Country Life

The Magpie by Monet

John Mcewen comments on The Magpie

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Monet’s formative artistic influence in Le Havre was the local painter eugène Boudin (1826–98). outdoor oil painting was facilitate­d by the invention of the metal paint tube and Boudin was an ardent advocate. their painting trips taught Monet ‘to understand nature’ and learn ‘to love it passionate­ly’.

In Paris, where he studied briefly with the academic painter Gleyre, he found fellow student enthusiast­s for pictures of landscape and daily life in Renoir, Sisley and the rich Bazille. Bazille and an aunt augmented his inadequate allowance from home— Monet’s father, a wholesale grocer, deplored his son’s career choice.

the Salon was the key to creative success, but, as Monet’s artistic interests were opposed to convention, his submission­s were rarely accepted. Crisis came when Camille Doncieux, his young model and mistress, gave birth to their son Jean. He survived a despairing jump from a bridge into the Seine.

His first patron, Louis Gaudibert, a shipbuilde­r, came to the family’s rescue by helping with the rent of a cottage at etretat, near Le Havre. there, Monet painted The Magpie, the largest of his snowscapes, a subject reintroduc­ed since 1856 by Gustave Courbet, whose revolution­ary gusto and taste for realism were an inspiratio­n to the young Impression­ists. Courbet and Bazille were Jean’s godfathers.

From etretat, Monet wrote to Bazille: ‘I’m very happy, very delighted… I go out into the country which is so lovely here that I perhaps find it even more agreeable in winter than in summer. And then in the evening, dear fellow, I come home to my little cottage to find a good fire and a dear little family. If only you could see how sweet your godson is.’

Kipper Williams is a cartoonist. His new book, All in Tents and Porpoises: The Best of Kipper Williams, was published at the end of last year

‘ways I’ve always been fascinated by the different artists have depicted snow. I love the winter scenes in Giles cartoon annuals, in which a blanket of white serves as a backdrop for his endlessly inventive visual jokes. A century earlier, Claude Monet painted The Magpie, one of his atmospheri­c Normandy snowscapes. The scene reminds me of the excitement I used to feel crunching across the field at the back of my Cheshire home the morning after a heavy snowfall. Monet’s field was hundreds of miles away, but the magical world he created childhood’ whisks me back to my

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 ??  ?? The Magpie, 1868–69, by Claude Monet (1840–1926), 35in by 51in, Musée d’orsay, Paris, France
The Magpie, 1868–69, by Claude Monet (1840–1926), 35in by 51in, Musée d’orsay, Paris, France

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