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DecorArts - The Mountain View Series(Triptych), Claude Monet Art Reproduction. Giclee Canvas Prints Wall Art for Home Decor 20x16", 3pcs/set

Product ID : 22941903


Galleon Product ID 22941903
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About DecorArts - The Mountain View

Claude Monet, 1840-1926, was widely disregard in his home country France the past hundred years. He was an Impressionist artist. Monet began to create some of his best paintings in the19th century. In early 1880s, he painted several groups of landscapes as well as seascapes in what he considered to be campaigns to document the French countryside, This painting was produced while he and his family lived in Vetheuil. What is Gallery Wrap? A gallery-wrap canvas does not show any visible staples or nails holding the fabric (canvas) to the stretchers on the sides. Quite often with a gallery-wrap canvas, the edges are painted, and the painting hung unframed.When Monet returned from England in 1871, He settled in Argenteuil and lived there until 1878. These years were a time of fulfilment for him. Supported by his dealer, Paul Durand-Ruel, Monet found in the region around his home the bright landscapes which enabled him to explore the potential of plein-air painting.He showed Poppy Field to the public at the first Impressionist exhibition held in the photographer Nadar's disused studio in 1874. Now one of the world's most famous paintings, it conjures up the vibrant atmosphere of a stroll through the fields on a summer's day.Monet diluted the contours and constructed a colourful rhythm with blobs of paint starting from a sprinkling of poppies; the disproportionately large patches in the foreground indicate the primacy he put on visual impression. A step towards abstraction had been taken.In the landscape, a mother and child pair in the foreground and another in the background are merely a pretext for drawing the diagonal line that structures the painting. Two separate colour zones are established, one dominated by red, the other by a bluish green. The young woman with the sunshade and the child in the foreground are probably the artist's wife, Camille, and their son Jean.