This week, I wanted to talk about
Claude Moent's “Bathers at La Grenouillere.” which is in the
collection of the National Gallery in London.
Claude Monet was born in Paris in
1840. His father was a small businessman and the family moved to Le
Harve about five years later so that his father could join a
wholesale grocery firm that was owned by family members. Thus, Monet
came from a middle class background.
From an early age, Claude displayed a
talent for drawing. Over time, he developed a reputation in Le Harve
for his comic drawings and caricatures and was able to derive income
from the sale of such works.
With such a beginning, one might well
expect that Monet would have developed into a portrait painter.
However, one day when he went out to watch Eugene Boudin work on a
landscape, he realized that landscapes were what he wanted to paint.
“I had seen what painting could be,
simply by the example of this painter working with such independence
at the art he loved. My destiny as a painter was decided.”
Friends and family recognized that
Monet had talent. However, they were unanimous in saying that he
needed to refine that talent by studying in the studio of an
established artist. At that time, the most respected artists
produced highly polished works with extensive modeling and glazing.
The apex of the art world was history painting in which figures were
depicted in scenes that told a story. Every artist's ambition was to
have a work shown at the prestigious Salon in Paris.
Monet was quite independent and
bridled against such suggestions. Nonetheless, he went to Paris to
study first at the Academie Suisse and later at the studio of Charles
Gleyre, an established conventional artist.
He did not like the conventional
approach to the study of art. Although he often completed works in
the studio, Monet preferred to work outdoors, painting directly from
nature. However, his time in Gleyre's studio was not wasted because
there he met Frederic Bazille and Pierre Auguste Renoir, who would be
his compatriots in the Impressionist movement.
Despite his dislike of conventional
painting, Monet prepared and submitted several works to the Salon
during this period. Most were genre paintings depicting contemporary
people outdoors. In some respects, these works were reminiscent of
Edourard Manet's work, Manet being something of a hero to Monet and
his friends. They were more polished and the colors more subdued
than Monet's later works.
Nonetheless, the Salon rejected
Monet's submissions. In the eyes of the juries, the works were
unfinished and they failed to tell a story.
During these years, Monet was able to
sell some paintings but he often spent more than he earned..
Subsidies, first from his aunt and later by Bazille enabled him to
continue on as an artist.
In 1869, Monet moved with his mistress
and young son to a cottage in Saint-Michel near Paris. Renoir was
living with his parents nearby and so the two painters would often go
out and paint the same subjects together.
One of the places they were was La
Grenouillere (the Frog Pond) a floating restaurant on the Seine at
Bougival. The cafe was attached to a small island and to the
riverbank by pontoons. There was a place to moor boats and a place
for swimming. It was a very popular venue for socializing and summer
fun. Indeed, it achieved such a reputation that Emperor Napoleon III
and Empress Eugene came to have a look.
Bathers at La Grenouiller is one of a
series of studies Monet made in preparation for a larger more
polished work that Monet submitted to the Salon. The larger work was
rejected and later lost during World War II.
What makes Bathers particularly
interesting is that it is a forerunner of the style Monet would use
in his later works when he was no longer working with the idea of
submitting paintings to the Salon. The artist used color rather than
lines to create the image. Figures, water, foliage are all described
with a few bold brush strokes.
The composition has a snapshot quality
- - a scene of everyday life. Monet does not comment on the scene.
He does not condemn it as people having frivolous fun nor does he
praise it as welcome relief for the everyday worker. He just
presents the scene and the viewer can make up his or her own mind.
The picture can be dived into four
quadrants with the pier dividing the picture horizontally and a
vertical line right of center descending from the trees past the
boats. Each section is a separate picture. However, the S curve of
the river brings the composition together.
A painting such as the Bathers would
not have been possible only a few years before. The invention of the
paint tube in the 1840s enabled Monet to easily transport his palette
to the scene. Similarly, the invention of the metal ferrule made
flat brushes possible. Such brushes enable Monet to work quickly and
their use is documented by the flat brush strokes in this painting.
The lesson here being that artists should not be afraid of employing
new technology.
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