He painted lots of those. Click link below to see three of them!
Not a statue or anything like it. His house and garden (with the pond of water lilies) at Giverny are his monument.
Monet liked to paint landscapes, and water played a HUGE role in them. Also, Monet bought a house near a swampy pond.
he liked painting nature especially water lillies
Monet had painted ten Weeping Willow paintings by 1919, apparently in mournful response to the mass tragedy of World War I. Due to the war, Monet's luxurious compound at Giverny was for the most part emptied of his children's families and his household staff, who were either called into service or moved away from the advancing German army. His only surviving son was in constant danger at the front. At times Monet could hear artillery fire, but he refused to leave, preferring to share the fate of his gardens. As a group, the Weeping Willow paintings are characterized by shadowy colors and writhing forms, as if Monet intended to express the grieving mood not simply with the subject, but also through an expressionist style of painting. They were among the very few easel-scale paintings that Monet made after 1914, when he claimed his failing eyesight was best suited for working in larger formats. The particular tree portrayed in Weeping Willowhad pride of place on the bank of Monet's water garden, with its exotic water lilies. The tree's trunk, its cascading branches, and its reflection are all incorporated into his greatest artistic legacy, the mural-scale Nymphéas canvases that were his preoccupation from 1914 until his death.
I'm not sure but I suggest Google-image searching Claude Monet's paintings, and see what comes up. Check out the websites, and see what information there is! One of his most famous works though is a series of paintings called "Water Lilies".
Not a statue or anything like it. His house and garden (with the pond of water lilies) at Giverny are his monument.
yes
Monet liked to paint landscapes, and water played a HUGE role in them. Also, Monet bought a house near a swampy pond.
he felt like it
Yes! Beavers, muskrats, ducks, porcupines, and snails eat water lilies. Other animals, such as deers and even humans eat the inside of water lilies-the seeds inside.
They have long stalks ty very much & i like french fries:d
he liked painting nature especially water lillies
Monet had painted ten Weeping Willow paintings by 1919, apparently in mournful response to the mass tragedy of World War I. Due to the war, Monet's luxurious compound at Giverny was for the most part emptied of his children's families and his household staff, who were either called into service or moved away from the advancing German army. His only surviving son was in constant danger at the front. At times Monet could hear artillery fire, but he refused to leave, preferring to share the fate of his gardens. As a group, the Weeping Willow paintings are characterized by shadowy colors and writhing forms, as if Monet intended to express the grieving mood not simply with the subject, but also through an expressionist style of painting. They were among the very few easel-scale paintings that Monet made after 1914, when he claimed his failing eyesight was best suited for working in larger formats. The particular tree portrayed in Weeping Willowhad pride of place on the bank of Monet's water garden, with its exotic water lilies. The tree's trunk, its cascading branches, and its reflection are all incorporated into his greatest artistic legacy, the mural-scale Nymphéas canvases that were his preoccupation from 1914 until his death.
Marine flora are water plants, things like sea weed, water Hyacinth, water lilies, single celled algae etc.
its a pretty flower that floats,and the lilly pads stay in place with the steam atached to the dirt.
The aquatic leaf beetle and black aphid both feed on water lilies Animals such as deer, ducks and beavers also eat parts of the water lily. Fish, like the grass carp, eat water lilies sometimes as well
I'm not sure but I suggest Google-image searching Claude Monet's paintings, and see what comes up. Check out the websites, and see what information there is! One of his most famous works though is a series of paintings called "Water Lilies".