Route de Chailly à
Fontainebleau, 1864 |
Monet
was born on November 14, 1840, in Paris , but he
spent most of his childhood in Le
Havre . There, in his teens, he studied drawing; he
also painted seascapes and landscapes outside with the French painter Eugene
Louis Boudin. By 1859 Monet had committed himself to a career as an artist and
began to spend as much time in Paris
as possible. During the 1860s he was associated with the pre-impressionist
painter Edouard Manet, and with other aspiring French painters destined to form
the impressionist school-Camille Pissarro, Pierre Auguste Renoir, and Alfred
Sisley.
Working outside, Monet painted
simple landscapes and scenes of contemporary middle-class society, and he began
to have some success at official exhibitions. As his style developed, however,
Monet violated one traditional artistic convention after another in the
interest of direct artistic expression. His experiments in rendering outdoor
sunlight with a direct, sketch-like (DRAFT, DRAWING) application of bright color became more and
more daring (AUDACIOUS, FEARLESS), and he seemed to cut himself off from the possibility of a
successful career as a conventional painter supported by the art establishment.READ MORE: http://www.renoirinc.com/biography/artists/monet.htm

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