Wisteria by Claude Monet - circa 1925 - 203.5 x 153.6 cm Kunstmuseum Den Haag Wisteria by Claude Monet - circa 1925 - 203.5 x 153.6 cm Kunstmuseum Den Haag

Wisteria

oil on canvas • 203.5 x 153.6 cm
  • Claude Monet - 14 November 1840 - 5 December 1926 Claude Monet circa 1925

Do you miss summer as much as I do? :(

Claude Monet was indirectly responsible for the term Impressionism, because it was in relation to his harbor scene Impression. soleil levant that an art critic sneeringly coined the term. The adverse criticism did not stop him ending his days as a celebrated artist, living at his rural retreat in Giverny. There, in his luxuriant garden, he could paint blossoming trees reflected in ponds and channels crossed by Japanese-style footbridges to his heart’s content.

This almost abstract painting of wisteria in Monet’s garden at Giverny is dominated by its blue background, along the top edge of which curling brushstrokes form an arch of what appear from the colors to be tangled blossoms. The paint is applied in superimposed layers and the individual brushstrokes are recognizable only in the top layer. At bottom right, the arch shape is repeated upside-down. The variation in sharpness or focus creates a sense of depth despite the virtually abstract nature of the image.

We encourage you to explore Mondrian's artworks from the collection of Gemeentemuseum Den Haag in the article "5 Paintings By Piet Mondrian You Wouldn’t Believe Were His".