Arrival of the Normandy Train, Gare Saint-Lazare by Claude Monet - 1877 - 60.3 x 80.2 cm Art Institute of Chicago Arrival of the Normandy Train, Gare Saint-Lazare by Claude Monet - 1877 - 60.3 x 80.2 cm Art Institute of Chicago

Arrival of the Normandy Train, Gare Saint-Lazare

oil on canvas • 60.3 x 80.2 cm
  • Claude Monet - 14 November 1840 - 5 December 1926 Claude Monet 1877

When he painted The Saint-Lazare Station, Monet had just left Argenteuil to settle in Paris. After several years of painting in the countryside, he turned to urban landscapes. The Gare Saint-Lazare was the largest and busiest train station in Paris. Early in 1877, with help from his friend Gustave Caillebotte, Claude Monet rented an apartment in the nearby rue Moncey and began the first of 12 canvases showing the station. He displayed seven of them, including this one, at the third Impressionist exhibition, in April of that year. Legend has it that he arranged to have the standing locomotives stoked with extra coal so that he could observe and paint the effects of belching steam—dull gray when trapped inside the station, white and cloudlike when seen against the sky. Maybe it's not true, but it sounds magnificent <3