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Impression, Sunrise

Musée Marmottan Monet, Paris, France
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Guidance to Describe:

1. Read Docent’s response.     2. Always use accredited sources.     3. Describe what you see.

People:

Two men enter the picture in a shallow, flat-bottomed boat. One of them is standing and paddling. They may be on their way to work on a fishing boat – picking up supplies – or heading home after a long night at sea.

Place:

The old Port of Le Havre.

Objects & Things:

The Sky is awash with streaks of strong color. The sun spreads its rays over calm waters. The Clipper ship, in the distance, may be in the boatyard for repairs on its sails.

Guidance to Interpret & Conclude:

1.Read Docent’s Response.     2. Always use accredited sources.     3. Ignite your imagination.

Interpret:

A new day dawns in the harbor. Light expresses itself in mysterious ways. Stillness adds to its charm. Monet revisits old memories. He may repress a tear or two. The great painter makes Impressionist painting seem effortless. Why reach for answers? Monet speaks for himself: “When you go out to paint, try to forget what objects you have in front of you, a tree, a field…Merely think, here is a little square of blue, here an oblong of pink, here a streak of yellow, and paint it just as it looks to you, the exact color and shape, until it gives your own naïve impression of the scene.”

Conclude:

Monet makes a last-minute decision to change the original painting’s title, View of the Harbour at Le Havre! to one evocative of tender feeling about his hometown. The artist’s perceptions and impressions reinforce his previous direct quote, and truly describe the nature of Monet’s personal style. The survival of Impressionist painters, is due to the mutual support and reassurance from leading figures. At the time, commissions from patrons and words of encouragement from critics for this new style of painting are not forthcoming.

Go back to Era & Artist, Painting, History & Culture. Contact me for help.

SOURCES:

VISUAL ARTS ENCYCLOPEDIA 2013 visual-arts-cork.com – Modern art. Web. “Social Classes in Paris.” Fleck, Danita, Choy, Linda, Jann, Maureen. Saint Joseph’s University, Philadelphia. PA. Web.

ARTIST, PAINTING, HISTORY & CULTURE Claude Monet

Biography of Claude MONET. Giverny Foundation is a not-for-profit Organisation, Vernon, France. 2009. Web. Photo: intermonet.com/venice/index. Web. Claude & Alice in Venice.

Impression, Sunrise

Musée Marmottan Monet, Paris Samu, Margaret. "Impressionism: Art and Modernity." In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000–. Web. “A Stolen Monet Goes Back on Display.” AP. “New York Times Archives 1991/4/17.” Web.

Modern era, Modern Age. French Impressionist movement

Stokstad, Marilyn, Michael. W. Cothren, contributors Frederick M. Asher [e.g. al.] 4th edition. Art History. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey. Prentice Hall. Print.

ESSENTIAL TOPIC Subject Matter: History. Portrait. Genre. Landscape. Still Life.

“Academic Art”. “Academic Art Style”. “Hierarch of the Genres” Types (Genres) of Painting.” ART ENCYCLOPEDIA 2013, “Visual Arts Guide to European, Irish, and American Art.” Web

Guidance to Analyze:

1. Become familiar with the Topic.     2. Look closely. Go back & forth.     3. You may see things differently.

Color:

The lighter, the more color you see on an object, or a surface. Pictures painted out-of-doors, in natural light, especially sunlight, are brightest. Monet uses complementary colors Orange + Blue. Notice how each color makes the other pop, even though the colors are muted. Open View Essential Topic, to see the Color Wheel.

Line:

A line is the path of a moving point; it can be of any length or width. Lines create geometric, or biomorphic shapes, resembling living organisms. Impression, Sunrise is painted indistinctly with broken lines of color.

Texture:

Monet has actually been observed using four bristle brushes, each is filled with a different pure color he dabs from his palette. His technique is Impasto - meaning paint applied thickly. Wet paint may be brushed on top of dry paint to vary its thickness.

Guidance to Analyze:

1. Become familiar with the Topic.      2. Look closely. Go back & forth.     3. Consider Impasto technique.

Focal Point:

The sun’s orange rays spill over the harbor.

Direction/ Movement:

Monet directs you through the painting with alternating intensities of color. He lays the paint down with quick dashes of smooth, or thick brushstrokes.

Repetition/ Rhythm:

Repeated dashes create a rhythmic flow through the harbor landscape.

Guidance to Analyze:

1. Become familiar with the Topic.     2. Look closely. Go back & forth.     3. Perspective is an artful illusion.

Yes: Perspective (Basic):

Foreground, Middle ground, and Background (imaginary horizontal sections) are implied on the 2-dimensional Picture Plane (flat surface).

Foreground is the section closest to you. Saturated colors and clearest details illustrate the impasto technique. Note the manned row boat, sun’s orange rays spilling over the water, and strong dashes of color. Less distinct is the tall Clipper ship, in Middle ground. Blurriness behind it, and the orange sky recede into Background.

Guidance to Analyze:

1. Become familiar with the Topic.     2. Look closely. Go back & forth.     3. Consider Mood.

Landscape:

Landscape painting depicts the out-of-doors. French Impressionists call it “en plein air,” in the open air. Scenic views, in all sorts of locations and climates are possibilities. Water, flowers and forests, mountains and valleys; figures and animals keep landscape artists happily occupied.

The mood expresses a peaceful stillness throughout the painting. Nostalgic feelings surface.

Guidance to Analyze:

1. Become familiar with the Topic.     2. Look closely. Go back & forth.     3. Consider Characteristics.

Era:

Modern era/ The Age of Modern Art (Mid – 19th- 20th Century)

Movement:

Impressionist, French (c.1870-1886)

Characteristics of Style:

Natural light. Wonderful reflections. Rapid marks made with short brushstrokes. Monet’s particular style labels him by many as “The father of Impressionism.”