Monet Abroad

Florence Gentner, Marine Kisiel, Jean-­ Marc Hovasse

Travel alongside Claude Monet to twenty destinations where he created his most famous work—including Venice, Rouen, Étretat, Antibes, and London—all of which nourished his mastery of light.

A major figure of impressionism, known primarily for his paintings of water lilies, Claude Monet was also a frequent, but discreet traveler. For more than fifty years, he made his way through Europe, looking for remarkable scenes, reflections, nuances, and transparencies of light to capture through his painting—­the result of patient, obsessive observation.

From Normandy to Venice, via London, Brittany, the Mediterranean, and the banks of the Seine, his travels were far more than mere journeys: they were an incessant quest for visual sensations. Art historian Florence Gentner retraces his artistic and personal voyages, showing how twenty destinations profoundly influenced some 250 of his major works, as well as the evolution of his color palette.

Extracts from more than one hundred letters, numerous sketches, notebook excerpts, and high-­definition reproductions reveal the circumstances of his journeys and convey the painter’s state of mind while he was away from home. His travel paintings constitute an exceptional body of work, enriched by an insightful analysis from Marine Kisiel, a heritage curator.

Part artistic biography, part travelogue, Monet Abroad reveals the modernity and insatiable curiosity of a painter constantly in search of new horizons and new subjects.

Contributors

Florence Gentner

Author

Florence Gentner was formerly special assistant to the Carnavalet Museum and the Maison de Victor Hugo. She regularly writes articles devoted to the homes of writers and gives lectures on art history. She is the author of numerous books on Claude Monet and Victor Hugo.

Marine Kisiel

Author

Marine Kisiel is an art and fashion historian. She is the chief curator of the nineteenth-century fashion department at the Palais Galliera in Paris.

Jean-­ Marc Hovasse

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