Not realky dots, but rather short brush strokes. That is one of the characteristics of Impressionism. In Monet's paintings before 1869 brushstrokes are not visible.
No. He was the second son of Claude Adolphe Monet and Louise Justine Aubrée Monet who are both second-generation Parisians.
Monet used techniques that were formulated by the Impressionists called Broken Color. He worked with oil paints and at times used pastels. he used a limited number of colors for his paintings:Lead white (modern equivalent = titanium white)Chrome yellow (modern equivalent = cadmium yellow light)Cadmium yellowViridian greenEmerald greenFrench ultramarineCobalt blueMadder red (modern equivalent = alizarin crimson)VermilionIvory black (but only if you're copying a Monet from before 1886)hi
Claude Monet did not only inspire it - he invented it.
There is not only one painting of this title. Over the last 30 years Monet painted his pond over and over again.
Claude Monet is a hero of the painting movement referred to as Impressionism. Impressionism is a painting style that developed in France in the 19th century as a radical departure from rigid academic representational panting. These painters were interested in the way light defines the way we see. They used small dabs of vibrant colors (many of which had only recently become available due to the industrial revolution) to create their pictures. They were also champions of leaving the studio to paint outside (plein air painting) taking with them small canvases and tube paints (another modern novelty). While it would be impossible to choose a single image or subject that Monet is known for, in the art world the phrase "Water Lilies" is synonymous with him.
Unfortunately, Claude Monet has passed on. We only have his art to remember him by. He was a very famous French artist. He was an Impressionist who liked to paint the effects of light on ordinary subject matter. Claude Monet died on December 5, 1926. He lived most of his life in France. He was buried in Giverny church cemetery.
Yes, it was.
No. He was the second son of Claude Adolphe Monet and Louise Justine Aubrée Monet who are both second-generation Parisians.
Monet used techniques that were formulated by the Impressionists called Broken Color. He worked with oil paints and at times used pastels. he used a limited number of colors for his paintings:Lead white (modern equivalent = titanium white)Chrome yellow (modern equivalent = cadmium yellow light)Cadmium yellowViridian greenEmerald greenFrench ultramarineCobalt blueMadder red (modern equivalent = alizarin crimson)VermilionIvory black (but only if you're copying a Monet from before 1886)hi
Monet died of lung cancer on 5 December 1926 at the age of 86 and is buried in the Giverny church cemetery. Monet had insisted that the occasion be simple; thus only about fifty people attended the ceremony.
Claude Monet did not only inspire it - he invented it.
There is not only one painting of this title. Over the last 30 years Monet painted his pond over and over again.
Claude Monet is a hero of the painting movement referred to as Impressionism. Impressionism is a painting style that developed in France in the 19th century as a radical departure from rigid academic representational panting. These painters were interested in the way light defines the way we see. They used small dabs of vibrant colors (many of which had only recently become available due to the industrial revolution) to create their pictures. They were also champions of leaving the studio to paint outside (plein air painting) taking with them small canvases and tube paints (another modern novelty). While it would be impossible to choose a single image or subject that Monet is known for, in the art world the phrase "Water Lilies" is synonymous with him.
Claude Monet and Auguste Renoir were impressionists. Édouard Manet belonged to the same circle of friends and colleagues, but only for a short period painted in an impressionist way.
Associated as much with the inspiration for his art as with his many paintings, Claude Monet is considered by many to be the foremost, as well as the founding, member of the Impressionist school of painting. Concerned with the play of light on the landscape, Monet's works exhibited new uses of both color and brush technique that were considered revolutionary within the art establishment of his day. Today he is best known for the series of "Water Lilies" paintings that he completed later in his life; his gardens in the French town of Giverny have also sparked a great deal of interest among horticulturalists andgarden designers due to their sophisticated use of color. As the painterCezanne is reported to have said, "Monet is only an eye, but, my God, what an eye!"
it is Claude Monet that inspired Eugene Boudin. In 1858 he met Claude Monet, then only 18 years old, and persuaded him to become a landscape painter, helping to instill in him a love of bright hues and the play of light on water later evident in Monet's Impressionist paintings. http://www.artisoo.com/shop-by-artist-eugene-boudin-c-66_156_343.html
Monet was a fickle individual and although his many "wives" were documented to the the public. His memoirs told of only one, his mistress whom he devoted his life around. Micolette was her name and later change it to Serena for obvious reasons.