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Red Boats at Argenteuil
Claude Monet·1875
Historical Context
Red Boats at Argenteuil, painted in 1875 and now in the Musée de l'Orangerie, belongs to a group of works in which Monet investigated the decorative potential of sail and hull colours reflected in the Seine. By 1875, Monet had been working at Argenteuil for four years and his treatment of water had grown more confident and abstract; the boats in this canvas are almost architectural elements within a composition organised around colour contrast rather than spatial recession. The red hulls — likely oxide-red river boats typical of the Seine — produce a chromatic shock against the blue-green water and sky that feels deliberately orchestrated. The Orangerie, built as a permanent home for the Water Lilies, also holds key early works by Monet that contextualise his development toward the late abstract panels.
Technical Analysis
The red of the boat hulls is applied in broad flat strokes that contrast sharply with the broken directional marks of the water reflections. Monet allows the paint to remain wet and physical, neither blended smooth nor broken into the tiny separate strokes of pointillism, occupying a middle register between observation and decoration.
Look Closer
- ◆The red sails reflected in the Seine create broken red patterns in the water — warm colour fragmenting into horizontal brushstrokes below the hull.
- ◆The riverbank at Argenteuil is populated with tiny leisure figures — Sunday visitors to the new suburb's promenades, barely distinguishable as individuals.
- ◆Monet painted the boat hulls with thick vertical strokes of blue and red that read as solid mass from a distance but resolve to pure pigment up close.
- ◆The sky's reflection is visible only in the still water near the right bank — the centre of the river is disturbed by current and wind.
- ◆A factory chimney is visible at the far right bank — Monet included Argenteuil's industrial reality within the leisure landscape without comment.






