Grain Stack in Giverny, 1899 by Blanche Hoschedé Monet(1889)
品类
绘画
创作技法
油彩/帆布
作品类型
原作
签名
左下图
作品不含裱框面积
11 x 1 x 14 in(27.94 x 2.54 x 35.56 cm)
开立收据之单位/机构
Artgiverny Expert
作品现状
票据
作品描述
Blanche is completely under the influence of Claude Monet. She is not only using the same palette and the same colors, but she herself painted at Monet's side; and we are tempted to say that the student has reached the level of the master. Claude Monet’s art dealer, Durand-Ruel, purchased a haystack painting by Blanche Hoschedé Monet, which is presently hanging in Claude Monet’s house in Giverny. The grainstack, formed when the grain has ripened and turned to gold, is a symbol of rural tradition. Blanche has captured the golden light in a view to the southwest, toward the hills of Giverny that extend along the left bank. Light floods the scene and emanates from the painting, whose interaction of light and color in the grain, the sky and the soil produce a festival of orange, yellow, brown and gold that, with the blue colors of the hills, creates a striking vision of Giverny
Provenance:
Gift from Blanche to her sister, Marthe Hoschedé-Butler
By descent through the family
Blanche HOSCHÉDÉ-MONET
(1865-1947)
Grain Stack in Giverny, 1899 by Blanche Hoschedé Monet(1889)
Blanche is completely under the influence of Claude Monet. She is not only using the same palette and the same colors, but she herself painted at Monet's side; and we are tempted to say that the student has reached the level of the master. Claude Monet’s art dealer, Durand-Ruel, purchased a haystack painting by Blanche Hoschedé Monet, which is presently hanging in Claude Monet’s house in Giverny. The grainstack, formed when the grain has ripened and turned to gold, is a symbol of rural tradition. Blanche has captured the golden light in a view to the southwest, toward the hills of Giverny that extend along the left bank. Light floods the scene and emanates from the painting, whose interaction of light and color in the grain, the sky and the soil produce a festival of orange, yellow, brown and gold that, with the blue colors of the hills, creates a striking vision of Giverny
Provenance:
Gift from Blanche to her sister, Marthe Hoschedé-Butler
By descent through the family