On view

European Art
William R. Elfers Gallery

Water Lilies and Japanese Bridge,

1899

Claude Monet, 1840–1926; born Paris, France; died Giverny, France
y1972-15
Water Lilies and Japanese Bridge represents two of Monet’s greatest achievements: his gardens at Giverny and the paintings they inspired. Monet moved to Giverny in 1883 and immediately began to develop the property. For him, the gardens were both a passion and a second artistic medium. His Asian garden was not part of the original estate; it was located on an adjacent property with a small brook, which he purchased and enlarged into a pond for a water garden in 1893. He transformed the site into an inspired vision of cool greens and calm, reflective waters, enhanced by exotic plants such as bamboo, ginkgo, and Japanese fruit trees and a Japanese footbridge. It was not until 1899, however, that he began a series of views of the site, of which this is one. A careful craftsman who reworked his canvases multiple times, Monet was committed to painting directly from nature as much as possible and for as long as he had the correct conditions; thus, he could work on as many as eight or more canvases a day, devoting as little as an hour or less to each. In this case, he set up his easel at the edge of the water-lily pond and worked on several paintings of the subject as part of a single process. Monet’s gardens and paintings show the same fascination with the effects of time and weather on the landscape. Both are brilliant expressions of his unique visual sensitivity and emotional response to nature. At Giverny, he literally shaped nature for his brush, cultivating vistas to paint.

More Context

Handbook Entry

More About This Object

Information

Title
Water Lilies and Japanese Bridge
Dates

1899

Maker
Medium
Oil on canvas
Dimensions
90.5 x 89.7 cm (35 5/8 x 35 5/16 in.) frame: 129.5 x 132.1 x 15.3 cm (51 x 52 x 6 in.)
Credit Line
From the Collection of William Church Osborn, Class of 1883, trustee of Princeton University (1914-1951), president of the Metropolitan Museum of Art (1941-1947); given by his family
Object Number
y1972-15
Place Made

Europe, France, Haute-Normandie, Giverny

Place Depicted

Europe, France, Haute-Normandie, Giverny, Monet's Water Lilly Pond

Signatures
Signed and dated bottom right, in red: Claude Monet 99
Culture
Materials

Claude Monet; sold to Galerie Georges Petit, Galerie Bernheim-Jeune and I. Montaignac, Paris, December 1899; sold to Durand-Ruel 1900; sold to Henry Osborne Havemeyer, New York, 1901; sold to Durand-Ruel, 1902; sold to William Church Osborn, New York, 1905; 1972 given by his son, Earl D. Osborn, to the Princeton University Art Museum.