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Monet or the Triumph of Impressionism EN
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Monet or the Triumph of Impressionism EN Book: Monet or the Triumph of Impressionism EN
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   Prehľadná a podrobná monografia Clauda Moneta - otca impresionizmu...Only an eye, but my God what an eye!(Cézanne) Along with Turner, no artist has sought more than Monet to capture light itself on canvas. Of all the Impressionists, it was the man Cézanne called only an eye, but my God what an eye! who stayed completely true to the principle of absolute fidelity to the visual sensation, painting directly from the object. It could be said that Monet reinvented the possibilities of colour, and whether it was through his early interest in Japanese prints, his time in the dazzling light of Algeria as a conscript, or his personal acquaintance with the major painters of the late 1800s, what Monet produced throughout his long life would change forever the way we perceive both the natural world and its attendant phenomena. The high point of his explorations were the late series of waterlilies, painted in his own garden at Giverny, that, in their moves towards almost total formlessness, are really the origin of abstract art.
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Monet or the Triumph of Impressionism EN

Daniel Wildenstein

Monet or the Triumph of Impressionism EN

Daniel Wildenstein

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Doplnkové info

  • Vydavateľstvo: Taschen
  • ISBN: 3822816922
  • Väzba: brožovaná

Popis knihy

   Prehľadná a podrobná monografia Clauda Moneta - otca impresionizmu...Only an eye, but my God what an eye!(Cézanne) Along with Turner, no artist has sought more than Monet to capture light itself on canvas. Of all the Impressionists, it was the man Cézanne called only an eye, but my God what an eye! who stayed completely true to the principle of absolute fidelity to the visual sensation, painting directly from the object. It could be said that Monet reinvented the possibilities of colour, and whether it was through his early interest in Japanese prints, his time in the dazzling light of Algeria as a conscript, or his personal acquaintance with the major painters of the late 1800s, what Monet produced throughout his long life would change forever the way we perceive both the natural world and its attendant phenomena. The high point of his explorations were the late series of waterlilies, painted in his own garden at Giverny, that, in their moves towards almost total formlessness, are really the origin of abstract art.

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