
The Cliffs at Étretat
Claude Monet·1886
Historical Context
Monet returned obsessively to the chalk cliffs at Étretat on the Normandy coast through the 1880s, producing a series of canvases that treated the famous arches and needles as a subject for atmospheric variation rather than topographical record. This 1886 version, now in Moscow's Pushkin Museum, captures the cliffs under particular weather conditions — the sea's mood inseparable from the rock formations above it. By the mid-1880s Monet had developed his practice of working in extended series, exploring how light and atmosphere transformed identical motifs across time. Étretat had become fashionable among Parisian artists after Courbet's paintings of the 1860s, but Monet's serial approach transformed landscape documentation into systematic investigation of perception.
Technical Analysis
Oil on canvas with Monet's characteristic broken brushwork building up cliff textures and sea surface simultaneously. The chalky white of the cliffs absorbs and reflects sky color, creating a chromatic dialogue between rock, water, and atmosphere that required rapid, committed paint application to capture transient light effects.
Look Closer
- ◆Monet's chalk cliff arches frame a section of sea and sky — rock serving as a compositional.
- ◆The cliff face is painted with the same broken color approach as the sea — geology as animated.
- ◆Fishing boats or the 'Aiguille' needle rock appear in the middle distance as scale references.
- ◆The sea's color changes through the arch from greener near-water to bluer in the further distance.






