DESCRIPTION
While still in his teens, Claude Monet (French, 1840–1926) was selling his charcoal sketches and caricatures to friends and neighbors in Le Havre, France. His excellent draftsmanship drew the attention of resident landscape painter Eugène Boudin, who befriended the young artist and encouraged him to try then-unconventional plein air oil painting. Monet was profoundly affected by its immediacy, and thus began his lifelong fascination with light, color, and capturing on canvas the fleeting sensory perception of nature. In Paris, Monet became involved with a circle of artist friends, who would form the core of a new movement. In their first formal exhibition in 1874, Monet’s painting of a misty dawn gave rise to the movement’s name: Impressionism. The 28 artworks reproduced in this book of postcards trace Monet’s early years, in which he ultimately create an innovative style distinctively his own, which was a prelude to 20th-century modernism.
DETAILS:
- 28 color reproductions bound in a handy postcard collection
- Mail the postcards, or keep the book for your own collection
- Decorate your office or dorm room with a wall of images
- ISBN 9780764976704
- Informative introductory text
- Backs of postcards offer enough room for short messages
- Perforated for easy removal
- Oversized postcards may require additional postage
- Pomegranate’s books of postcards feature exclusive selections of art from museums and artists around the world
- Book: 6.875 x 4.75 x .375 in.
- Postcard: 6.5 x 4.75 in.
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Description | While still in his teens, Claude Monet (French, 1840–1926) was selling his charcoal sketches and caricatures to friends and neighbors in Le Havre, France. His excellent draftsmanship drew the attention of resident landscape painter Eugène Boudin, who befriended the young artist and encouraged him to try then-unconventional plein air oil painting. Monet was profoundly affected by its immediacy, and thus began his lifelong fascination with light, color, and capturing on canvas the fleeting sensory perception of nature. In Paris, Monet became involved with a circle of artist friends, who would form the core of a new movement. In their first formal exhibition in 1874, Monet’s painting of a misty dawn gave rise to the movement’s name: Impressionism. The 28 artworks reproduced in this book of postcards trace Monet’s early years, in which he ultimately create an innovative style distinctively his own, which was a prelude to 20th-century modernism. DETAILS:
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