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Sunday 28 October 2018

Giverny



Both John and I have always talked about  visiting the Gardens of Monet in Giverny, as we have a particular passion for the Impressionist group of painters. The paintings of Claude Monet hold enormous appeal, especially the waterlily series that he worked on for the last years of his life.

It was in 1881, from a window in the train, and after the tragic death of his wife Camille in 1879 at the age of 32, that he first saw Giverny. Monet, Alice Hoschedé who was the wife of his friend and patron, and both his and her children moved to the house in Giverny, where he planned and planted a large garden and where he painted for much of his life. Following the death of her estranged husband, Monet married Alice Hoschedé in 1892. The balance of his life was devoted to his family, his painting and to the creation of his garden and lily pond. The garden was expressly created to become the focus of the remainder of his painting life.  It is believed that in an earlier time of his life, in Holland, he saw the tulip fields, which sparked the idea of colour blocks.  Eventually, he translated this idea to the confines of the Garden at Giverny and his paintings. Seeing the gardens In reality is rather overwhelming. The plants are packed together in a wilderness of type and glorious colour. We visited on a dark and fog ridden morning and my first photos show the sullenness of the sky. I worried that there was no sunshine but later the sun broke through and we returned, after a wonderful hot coffee and slice of quiche, to circumnavigate the paths once again. The sun brought an entirely different dimension to the gardens and the lily pond. We loved it all and lingered long into the day. There were few people, as the summer is the highlight for most. But we found this time of year evocative and it was as if the garden itself was in mourning for the great artist. The Nymphéas or Waterlilies occupied Claude Monet for  almost 30 years until he died in 1926, age 86. Upon his death the huge panels of this series were donated to France and have been displayed since 1927 at the Musèe de L’Orangerie in Paris. The series is a monumental work of some 300 or so pieces, 40 of which are in large format. To enter the L’Orangerie  and view this work is to be totally surrounded, as if in the garden itself. Monet focused on the reflections in the water and I attempted, in my amateur way, to do the same. Below is a series of photos taken in overcast and then broken sunlight. It is autumn and a feeling of loss and quietude pervaded the lily pond portion of the garden, offset by the riotous colours in the rest of the garden. We visited the rambling house and walked through the rooms where the family lived; the kitchen with its brilliant copper pots and huge cookstove, the big dining room with yellow and blue china and a homely vase of garden flowers in the center of the large family dinner table. It was possible to imagine a happy and creative life in this place as his  gifted legacy of paintings  to the world has displayed.

I know I  have overdone the garden photos, but to me it was a highlight of all we have done in this beautiful country…right up there with visiting the tulip fields in Holland, first with John and then my sister on a beautiful day in May.




Heading to Giverny in 6:30 AM Paris Traffic


Overcast with Mist 


Monet's Entire Focus of Planting was to Create Reflections


Birdsong Floods the Garden


Muted Shades


Grey Sky Reflected


Willow Frame


Perimeter Plantings All Structured to Reflect

But It Looks Unplanned


Lily Pads


Haunting Fall Colours


Quiet Day at Giverny


Every Outlook Different


Here Red Berries


Shimmering


One Imagines Monet's Presence

Flash of Orange


Water Perspective


The Bridge


Iconic, Beautiful Shape, Reflected


Arching Yellow


Sparks of Sunshine


Dense Planting


Brillant Colours


Shapes


Beloved Dahlias


Blizzards of Colour


Pinks 


Magenta


Drifts of Lavender


My Favourites, Cosmos


How Many Plant Types?


We met some of the  Hardworking Gardeners


These Are Towering


Every Variety of Dahlia


At least 3M


La Maison, Pink, Green and Rambling


Dining Room Bouquet


Photo of the Bridge Decades Ago


Kitchen Copper


Lovingly Polished


Floating Fushia


Iridescent



Just Imagine Summer . . . this is late October


Monet Loved these Brillant Little Chickens with Feathered Feet


Mexican Sunflower


As Entitled


His Inspiration


Claude Monet: 14 November 1840 - 5 December 1926


Sunshine!  

One of the WaterLily Series by Claude Monet


Blue Water


View From the Shore 



In this Garden You are Not a Bystander


Floating Leaves


This View Taken in Overcast, Now in Sunlight


A Day With Monet


Glorious Day


Different Textures


Trying to See as Monet Saw


Willow Magic


It Makes a One Smile


Autumn Jungle


Vibrant


Garden Art


The Graceful Giverny  Bench


Gardener's Delight


End of a Beautiful Day