Lionel Walden | Breaking Waves
Penleigh Boyd | Silver Light, Hawkesbury River, 1922
During his lifetime, and in the decades following his premature death at the age of thirty-three, Australian artist Penleigh Boyd (1890-1923) received the greatest recognition for his evocative depictions of the Australian landscape shown under heightened atmospheric conditions.
Boyd’s life and art was inextricably connected to the First World War.
Serving with the Australian Imperial Forces in France, he was badly gassed at Ypres in September 1917, and convalesced in England, before returning home to Melbourne in March 1918.
Penleigh Boyd | Silver Light, Hawkesbury River, 1922 | Smith and Singer
Claude Monet | The Manneporte (Etretat), 1883
Monet spent most of February 1883 at Étretat, a fishing village and resort on the Normandy coast.
He painted twenty views of the beach and the three extraordinary rock formations in the area: the Porte d'Aval, the Porte d'Amont, and the Manneporte.
The sunlight that strikes the Manneporte has a dematerializing effect that permitted the artist to interpret the cliff almost exclusively in terms of color and luminosity.
Claude Monet | The Manneporte (Etretat), 1883 | Metropolitan Museum of Art
Claude Monet | Boating on the River Epte, 1890
Boating on the River Epte (also known as The Canoe on the Epte) is an 1890 oil painting by French impressionist artist Claude Monet.
It is currently housed at the São Paulo Museum of Art.
Between 1887 and 1890 Monet concerned himself with portraying scenes from the River Epte, which skirted his property at Giverny.
The sisters Suzanne and Blanche Hoschedé posed for this series of pictures, their late father being banker Ernest Hoschedé, a patron of the arts and collector of Monet, and their mother, Alice, who became Monet's second wife.
Claude Monet | Boating on the River Epte, 1890 | São Paulo Museum of Art
Claude Monet | Camille Monet à la fenêtre, 1873
In 1871, Monet took up residence in the Maison Aubry on rue Pierre Guienne in Argenteuil.
It was situated down the street from the train station, making it possible for the artist to commute to his Paris studio and return home in the evening.
Although Maison Aubry served as a frequent meeting place for Impressionist painters as well as collectors, writers, and journalists, this painting provides a rare glimpse into the interior of the Monets’ home.
Claude Monet | Camille Monet à la fenêtre, 1873 | Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond
Claude Monet | The Stroller (Suzanne Hoschede), 1887
This painting of Suzanne Hoschedé in the meadows just south of Le Pressoir, Monet's home at Giverny, was probably made in the summer of 1887.
She became Monet's preferred model in the period after the death of his first wife, Camille, in 1879, and before 1890, when he gave up plein-air figure painting.
The model was the daughter of Alice Hoschedé, whom Monet married in 1892. | Source: © Metropolitan Museum of Art
Odilon Redon | Melancholy, 1876
• "The artist lives only day by day, and is the recipient of the things that surround him; he transposes sensations from outside, according to what the fate reserves him, but transforms them relentlessly and tenaciously, in a manner determined by him alone".
Odilon Redon | Melancholy, 1876 | The Art Institute of Chicago
• "L'artista vive solo giorno per giorno, ed è destinatario delle cose che lo circondano; traspone le sensazioni dall'esterno, secondo ciò che il destino gli riserva, ma le trasforma senza sosta e tenacemente, in un modo determinato da lui solo".
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