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A Monet Winter River

Jan 22, 2019

Students in today’s class learned about impressionism and we took a closer look at Claude Monet’s painting Impression Sunrise .  The term impressionism comes from the title of this painting.  Monet was a founder of Impressionist Painting.  Monet would use strong colours and bold short brushstrokes.  Turning away from the blended colours and evenness of classical art, he placed colours side by side to create a division of colours.  Monet painted scenes over and over again in various light and weather conditions. His goal was to capture the light and the way it reflected off objects, such as water. He was often accompanied by Renoir, Sisley and Bazille on these painting sojourns.   He was also friends with Pissarro and Edouard Manet.

Claude Monet was born in Paris, France in 1840 and when he was young he did not like being confined to a classroom and was more interested in being outside.  He filled his school books with sketches of people, including caricatures of his teachers.   Monet loved to set up his easel outside and paint his pictures en plein air.  He even had a small houseboat and would paint the scenes he saw from that view.  In 1892, Claude Monet moved to Giverny, France.  It had a garden, pond, orchards and a bridge that would serve as a source of great inspiration for the artist – including his most famous work, Water Lilies . Despite developing cataracts in his right eye, Monet continued to paint until his death in 1926.  He was 86 years old.

Students practiced painting colours side by side and tried not to over blend or make just one colour.  Here are few examples from our grade 4-8 students at KCS.   Some students choose to place their street lamps in perspective with the river.   One student called their work Winter Beauty – And indeed they all are!