“I perhaps owe having become a painter to
flowers.”
Claude Monet
Claude Monet
It has been a common practice throughout the ages
for artists to employ assistants to help in the production of their work. From Peter
Paul Rubens, who often only painted the hands and faces in his paintings,
to contemporary artist Jeff
Koons who has a “paint by numbers” factory to create his work, their
designs are realized by the hands of unknown others.
The French artist Claude Monet also employed
assistants, but not for his paintings in which each brush stroke was applied by
Monet himself. He employed his assistants to create the subject matter of some
of his most enduring works, the garden and water lilies series.
Considered to be the founding father of the Impressionists,
whose painting Impression, soleil levant (Impression, Sunrise) gave the movement its name,
was in his youth a gifted caricaturist able to charge 20 francs per drawing. It
was through their mutual framer that Monet met the outdoor painter Eugène Boudin who
introduced the 16 year old to landscape painting, the love of bright colors and
the play of light on water.
Four years later Monet
met the marine landscape artist Johan Jongkind about who
he told the French journalist Thiébault-Sisson “He became from this moment, my true master and it’s to him, that I owe
the definitive training of my eyes.”
With the money he had saved from the sales of his
caricatures Monet was able to defy his family and move to Paris to study
painting. But unlike other aspiring artists who would go to the Louvre to copy
the masters Monet copied what he could see outside his window. After a stint in
the army which was cut short by a bout of typhoid fever Monet reconciled
with his family, who had accepted his desire to become an artist, and he
returned to Paris with their blessing.
His obsession with painting what he could actually
see led him to produce series of paintings of the same subject viewed in
different atmospheric conditions be it time of day or seasonal variations. And
as he told his dealer, Paul
Durand-Ruel, “It would be a very bad idea... to exhibit even a small number
of this new series, as the whole effect can only be achieved from an exhibition
of the entire group.”
In his early 30’s Monet spent a poverty stricken
year in London upon his return to France he completed several series of
landscapes and seascapes attempting to document The French countryside. In his
early 40’s he discovered the village of Giverny in northern France where within weeks
the Monet family were living in a rented house on a two acre property. Once Monet’s paintings started selling in America he
was able to purchase the house and land.
It was here that
he created his garden. A garden that reflected through flowers his love of
color in all its various combinations, living arrangements he reproduced in his
paintings. Three years later Monet purchased the adjoining land and created his
water lily ponds. At its peak Monet employed up to seven assistants to tend his
horticultural designs whilst he captured their ever changing moods on canvas. Which
museum director, Gary Tinterow, described
as “the point of departure for an almost abstract art.”
The exhibition Monet
and the Birth of Impressionism is current on show at Frankfurt’s Stadel Museum until
21st of June.
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