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Garden
Claude Monet·1876
Historical Context
Garden paintings occupied Monet throughout his mature career, culminating in the famous Giverny water garden series, but even in earlier works like this 1876 canvas the garden was a private theater for his light experiments. Monet stands as the central figure of French Impressionism, transforming landscape painting from documentary description to the analysis of light itself. Working outdoors in all conditions, he pioneered the serialized study of a single motif at different times and seasons, demonstrating that a subject's identity is inseparable from the light falling upon it.
Technical Analysis
Monet's brushwork is fluid and instinctive, breaking surfaces into interlocking dabs and strokes of pure color that blend optically at viewing distance. His palette captures the chromatic complexity of natural light — lavenders in shadow.






