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The Waterlily Pond with the Japanese Bridge, 1899, Monet, Claude (1840-1926) / Private Collection / Peter Willi / The Bridgeman Art Library This stretched canvas print is the result of sophisticated digital printing technology in which the image is printed directly onto an artist-grade, 100% cotton canvas. The canvas is then expertly stretched around 1.5" wooden bars and carefully finished with hand-painted edges. An acrylic coating protects the stunning giclee print from dust, moisture and fading. Watermark will not appear on finished product.
The Waterlily Pond with the Japanese Bridge, 1899, Monet, Claude (1840-1926) / Private Collection / Peter Willi / The Bridgeman Art Library This stretched canvas print is the result of sophisticated digital printing technology in which the image is printed directly onto an artist-grade, 100% cotton canvas. The canvas is then expertly stretched around 1.5" wooden bars and carefully finished with hand-painted edges. An acrylic coating protects the stunning giclee print from dust, moisture and fading. Watermark will not appear on finished product.
Claude Monet (1840 – 1926), the founder of Impressionism, was one of the most influential landscape painters in the history of art. Born in Paris, Monet was enrolled in the studio of Glenyre, where he met Renoir, Sisley, and Bazille, who became the core of the Impressionist group. Painting outdoors, he broke the tradition of portraying a subject literally by conveying the fleeting effects of atmosphere, time of day, and season upon color and light. Eliminating black and gray from his palette, he represented natural color like a prism, breaking it down into its individual components, often painting a series of the exact same view under different light and weather conditions. Monet brought the study of the transient effects of natural light to its most refined expression, ultimately becoming a forerunner of 20th century modernism.
Read MoreClaude Monet (1840 – 1925), a founding father of Impressionism who disliked the restrictiveness of traditional art, began as a caricature artist, evolving into one of the world’s most extraordinary and important landscape painters. His “Japanese Bridge,” part of a series that captures shifts in color during various phases of daylight, depicts a wooden footbridge that spanned the famous lily pond at his Giverny home in France. The transportive “Japanese Bridge” is an extraordinary water landscape in which Monet’s adeptly imparts the artwork with the depth of a view glimpsed through a window
The Waterlily Pond with the Japanese Bridge, 1899, Monet, Claude (1840-1926) / Private Collection / Peter Willi / The Bridgeman Art Library This stretched canvas print is the result of sophisticated digital printing technology in which the image is printed directly onto an artist-grade, 100% cotton canvas. The canvas is then expertly stretched around 1.5" wooden bars and carefully finished with hand-painted edges. An acrylic coating protects the stunning giclee print from dust, moisture and fading. Watermark will not appear on finished product.
Claude Monet (1840 – 1926), the founder of Impressionism, was one of the most influential landscape painters in the history of art. Born in Paris, Monet was enrolled in the studio of Glenyre, where he met Renoir, Sisley, and Bazille, who became the core of the Impressionist group. Painting outdoors, he broke the tradition of portraying a subject literally by conveying the fleeting effects of atmosphere, time of day, and season upon color and light. Eliminating black and gray from his palette, he represented natural color like a prism, breaking it down into its individual components, often painting a series of the exact same view under different light and weather conditions. Monet brought the study of the transient effects of natural light to its most refined expression, ultimately becoming a forerunner of 20th century modernism.
Read MoreClaude Monet (1840 – 1925), a founding father of Impressionism who disliked the restrictiveness of traditional art, began as a caricature artist, evolving into one of the world’s most extraordinary and important landscape painters. His “Japanese Bridge,” part of a series that captures shifts in color during various phases of daylight, depicts a wooden footbridge that spanned the famous lily pond at his Giverny home in France. The transportive “Japanese Bridge” is an extraordinary water landscape in which Monet’s adeptly imparts the artwork with the depth of a view glimpsed through a window