.jpg&width=1200)
Le Déjeuner sur l'herbe
Claude Monet·1866
Historical Context
Le Déjeuner sur l'herbe (1866) at the Musée d'Orsay is a surviving fragment of Monet's enormous canvas—originally approximately four by six meters—painted in direct response to Manet's scandalous 1863 painting of the same title. Monet's version was bourgeois and un-scandalous, depicting fashionably dressed figures picnicking in the Forest of Fontainebleau, attempting to bring the large-format Salon ambition to open-air painting. The canvas proved too large to transport and was left folded with a friend; when Monet reclaimed it years later it had suffered from damp and he cut the canvas into surviving sections, this large fragment being deposited at the Orsay. It is a key document of early Impressionism.
Technical Analysis
The surviving fragment shows Monet's early command of dappled light falling through forest foliage onto the white tablecloth and figures. Light effects are ambitious but still dependent on tonal contrast rather than the full optical color of his mature work. The figures are handled with unusual care and finish for Monet.
Look Closer
- ◆The poplars line the riverbank in strict vertical alignment, their trunks dark accents.
- ◆The water reflects the trees as vertical stripes of color mirroring the trunks above.
- ◆The sky between the treetops is broken into small patches by the interlocking branches.
- ◆The composition is almost abstract — vertical trees, horizontal water, interlocked reflections.






