more than $65 million for the painting, surpassing the previous record of $33.2 million for a Manet which was paid for Self Portrait With a Palette in 2010.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spring_...

Le Printemps (Spring)
1881
Oil on canvas
74 x 51.5 cm
The Getty Center, L.A.
https://www.getty.edu/art/collection/...

(1840 - 1926)
Haystacks is the common English title for a series of impressionist paintings by Claude Monet. The principal subject of each painting in the series is stacks of harvested wheat (or possibly barley or oats: the original French title, Les Meules à Giverny, simply means The Stacks at Giverny, obviously concerning stacks of straw). The title refers primarily to a twenty-five canvas series (Wildenstein Index Numbers 1266–1290) which Monet began near the end of the summer of 1890 and continued through the following spring, though Monet also produced five earlier paintings using this same stack subject. A precursor to the series is the 1884 Haystack Near Giverny (Pushkin Museum).
The series is famous for the way in which Monet repeated the same subject to show the differing light and atmosphere at different times of day, across the seasons and in many types of weather.
The series is among Monet's most notable works.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haystac...

Stacks of Wheat (End of Summer)
1891
Oil on canvas
60 x 100.5 cm
Art Institute of Chicago, U.S.
https://www.artic.edu/artworks/64818/...
In May 1891, Monet hung fifteen of these canvases next to each other in one small room in the Galerie Durand-Ruel in Paris. An unprecedented critical and financial success, the exhibition marked a breakthrough in Monet’s career, as well as in the history of French art.

(1832 - 1883)
Père Lathuille was a restaurant on Avenue de Clichy, not far from the famous Café Guerbois, which Manet frequented. In 1879, he asked the actress Ellen Andrée, who had frequently served as the painter's model, and Louis Gauthier-Lathuille, the owner's son, to pose in the restaurant's garden. Because Andrée failed to show up for a subsequent session, Manet replaced her with Judith French, a relative of the composer Jacques Offenbach. This approach is typical of Manet, who liked to give his paintings the impression of a snapshot, but meticulously staged them.
The painting has an ambiguous character. At first glance, it appears to depict a love scene between a young man and a somewhat older woman. However, there are good reasons to question this interpretation. For instance, the young man does not appear to be sitting on a chair, but rather crouched next to the woman, and the table is set for only one person. The wine glass the boy is holding likely belongs to the woman. The latter gives a defensive impression, given her stiff, slightly hunched posture. Seen in this light, the painting could also depict a daring attempt at seduction. Some authors even refer to this as a gigolo.
The waiter in the background also occupies an ambiguous position. He could be watching the scene as a kind of voyeur, but he could just as easily be waiting for the young man to leave the woman alone so he can pour her coffee from the pot in his hand.
https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bij_Pèr...

Chez le Père Lathuille (At the Père Lathuille Restaurant)
1879
Oil on canvas
92 x 112 cm
Musée Des Beaux-Arts de Tournai, Belgium
https://mba.tournai.be/collection/edo...

(1840 - 1926)
In February 1882, Claude Monet went to Normandy to paint, one of many such expeditions that he made in the 1880s. This was also a retreat from personal and professional pressures. His wife, Camille, had died three years earlier, and Monet had entered into a domestic arrangement with Alice Hoschedé (whom he would marry in 1892, after her husband’s death). France was in the midst of a lengthy economic recession that affected Monet’s sales. In addition, the artist was unenthusiastic about the upcoming seventh Impressionist exhibition—divisions within the group had become pronounced by this time—and he delegated the responsibility for his contribution to his dealer, Paul Durand-Ruel.
Disappointed in the area around the harbor city of Dieppe, which he found too urban, Monet settled in Pourville and remained in this fishing village until mid-April. He became increasingly enamored of his surroundings, writing to Hoschedé and her children: “How beautiful the countryside is becoming, and what joy it would be for me to show you all its delightful nooks and crannies!” He was able to do so in June, when they joined him in Pourville.The two young women strolling in Cliff Walk at Pourville are probably Marthe and Blanche, the eldest Hoschedé daughters.
https://www.artic.edu/artworks/14620/...

Cliff Walk at Pourville
1882
Oil on canvas
66.5 x 82.3 cm
Art Institute of Chicago, U.S.
https://www.artic.edu/artworks/14620/...

(1832 - 1883)
Manet was the quintessential "Painter of Modern Life," a phrase coined by art critic and poet Charles Baudelaire. In 1878-79, he painted a number of scenes set in the Cabaret de Reichshoffen on the Boulevard Rochechouart, where women on the fringes of society freely intermingled with well-heeled gentlemen. Here, Manet captures the kaleidoscopic pleasures of Parisian nightlife. The figures are crowded into the compact space of the canvas, each one seemingly oblivious of the others. When exhibited at La Vie Moderne gallery in 1880, this work was praised by some for its unflinching realism and criticized by others for its apparent crudeness.
https://art.thewalters.org/object/37....

The Café-Concert
1879
Oil on canvas
47 x 58 cm
Walters Art Museum, Baltimore, US
https://art.thewalters.org/object/37....

(1840 - 1926)
This is one of several views Monet painted of the cliffs and sand flats of Pourville, a small fishing village on the Normandy coast of France. The title indicates a momentary stage in the continuous cycle of nature, just as the quick, spontaneous application of paint reflects Monet's efforts to capture shifting effects of light, weather, and tide. The paint layers under the beach indicate that this part of the composition originally depicted water, as would have been appropriate for a depiction of high rather than low tide. Similar changes were made in the clouds during the painting process.
https://www.musee-orsay.fr/en/artwork...

Low Tide at Pourville, near Dieppe
1882
Oil on canvas
65.4 x 104.7 cm
Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, Ohio, United States
https://www.clevelandart.org/art/1947...

(1832 - 1883)
Plum Brandy, also known as The Plum (French: La Prune), is an oil painting by Édouard Manet. It is undated but thought to have been painted about 1877.
Manet may have based the painting on observations at the Café de la Nouvelle Athènes on the Place Pigalle in Paris. However, the background - the decorative grille and its gold frame - does not match other depictions of the café, and suggests the painting was made in Manet’s studio, where he is known to have had a café-style marble table on iron legs. Manet uses a simple style: for example, the plum in its glass and the fingers of the woman's left hand are created with just a few dabs of colour.
The model is the actress Ellen Andrée, who was also depicted with Marcellin Desboutin in the similar 1876 painting L'Absinthe (or In a Café) by Edgar Degas. The similarities between the two paintings suggest that Manet's The Plum may be a response to Degas's L'Absinthe. Degas's painting shows a bleak scene of despair blunted by absinthe; Manet's is a more hopeful scene, where there is the chance that the sitter's loneliness may be broken. Andrée also appears in Pierre-Auguste Renoir's 1881 painting Luncheon of the Boating Party.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claude_...

Plum Brandy
c. 1877
Oil on canvas
73 x 50 cm
National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
https://www.nga.gov/artworks/53034-pl...

In a Café or L'Absinthe, 1876, Degas

(1840 - 1926)
Why travel far in search of inspiration, when beauty lies right before your eyes? In Vétheuil, Claude Monet needed only to step down from his garden to find himself on the banks of the Seine. The river bends gracefully at the foot of the village church.
Across the water, on the opposite bank, he could see the houses of Lavacourt—a small hamlet clinging to the tip of the peninsula formed by the meander. The riverbed is scattered with little islands, shaded by willows.
Monet would set up his easel here, perhaps working from his studio-boat, moored at the end of the garden. From the bank today, though, one cannot glimpse the precise angle he chose: the river curving into the distance, with the bell tower of Saint-Martin de La Garenne rising above the horizon. To rediscover that viewpoint, one has to venture out onto the water.
Monet first painted this landscape in 1878. He returned to it the following year with a series of four views, and again in 1880 with this large canvas (Lavacourt, Claude Monet, 1880, Dallas Museum of Art, Texas). According to the catalogue raisonné, although it shows a summer scene, the work (100 × 150 cm) was executed as early as March, based on the smaller canvases of 1879.
Monet sets the horizon at the center of the canvas. The open sweep of the foreground is echoed by the wide sky, dappled with clouds and mirrored in the shimmering water. It is morning: the light is gentle, subdued. Sunlight strikes the facades of the houses, whose reflections ripple across the river, making the colors dance.

The Seine at Lavacourt
1880
Oil on canvas
98.43 × 149.23 cm
Dallas Museum of Art, Dallas, US
https://dma.org/art/collection/object...

(1832 - 1883)
The Rue Mosnier with Flags is an 1878 oil on canvas painting by Édouard Manet, showing the eponymous Parisian street, decorated with French flags for the first national holiday on 30 June 1878, the Fête de la Paix (Celebration of Peace). The Fête de la Paix was held during that year's Exposition Universelle, which together marked France's recovery after the Franco-Prussian War and the Paris Commune. The holiday was moved to 14 July in 1880 to become Bastille Day. The painting is held by the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles.
The painting depicts a scene on the Rue Mosnier, now the Rue de Berne [fr], which is overlooked by Manet's studio at 4 Rue de Saint-Pétersbourg [fr]. It was painted from an upstairs window, with tricolour flags hanging from the buildings along the road, above passing pedestrians and carriages. In the foreground is a man with a ladder, and a one-legged man on crutches, possibly a veteran wounded in the Franco-Prussian War. Behind a fence to the left is rubble from building works to extend the Gare Saint-Lazare. The painting measures 65.4 cm × 80 cm (25.7 in × 31.5 in) and it is signed and dated in the lower left corner, "Manet / 1878". This work echoes the composition of another Manet painting of 1878, Road-menders in the Rue Mosnier. Another 1878 Manet painting of a similar scene of the Rue Mosnier, decorated with flags, is held in a private collection.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Rue...

The Rue Mosnier with Flags
1878
Oil on canvas
65.4 x 80 cm
Getty Center, L.A.
https://www.getty.edu/art/collection/...

(1840 - 1926)
In 1876, Victor Chocquet made his apartment available to Claude Monet. Located on the fifth floor of a building at 198 rue de Rivoli in Paris, it offers a bird's eye view of the Tuileries Gardens, which inspired four of Monet's paintings. The version in the Musée Marmottan Monet is the most accomplished. It is distinguished by the balance of its composition. The mass of the Marsan pavilion, on the left, and the very high horizon line define the framework devoted to the description of the French-style park. Ponds, flowerbeds, and groves form the poetic setting, completed by the regular layout of the pedestrian walkways and the uninterrupted arrangement of the sculptures. The palette of blond ochres and shades of green, blue, and pink recalls that of On a Walk Near Argenteuil and, more generally, the works of the mid-1870s.
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...

The Tuileries (Study)
1874
Oil on canvas
54 x 73 cm
Musée Marmottan Monet, Paris
https://www.marmottan.fr/notice/4016/

(1832 - 1883)
In the Conservatory (French: Dans la serre) is an 1879 oil painting by Édouard Manet in the Alte Nationalgalerie, Berlin, depicting Manet's friends, a couple, in a conservatory. There is an ambiguity in the painting that has led art critics to characterize the couple's relationship in divergent ways.
The setting is a conservatory at 70 Rue d'Amsterdam in Paris, then owned by painter Georg von Rosen and which Manet used as a studio for nine months in 1878 and 1879. Such a conservatory may have been more than a greenhouse; French painter Alix-Louise Enault's Consolation depicted the Parisian conservatory as a "luxuriously decorated and intimate locale—a secluded indoor area conducive to private rendezvous".At first glance, we see a double portrait of a fashionable and attractive couple of some social rank. They are Manet's friends, the Guillemets, who owned a clothing shop. Their married status is conveyed by their rings, and the proximity of their hands is the nearest hint of intimacy. The woman becomes the focus of the portrait, however, being more prominently placed and colourfully dressed. Their physical separation—with the husband Jules slouching in dark clothing behind the bench—their lack of engagement with the viewer, and their abstract gazes create a sense of detachment, which has been the primary theme in modern criticism of the work.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In_the_...

In the Conservatory
1879
Oil on canvas
115 x 150 cm
Alte Nationalgalerie, Berlin
https://recherche.smb.museum/detail/9...



Claude Monet
(1840 - 1926)
Woman with a Parasol – Madame Monet and Her Son, sometimes known as The Stroll (French: La Promenade) is an oil-on-canvas painting by Claude Monet from 1875. The Impressionist work depicts his wife Camille Monet and their son Jean Monet in the period from 1871 to 1877 while they were living in Argenteuil, capturing a moment on a stroll on a windy summer's day.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woman_w...

Woman with a Parasol – Madame Monet and Her Son
1875
Oil on canvas
100 x 81 cm
National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
https://www.nga.gov/artworks/61379-wo...

(1832 - 1883)
Nana is a painting by French painter Édouard Manet. It was completed in 1877 and was refused at the Salon of Paris the same year. Manet decided to show his painting in the window of a shop on the Boulevard des Capucines, one of Paris’s main streets. The painting gathered attention and crowds during its exhibition, due to Manet's fame in Paris. The work is now at the Kunsthalle Hamburg art museum in Germany.
The painting shows a young and beautiful woman who stands before a mirror with two extinguished candles, her face turned to the spectator. Her dress is incomplete; she wears a white chemise, blue corset, silk stockings and high-heeled footwear. The interior suggests that it is a boudoir. Behind the woman is a sofa with two pillows. An elegantly dressed man, sitting on the sofa, can be partly seen on the right of the painting. On the left side, there is a chair, a table and a flowerpot.
Both the title and the numerous details suggest that the picture represents a high class prostitute and her client. "Nana" was a popular assumed name for female prostitutes during the second half of the 19th century (much like the connotation "Candy" has had for English-speakers more recently). Even today the French word "nana" is used to describe a frivolous woman (or simply "a female" in argot).
The model for the painting was Henriette Hauser, a well-known courtesan of the era.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nana_(M...

Nana
1877
Oil on canvas
154 x 115 cm
Hamburger Kunsthalle, Hamburg, Germany
https://online-sammlung.hamburger-kun...

(1840 - 1926)
Though Monet preferred painting in the open air, for this work he brought his easel indoors to capture his first wife, Camille Doncieux, sitting at her embroidery loom. Quietly absorbed in her task, Monet's figure recalls the scenes of 17th-century Dutch masters, who were enjoying a revival in France at the time. Even indoors, light remains a primary concern for the artist; the touches of white flicker across the front of Camille's dress, creating a tapestry-like texture that perhaps alludes to her work on the loom.
https://collection.barnesfoundation.o...

Madame Monet Embroidering (Camille au métier)
1875
Oil on canvas
65.5 × 56 cm
The Barnes Foundation collection, Philadelphia
https://collection.barnesfoundation.o...

(1832 - 1883)
Chez Tortoni is a painting by the French artist Édouard Manet, painted ca. 1875.
The painting depicts an unidentified gentleman sitting at a table in the[Café Tortoni de Paris while drawing on a sketchpad. A half-empty glass of beer stands on the table.
Chez Tortoni hung in the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum of Boston, Massachusetts, United States prior to its theft in 1990 and it has not yet been recovered.
A $10 million reward is offered for the return of Chez Tortoni and the other stolen items.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chez_To...

Chez Tortoni
1875
Oil on canvas
26 x 34 cm
Whereabouts unknown since the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum theft in 1990

(1840 - 1926)
With the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War, Monet and his newly wedded wife Camille fled to England for fear of Monet's military conscription. Returning to France in late 1871, the couple settled in Argenteuil along the Seine. While many of Monet's paintings of trains come from the Gare St. Lazare Station, The Train in the Snow represents Argenteuil station, which was the artist's "commuter stop." At the time of Monet's residence, Argenteuil was located in a suburban section of France, connected by railway to Paris, Le Havre, and Rouen; trains and engines were in constant view at Argenteuil station because of their storage or redirection there.
Throughout the winter of 1874-1875, Monet continuously painted snow scenes in and around his home at Argenteuil. Fascinated by the trains traveling through his local station on their way to Paris, the artist worked on his paintings while standing on the station platform. Out of his many paintings of trains, Monet seems to have only painted three scenes from 1875-1876 that take place in the snow, including this particular painting.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Tra...

Train in the Snow
1875
Oil on canvas
59 x 78 cm
Musée Marmottan Monet, Paris
https://www.marmottan.fr/notice/4017/