What you need to know about Claude Monet
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Claude Monet, one of the world’s foremost Impressionists, lived a long, colorful life, influenced by other artists, nature and, of course, his native France. Here’s a look at key moments that helped shape his work.
You also can see what he saw at Giverny in an article that describes how to see his home and gardens without the crowds.
Born: Nov. 14, 1840, Paris
Moves: At age 5, to Normandy, France
Serves: In the military in 1861 and ‘62, in Algeria
Returns: To Normandy in 1862
Studies: In Paris later in 1862
Meets: Alfred Sisley and Pierre-Auguste Renoir, among other artists, in 1862
Becomes a father: Son Jean is born Aug. 8, 1867
Attempts: Suicide in 1868
Marries: Camille Doncieux, his frequent model and mother of Jean, on June 28, 1870
Begins: A relationship with Alice Hoschedé in 1876
Uses: Money made from his paintings to pay for the care of Camille, whose health is in decline after the birth of their son Michel in 1878
Paints: Camille in her last days. She dies Sept. 5, 1879
Moves: In 1883 to Giverny in Normandy with Alice and her children and his two sons
Buys: A house in 1890 in Giverny
Marries: Alice in July 1892
Creates: A water lily garden in the 1890s in Giverny and begins to paint the flowers
Loses: Alice in 1911 and his son Jean in 1914
Works: On 12 huge water lily canvases from 1916-1926, despite vision problems
Dies: Of lung cancer Dec. 5, 1926
Sources: Giverny.org; Encyclopedia Britannica; “Monet” by Christoph Heinrich
MORE: Visiting Ernest Hemingway’s Paris | Museums to explore on a rainy day | Impressions of Monet’s Giverny | How to get there
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