O Lago com Ninféias (The Water Lily Pond) - Claude Monet
National Gallery, Londres, Inglaterra
OST - 88x93 - 1899
In 1893 Monet bought a plot of land next to his house in
Giverny. He had already planted a colourful flower garden, but now he wanted to
create a water garden ‘both for the pleasure of the eye and for the purpose of
having subjects to paint'. He enlarged the existing pond, filling it with exotic
new hybrid water lilies, and built a humpback bridge at one end, inspired by
examples seen in Japanese prints. The water garden became the main obsession of
Monet’s later career, and the subject of some 250 paintings.
Here, the bridge spans the width of the canvas but is cut off
at the edges so that it seems to float unanchored above the water, its shape
reflected in a dark arc at the bottom of the picture. The perspective seems to
shift; it is as though we are looking up at the bridge but down on the water
lilies which float towards the distance. The vertical reflections of the trees
provide a counterpoint to the horizontal clumps of the lily pads.
For Monet, gardens offered a refuge from the modern urban and
industrial world, although he and his fellow garden enthusiasts benefited from
modern advances in botanical science that were creating new hybrid flowers in a
wide choice of shapes and colours that could be produced on an almost
industrial scale. He made modest gardens in the homes he rented in Argenteuil
and Vetheuil in the 1870s, but from 1883, when he moved to a rented house in
Giverny, about 50 miles to the west of Paris, he had more scope to indulge his
passion for plants. He became a dedicated gardener with an extensive botanical
knowledge, and sought the opinions of leading horticulturalists. As Monet’s
career flourished his increasing wealth enabled him to fund what became a grand
horticultural enterprise: by the 1890s he was employing as many as eight gardeners.
Monet began by refashioning the garden in front of the house,
the so-called ‘Clos Normand’, replacing the existing kitchen garden and orchard
with densely planted colourful flower beds that were filled with blooms
throughout the seasons. He was able to buy the house in 1890, and three years
later he purchased an adjacent plot of land next to the river Epte beyond the
railway line at the edge of his property. The plot had a small pond with
arrowhead and wild water lilies, which he wanted to turn into a water garden
with a larger lily pond ‘both for the pleasure of the eye and for the purpose
of having subjects to paint’.
The idea may have occurred to him after he had seen the water
garden at the 1899 Exposition Universelle in Paris created by the grower Joseph
Bory Latour-Marliac, who bred the first colourful hardy waterlilies. Monet
began by requesting permission from the Prefect of the Eure to dig irrigation
channels from the Ru – a branch of the Epte – to feed his pond, but the Giverny
villagers objected, fearing it would contaminate the water and that the foreign
plants would poison their cattle. Monet was furious, but three months later
permission came through and he began to enlarge the existing pond, replacing
the wild water lilies with Latour-Marliac hybrids available in yellows, pinks,
whites and violets.
The pond was enlarged on further occasions – in 1901 and 1904 –
tripling the size of the water garden. Together with the flower garden on the
other side of the railway track it became the principal preoccupation of the
last 26 years of Monet’s life. While the Clos Normand garden was laid out along
fairly traditional lines, harking back to the formal French gardens of
seventeenth-century Europe, with a central alleyway and geometrically arranged
beds, the water garden was more Eastern in inspiration. Its less regimented,
more natural design and more muted colours created a quieter, meditative
atmosphere. Monet erected a Japanese bridge over the western end of the pond
that took its inspiration from the bridges in ukiyo-e Japanese prints. He was a
keen collector of these prints and he owned a copy of Hiroshige’s Wisteria at Kameido Tenjin Shrine (1856), one
of the many prints that features a curved bridge. In a more general sense, the
water garden reflected Monet’s admiration for the Japanese appreciation of
nature.
Monet had to wait for his water garden to mature before he
could begin to paint it in earnest. As he later recalled: ‘It took me some time
to understand my water-lilies. It takes more than a day to get under your skin.
And then all at once, I had the revelation – how wonderful my pond was – and
reached for my palette. I’ve hardly had any other subject since that moment.’
In total, Monet painted 250 canvases of his water garden. Around 200 of these
represent water lilies floating on the surface of the water, while the
remainder also show the Japanese bridge, the weeping willow trees and wisteria
and the irises, agapanthus and day lilies on its banks. In all these pictures
Monet was painting a subject that was already ‘pictorial’ – a landscape that
had been carefully composed according to his personal aesthetic. The National
Gallery has three further paintings of the water garden:Water-lilies, setting sun; Irises; and Water-lilies.
Monet painted three views of the Japanese bridge in 1895, not
long after it had been constructed, but then took a break from the subject,
only returning to it in 1899. By now the pool was overhung by vegetation and
surrounded by plants, but to judge from contemporary photographs it was never
as enclosed as Monet painted it, and he exaggerated the feeling of
claustrophobia. In December 1900 he exhibited 12 paintings at Durand-Ruel’s
gallery in Paris, all of which showed more or less symmetrical views of the
Japanese bridge.
In this painting, as in the others in the series, we are
looking down onto the surface of the water, where the lily pads float into the
distance, meeting the dense foliage on the far bank. Weeping willows are
reflected in the pond and clumps of iris border its banks. The perspective
seems to shift so that it is hard to find a single focal point; it is as though
we are looking up at the bridge but down on the waterlilies. The picture, like
the water itself, seems to oscillate between surface and depth. The mainly
vertical reflections provide a counterpoint to the horizontal clumps of the
lily pads. Different colours, applied with thick brushstrokes, are placed next
to each other. This way of painting has more in common with Monet’s early
Impressionist works than his more recent paintings of mornings on the Seine,
where he had used softer, more blended strokes to convey hazy atmospheric
effects.
The Japanese bridge series marked a turning point in Monet’s art. From now on his subjects were painted from an increasingly confined viewpoint, conveying the sense of an enclosed world. In later paintings of the pond, he would dispense with the banks and bridge altogether to focus solely on the water, the reflections and the water lilies. The culmination of Monet’s water lily paintings were the Grandes Dėcorations, 22 enormous canvases each over two metres high and totalling more than 90 metres in length, which he completed months before his death and donated to the French state. These are now on permanent display in two oval rooms in the Musée de l’Orangerie, Paris.
The Japanese bridge series marked a turning point in Monet’s art. From now on his subjects were painted from an increasingly confined viewpoint, conveying the sense of an enclosed world. In later paintings of the pond, he would dispense with the banks and bridge altogether to focus solely on the water, the reflections and the water lilies. The culmination of Monet’s water lily paintings were the Grandes Dėcorations, 22 enormous canvases each over two metres high and totalling more than 90 metres in length, which he completed months before his death and donated to the French state. These are now on permanent display in two oval rooms in the Musée de l’Orangerie, Paris.
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