Boat Lying at Low Tide by Claude Monet - 1881 - 82 x 60 cm Tokyo Fuji Art Museum Boat Lying at Low Tide by Claude Monet - 1881 - 82 x 60 cm Tokyo Fuji Art Museum

Boat Lying at Low Tide

oil on canvas • 82 x 60 cm
  • Claude Monet - 14 November 1840 - 5 December 1926 Claude Monet 1881

In the early 1880s Monet's art reached a turning point. In 1879 his wife Camille died and in 1880 and 1881 he did not exhibit at the Impressionist exhibitions. In 1881 he became attracted by the sea of Normandy; he had been familiar with it since he was a child. The rugged coast, shingled beaches, and stunning cliffs provided subject matter for several of Monet's most significant works. The artist spent the last 30 years of his life in Giverny, a picturesque village on the eastern border of Normandy. 

If you would like to learn more about Monet and Normandy, please click here for our Impressionism Course.

P.S. We can imagine how important Camille was for Claude by observing her portraits made by him, like this one where she is depicted as the Spring.  <3

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