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From website: http://giverny.org/monet/welcome.htm
CLAUDE MONET1840-1926.

Claude Monet was born in Paris on November 14, 1840. When he was five years old, the family moved to the port town of Le Havre. For much of his childhood he was considered by both his teachers and parents to be undisciplined and therefore, unlikely to make a success of his life. When he was a fifteen, scornful of the quiet earnest pictures Boudin was painting, they met and Boudin, overcoming the younger man's resistance, urged him to study landscape. Together they worked outdoors in the lovely Norman countryside around Le Havre and Monet became a "plein-airiste" (open-air painter) almost against his will - an ironical fact since it was he who later so fanatically advocated the practice of painting out-of-doors. Boudin generously and modestly taught Monet whatever he had gleaned and long years afterward, when they were both successful, Monet acknowledged his debt.

Dissuaded by Boudin from going on with his lucrative but limited work in caricature, Monet determined to become a serious painter. With this decision began years of struggle against poverty so bitter that he often had no food for himself or his family, and what was almost worse, no money for paints and canvas. His parents were not initially against his going to Paris to study, but they imposed on him such stringent regulations about submitting to academic training that their attitude amounted virtually to opposition. He refused to take regular courses at the Ecole des Beaux Arts, attending instead the so-called Academy Suisse, a kind of sketching class run by a former model, and exchanging ideas with the lively company that congregated at the Brasserie des Martyres, one of the eating places favored by artists and authors.

After doing military service in Algiers, he came to Paris for a second time and made the acquaintance of Renoir, Sisley and Bazille at Gleyre's studio. He exhibited in 1865 at the Salon. In 1871 he visited London with Pissaro where they both came under the influence of Turner. The first showing of his collected work was held in 1880, although in 1877 he and his friends had already come to be known as the Impressionists. Of them all, he was perhaps the most influential and the most versed in the various theories of the new technique.

Monet was a cultivated man with a cosmopolitan outlook. His friends, writers and artists, poets and composers, came to visit at Giverny where the food was good, with wine well chosen and the conversation relaxed. In 1923 he underwent two cataract operations. They partially restored his eyesight but left him with veiled vision and distorted color perception. Still he continued to paint; his internal vision seemed as clear as ever.

Monet was eighty-six, on December 5, 1926, when he died, a driven old man, almost blind with cataracts, preyed upon by terrible fits of depression. He considered that his entire life had been a failure. He insisted that his one achievement was to have worked directly from nature. He often painted from memory in a manner identical to his paintings from nature.

From website: http://www.askart.com/AskART/artists/biography.aspx?artist=9000072

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Archive 9Feb2001 Disk#4
CLAUDE MONET
19th Century
WATERLILIES
CLAUDE MONET
1908