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Monet

The Restless Vision

ebook
1 of 2 copies available
1 of 2 copies available
A groundbreaking look at the life and art of one of the most influential, modern painters of the late nineteenth century and founder of the Impressionist movement
“Wullschläger emerges with a strikingly different picture of the artist. Passionate, prickly, edgy and unstable, her Monet, the unrecognizable Monet, is a powerful new character in art.” —The Sunday Times (London)

Drawing on thousands of never-before-translated letters and unpublished sources, this biography reveals dramatic new information about the life and work of one of the late nineteenth century’s most important painters. Despite being mocked at the beginning of his career, and living hand to mouth, Monet risked all to pursue his vision, and his early work along the banks of the Seine in the 1860s and ’70s would come to be revered as Impressionism. In the following decades, he emerged as its celebrated leader in one of the most exciting cultural moments in Paris, before withdrawing to his house and garden to paint the late Water Lilies, which were ignored during his lifetime and would later have a major influence on all twentieth-century painters both figurative and abstract.
This is the first time we see the turbulent life of this volatile and voracious man, who was as obsessed by his love affairs as he was by nature. He changed his art decisively three times when the woman at the center of his life changed; Wullschläger brings these unknown, passionate, and passionately committed women to the foreground. Monet's closest friend was Prime Minister Georges Clemenceau; strong intellectual currents connected him to writers from Zola to Proust, as well as to his friends Manet, Renoir, and Pissarro. Brilliant and absorbing, this biography will forever change our understanding of Monet's life and work.
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    • Library Journal

      April 1, 2024

      Wullschl�ger, chief art critic at the Financial Times and prize-winning author of Hans Christian Andersen: The Life of a Storyteller and Chagall: Life and Exile, returns to art biographies with this in-depth consideration of Monet, one of the most influential painters of the 19th century and founder of the impressionist movement. Prepub Alert.

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 29, 2024
      Financial Times art critic Wullschläger (Chagall) delivers a scrupulous biography of impressionist painter Claude Monet (1840-1926). Beginning with his childhood in Paris and Le Havre, she touches on his family (“Resourcefulness, adaptability, robust health, and a resolutely urban outlook were the legacy of grandparents”), his teenage stint as a caricaturist, his military service, and the genesis of his artistic career. But the focus lies in how the women he loved shaped his creative life. According to Wullschläger, Monet “made his reputation” painting his future wife Camille Doncieux in such works as The Woman in a Green Dress, in which he simultaneously showed off and “disguised” his subject by depicting her as she walked away. Also explored are the period of “intense introspection” during Camille’s illness leading up her 1879 death that fueled Monet’s obsessive work on pastorals, and the new productivity he harnessed during his courtship with and eventual marriage to Alice Hoschedé, who inspired Monet with her “strength” and “her faith in him and ambition for him.” Refreshingly, Wullschläger doesn’t shy away from Monet’s less savory characteristics, including his rage, emotional manipulation, and profligate spending, bringing to life a man whose creative genius was inseparable from his flawed humanity. Even readers well-versed in Monet’s life story will learn something new from this thorough and original reappraisal. (Sept.)Correction: An earlier version of this review misstated the years of Monet’s birth and death.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from September 15, 2024
      Curious about the interior life of the revolutionary painter Monet, Wullschl�ger (Chagall, 2008) was elated to discover a trove of his letters not previously translated into English. Here is Monet as an "unruly child" who loved to draw and spend his days by the sea in Le Havre, a busy port where "everything is in motion," and where Monet first fell under the spell of light, change, and dynamism, inspiring what became known as Impressionism. In Paris, he befriended Renoir and other future Impressionists and lived with and painted stylish Camille Doncieux, with whom he had two sons. Ever restless and hungry for new vistas, Monet traveled often, but home was crucial to him, especially houses on the Seine outside Paris and the paradise he created at Giverny. Wullschl�ger tracks the high-stakes drama of Monet's relationship with Alice Raingo Hosched� as they lived scandalously together with his two and her six children while she was still married. A writer of radiant energy and exhilarating insights, Wullschl�ger matches each phase in Monet's long, ardent, precarious, and momentously creative and productive life with the evolution of his radically in-the-moment paintings. Her biography, like his work, profoundly alters our perceptions, revealing how, from portraits to seascapes to water lilies, Monet painted out of love and endless fascination with what it feels like to be alive.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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