Claude Monet was born in Paris on the 14th
November, 1840. When he was five years old, he moved to the port
town of Le Havre. For much of his childhood, Monet was considered
by both his teachers and his parents to be undisciplined and,
therefore, unlikely to make a success of his life. Enforcing this
impression, Monet showed no interest in inheriting his father's
wholesale grocery. The only subject which seemed to spark any
interest in the child was painting. He developed a decent
reputation in school for the caricatures he was fond of creating.
By the age of fifteen, he was receiving commission for his work.
It was at Le Havre that Monet met the painter
Eugène Boudin. While Boudin's own paintings have never been held
in that high regard, he is seen as having played a critical role
in the education of Monet. Born of a seafaring family in 1824,
Boudin was obsessed with the idea of painting outdoors or en
plein air . The two painters met in 1856 and, at first,
Monet resisted Boudin's offer of tuition but he eventually relaxed
his protestations and before long, the two had forged a
relationship that was to last a lifetime. Although Monet soon left
Le Havre to spend a large part of his life traveling throughout
Europe, he returned frequently to visit his old friend. The
interest that had been sparked some years earlier was refined and
shaped and Monet was in no doubt as to the extent to which his
outlook on life had been altered:
My eyes were finally opened and I understood
nature; I learned at the same time to love it.
Boudin may have opened Monet's eyes, he may have
even convinced the young painter to break with tradition and
finish his paintings outdoors, but the young protégé had yet to
truly experience the country's capital. Before long, the
limitations of L e Havre on a burgeoning young artist became all
to apparent and, in 1859, Monet left for Paris. However, having
displaced himself to the heart of Europe's art-world, Monet soon
found himself disillusioned by the confines of long-since
established principles. He rejected the formal art training that
was available in Paris. Bored and frustrated, Monet was to do more
painting at the very relaxed Académie Suisse then in
the formal schools for which he had left Le Havre.
In the Spring of 1862, Monet was called up for
National Service. He went to Algeria for a year with a prestigious
regiment: les Chaussures d'Afrique . This experience
was to have a profound effect on Monet. The landscapes and colours
of Alg eria presented an entirely different perspective of the
world, one which was to inspire him for many years to come.
Theoretically, Monet should have remained in Algeria for seven
years, but his time there was curtailed by the contraction of
typhoid. The artist's aunt, Madame Lecadre, intervened and bought
Monet out of the army. Her only condition: that Monet return to
Paris and make a serious attempt at completing a formal artistic
tuition course.
Despite these provisions, Monet did not enroll
in l'École des Artistes . It was a renowned
institution, but one filled with the traditionalists that Monet
was so determined to contradict. Instead, he joined the studio of
the Swiss-born Charles Gleyre. Gleyre was a successful Salon
painter but he was neither a professor at the École
nor was he a member of the Académie . Remembering his
own poverty as a student artist, Gleyre charged very little, only
10 francs for models and the studio. This leniency attracted a
large number of artists. The student body, such as it existed, was
extremely diverse: young, old; rich, poor; good, bad, etc. Among
them all, however, Monet was to meet three very close and
influential friends: Frédéric Bazille, Auguste
Renoir and Alfred Sisley.
This subcategory of Gleyre's students was representative of the
studio's diverse constitution. While all three of these painters
were talented, they came from very different social backgrounds.
Noticeably, Renoir was considerably less well-off then his fellow
artists. The unifying force that was to bind the group for so
long, however, was the commitment and intense dedication to their
new approach to art. One which was eventually to be labeled
impressionism.
Gleyre was a very talented instructor and all
his students benefited from his persistent teaching methods. Monet
remained at his studio for approximately two years. Throughout
this time, Monet, Renoir, Sisley and Bazille made frequent trips
to the nearby forest of Fontainbleau - located South-East of
Paris. This forest had been a popular venue for artists for a
number of years. How ever, this new group broke the tradition of
their predecessor's paintings by replacing subdued colours and
dark shadows with open spaces and sunlight. When Monet was not
fulfilling his need to be outdoors by going to Fontainbleau, he
was visiting his old friend, Boudin, in Le Havre. There can be no
doubt as to his enthusiasm during this time:
Every day I discover more and more beautiful
things. It's enough to drive one mad: I have such a desire to do
everything, my head is bursting with it.
This enthusiasm and appreciation of the world
outdoors was rewarding but Monet wanted to make a name for himself
and this meant appeasing the tradionalists of the Académie .
Contrary to the advice of his friend and mentor, Boudin, Monet
adhered to the expectations placed on serious entries to the Salon
and painted a number of pictures in doors. These were very
successful. But his larger piece drew some criticism. Quite the
opposite from the expected smooth surfaces which were in vog ue at
the time, Monet's entry was "broadly handled with a loaded
brush, giving a rough surface texture and clearly visible
brushstrokes, and sacrificing detail to overall effect."
Monet persisted in his efforts to appeal to the Académie
and during the period from '65 to '66 he painted a number of
subjects with varying degrees of success. His last entry, The
Woman in the Green Dress (reportedly painted in four days), bought
both recognition and introduction to his mistress, Camille
Doncieux. Monet, desperate to achieve complete success, immersed
himself in his next project and entry to the Salon for the
following year: Women in the Garden. This painting too k a very
long time to finish because Monet would only paint when the light
was falling correctly on every aspect of the painting's
subject-matter. In order to complete the top of his canvas, Monet
dug himself a ditch so that he could continue to paint the scene
from the same perspective (other painters simply stood upon a
ladder). Despite these many arduous efforts, the Salon rejected
the painting when it was finally entered for the following season.
Shortly after the Salon's decision, Camille
became pregnant. They had little money and were largely dependent
on Monet's friends. Madame Lecadre took Monet in to her house, but
Camille was forced to remain in Paris. This marked the beginning
of a lifestyle which was becoming increasingly itinerant,
culminating in Monet's move to London in the early 1870's to avoid
involvement in the Franco-Prussian War. Here he was exposed to the
English masters, Constable and Turner. Later, Monet returned again
to Le Havre where he painted the often cited Impression:
Sunrise, the painting largely credited with the naming
of the entire movement.
After the completion of the Sunrise,
Monet moved back to Paris and finally rented a house at Argenteuil
on the Seine where he and Camille lived for six years. This period
represents the height of the impressionist movement. Frequently
joined by Renoir and other friends from his student days, Monet
painted every aspect of life and the world out door s. In 1874,
Manet, Degas, Cézanne, Renoir, Pissarro, Sisley and Monet put
together an exhibition which has been vastly talked about in the
history books but was, unfortunately, a contemporary disaster. The
exhibition marked a return to financial insecurity for Monet and
it was only the intercession of Manet (once a critic, now a
friend) that allowed Monet to remain at Argenteuil. In an attempt
to recoup some of his losses, Monet made a sale of his paintings
at the Hotel Drouot. This, too, was a complete failure.
These setbacks demonstrate a remarkable quality
about the painter. Despite almost constant rejection and financial
uncertainty, Monet's paintings never became morose or even,
really, all that somber. Instead, Monet immersed himself in the
task of perfecting a style which still had not been accepted by
the world at large.
His rendering of the quiver of light in the
expanse of space reached its chromatic fullness...he replaced
his technique of broad modulations with a kind of pictorial
granulation.
Never fully content, Monet went to Dieppe,
Pourville and Varengeville-sur-Mer. His first wife Camille died in
1882, and in 1883 Monet finally settled in Giverny where he
remained until his death. This geographical constant was coupled
with the disintegration of the group of impressionists. Other
influences and groups presented themselves and, gradually, each of
the painters drifted away to pursue their own styles. Among the
newcomers was Vincent van
Gogh.
In 1892 Monet married Alice Hoschede, with whom
he had had an affair during his marriage to Camille. In that year
he painted his series of Rouen Cathedral, noticing how every
aspect of the scene was altered in accordance with the changing
light. This realization was to become an obsession in his later
years. At last, Monet gained renown. He knew several important
people and he became financially secure for the first time in his
life. With this new-found luxury, Monet devoted himself to
gardening which, in turn, provided a motif for the painter's last
important work, the Water Lily Pool . Monet was
absorbed in this project almost exclusively from 1900 until his
death,
...stripping it of objective solidity and
creating of it an ethereal, lyrical abstraction.