Poppies at Argenteuil is a breathtaking work of art by Oscar-Claude Monet, done in 1873 in oil on a canvas background. The size of the painting is approximately 50 x 65 cm. As of today, Poppies at Argenteuil is located at Musee d'Orsay, Paris. Monet was born in Paris, France in the year 1840. He was a student at Académie Suisse after serving two years in the French army. His aunt would buy out his contract so long as he agreed to become a full-time student at an esteemed institute of art. When one first perceives this painting, they feel a strong sense of connection with the vibrant color and the personal details that Monet tediously added when creating it. Claude Monet was a definite product of the Enlightenment, as he sought out humanity, …show more content…
His childhood heavily influenced his desire to become an artist; however, his father’s disapproval hindered this progression for a time. Monet favored his mother, who was a singer, but she died when he was young, so he spent much of his life after his mother passed away trying to gain back his father’s respect. In 1859, Monet decided to take a drastically different turn in life and joined the French military on a seven-year assignment. When his aunt eventually had to buy out his contract that was the true beginning of his professional career. He suffered from depression, an illness that he struggled throughout his …show more content…
Monet has a skill for light and dark unlike any other, so one could adequately rate his technique at around II. People still talk about Claude Monet’s painting skill a revolutionary way when it comes to the art of the Enlightenment. The inherent meaning of the poem deserves an I, as it so boldly displays many different interpretations of his wife and son. However, Monet failed to make his work on this painting stand out against other artists of the time, so his ability to paint uniquely in this sense is about an III. He finally pulls out a strong II with fulfilled intent, because his repetition and rebellion against classical art come out clearly in this particular
During his ‘Dutch’ period, Van Gogh’s subject matter was primarily focused on the lifestyle of the poor and the bible (Dubecky). In his ‘French’ period, Van Gogh had begun to shift his focus to drawing nude figures and portraits. Monet, conversely, liked to paint his subject matters in series. He would paint “the same subject at different times of the day in different lights” (Brown 1536). Some series that he painted included water lilies, bridges, and haystacks. Something that Van Gogh and Monet both really took passion in is basing their art on their life experiences. They both painted their surroundings such as landscapes, seascapes, and people around them. Van Gogh would also draw still lifes of food and would paint paintings based on his emotions during his recovered bouts of mental illness.
Seurat and Monet both approach the same ideas and concepts to create too very separate and unique works that actually have a lot in common in subject matter as well as both historically and stylistically. Overall, both paintings, A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of the Grande Jatte by Georges Seurat and La Grenouillère by Claude Monet, are excellent
In 1859, Monet set off to study painting in Paris. Paying his way with the 2,000 francs saved from the sales of his caricatures, he set himself up in the city with supreme confidence. During this time Monet was living a very bohemian type of lifestyle, selling whatever paintings possible in order support himself. In 1865, Monet began to regularly submit works to the Salon, one of the largest and most prestigious window shops in France, which posted the works of 'up and coming' artists. During the 1860's audiences were enormous, up to 400,000 visitors for a single exhibition, and the publicity generated by a good Salon review could make an unknown painter rich and fashionable within a year. After one exhibition the conservative critic, Paul Mantz, commented positively on Monet's The Pointe de la Heve at Low Tide and
Monet spent a great deal of his youth in Normandy, growing up in a suburb of Le Havre, where this view was painted. Even though this painting was completed very early in his career, Monet must have thought greatly of this piece, as he showed it in an exhibition held in Paris in 1876.
Van Gogh was really good at what he did I really liked the Starry Night over Rhone painting it looked really realistic. I liked the way he always painted the sky or painted things in nature. He used the same colors that he used in the Starry Night to paint the art piece Starry Night Over
Claude Monet's Grainstack (Sunset) is the painting I chose from the Boston Museum of Fine Arts. Monet was an impressionist painter in France, and did most of his work at his home at Giverny. Impressionism got its name from a painting that Monet painted, Impression Sunrise. Impressionist paintings are put into a category based on characteristics such as light that draws attention to objects, rough textures, and visual pleasure that the viewer receives upon looking at the paintings. Impressionist paintings are art for arts sake and focus on leisure and nature. These paintings are generally the most well known and popular paintings because of their attractive appearance.
The following is an analysis and an interpretation of Autumn on the Seine, Argenteuil. This oil on canvas painting can be found in the High Museum of Art. Claude Monet, the artist of this piece painted this in 1873, right as the Impressionism Movement was beginning. Monet played the important role of one of the founders of the Impressionism Movement with his works like Autumn on the Seine, Argenteuil. Autumn on the Seine, Argenteuil is from a series of paintings that Monet did while in Argenteuil. In the artwork Autumn on the Seine, Argenteuil, the lighting used throughout the painting, brushstroke techniques, perspective, and color all play an important role in the piece, as well as in the Impressionism
Claude Monet was an impressionist who used and changed art conventions such as the Salon des Refusés and the world as a source of ideas to create artworks such as “Impression, Sunrise”. The impressionists of the late 1800s wanted to capture the ephemeral moment in time. The artists had a major focus with the light and colour of the moment than with the details of
A vast amount of his lifetime was devoted to the creation of his world renowned pieces of artwork. Ross states, “It was the beginning of a career that was to result in more than five-hundred drawings and over two-thousand canvases”. Two-thousand is an enormous number considering it was the number of canvases Monet had completed instead of drawings. That is pure evidence of not just Monet’s love for art but, specifically his passion for painting.
He studied at the Academie Carriere to be an engineer from 1898 to 1899 and it was there that he first met Henri Mattisse. It was also around this time that he and Maurice de Vlamnick started working in the same studio, an old restaurant in Chatou which they rented together. As two painters working in the same studio they soon became close friends and soon enough de Vlamnick introduced him to Matisse at the Bernheim-Jeune Gallery. However, before Derain could finish school, he was drafted for three years of military service.
Vase with Poppies, must be one of my favorite paint from Vincent van Gogh. This painting has it all what a girl loves to see, and have. The colors are bright red, in has pink, browns, and white flowers. I love this painting because the background is drack and dull, but the vas and the flowers stand out. Even though the flowers are not beautiful, nor blooming. The structure Van Gogh created, and the colors used, he just combined everything so well.
Vincent Van Gogh was a master of the Post-Impressionist art movement; he created works that conveyed strong emotions through the simplest of elements. In Avenue of Poplars in Autumn, Van Gogh again shows his mastery of brushwork and color, giving the viewer a scene of a person walking from a home near dusk down an avenue lined with spindly poplars. Made in October of 1884, the painting seems to accurately reflect the season with red and brown leaves stubbornly adhering to the trees. The initial feeling of this piece is one of peace and calm. Autumn is a time for being with family and avoiding the cold. But the longer the viewer looks, the more they realize that this painting seems to show the opposite of a serene scene, creating an uneasy atmosphere. The feeling only grows when they see the shadows that lick the edges of the trees, the bar-like ruts in the road, and lone figure that walks steadily away from the empty house. In Avenue of Poplars in Autumn, Van Gogh strives to create a forbidding and frightening atmosphere through dark and contrasting colors, limited space, skewed balance, straight and diagonal lines, movement, and the subject matter of the painting, all to represent his emotional response to the scene.
Claude Monet was born in Paris in 1840 and would become known as one of France’s famous painters. Monet is often attributed with being the leading figure of the style of impressionism; but this was not always the case. Monet started out his career as a caricaturist, showing great skill. Eventually “Monet began to accompany [Eugène] Boudin as the older artist . . . worked outdoors, . . . this “truthful” painting, Monet later claimed, had determined his path as an artist.” Monet’s goal took off as his popularity grew in the mid 1870s after he switched from figure painting to the landscape impressionist style. William Seitz supports this statement through his quote, “The landscapes Monet painted at Argenteuil between 1872 and 1877 are
Sunflowers, 1888. When he was more miserable he used darker, mysterious colours i.e. Starry Night 1889; and when he was straight to the point, Self-Portrait if Bandaged Ear, 1889. He conveyed his emotional life in his art. He never tried to hide his depression, yet instead highlighting this in his paintings, and this is what makes him so individual.
John Griffith Chaney, best known by his pen name Jack London was an American writer; he was born in San Francisco, California on January 12th, 1876, and died in Glen Ellen, California on November 22nd, 1916. London had a difficult childhood, regarding London’s writing style, oxfordbibliographies.com, (2012) mentions: “Perhaps in part because of the psychological dualities of his childhood, London frequently attempted to conjoin opposites in his work, such as socialism and individualism, wanderlust and love of home, travel overseas and California ranching, Friedrich Nietzsche versus Karl Marx or Charles Darwin, racism versus brotherhood”.