Cathédrale de Rouen, le Portail (1894) Painting by Claude Monet

  • Original Artwork Painting, Oil
  • Dimensions Height 39.4in, Width 26in
  • Framing This artwork is not framed
  • Categories Impressionism Landscape
La série des Cathédrales de Rouen par Claude Monet est composée de 30 tableaux, principalement axés sur le portail occidental de la cathédrale Notre-Dame de Rouen, peints entre 1892 et 1894 sous différents angles et à divers moments de la journée. Lors de son premier séjour à Rouen, Monet réalise deux vues de la cour d'Albane en plein air avant de [...]
La série des Cathédrales de Rouen par Claude Monet est composée de 30 tableaux, principalement axés sur le portail occidental de la cathédrale Notre-Dame de Rouen, peints entre 1892 et 1894 sous différents angles et à divers moments de la journée. Lors de son premier séjour à Rouen, Monet réalise deux vues de la cour d'Albane en plein air avant de peindre la façade de la cathédrale depuis des appartements situés autour de la place de la Cathédrale. Après des ajustements en atelier, vingt de ces œuvres furent exposées en 1895, reflétant le génie de Monet à capturer les variations de lumière et d'atmosphère sur l'architecture gothique.

Related themes

PortailRouenCathédrale

Automatically translated
Artist represented by ArtMajeur by YourArt Editions
Follow
Claude Monet was born in Paris in 1840. He studied drawing at the Collège Communal in Le Havre. Eugène Boudin introduced him to plein-air painting around 1856. Monet moved to Paris in 1859 and enrolled in the [...]

Claude Monet was born in Paris in 1840. He studied drawing at the Collège Communal in Le Havre. Eugène Boudin introduced him to plein-air painting around 1856. Monet moved to Paris in 1859 and enrolled in the Académie Suisse the following year. Camille Pissarro met him there. He served in the Algerian military from 1861 to 1862. Monet returned to Paris after the war and met Gustave Courbet. He entered Charles Gleyers' atelier, where Auguste Renoir, Alfred Sisley, and Fréderic Bazille were all studying. Édouard Manet became acquainted with him in 1866. Monet painted in Normandy and the Fontainebleau Forest. In 1865, he debuted at the Salon de Paris. Monet moved to London in 1870. He later returned to Argenteuil in France via the Netherlands after the Franco-Prussian War. He took part in the first four Impressionist exhibitions, as well as the seventh, beginning in 1874. He moved to Vétheuil in 1878, and three years later to Giverny. He then traveled to the Netherlands, Italy, and London, as well as Spain, Norway, and Venice. He was represented at the World's Fair in the Exposition centennale de l'art français in 1889. In 1893, he established his water garden in Giverny, and in 1922, he bequeathed his Water Lilies to the French state. In 1926, Monet died in Giverny.

ArtMajeur

Receive our newsletter for art lovers and collectors