Japanese Art: a Major Influence on the Work of Monet

©Sophie Boegly
Claude Monet, the figurehead of the impressionist movement, was strongly influenced by Japanese art. He was an admirer of the work of Hokusai and purchased several of his prints, which would go on to shake up his creative process.
Over the 1880s, Japanism made its whirlwind entry into western culture, especially in France. As Le Bon Marché sold prints, kimonos and fans, painters like Van Gogh and Monet were becoming captivated by this new aesthetic.
Ancient models and the classic use of perspective were transformed into a spectacular juxtaposition. Monet’s Waterlilies series was directly inspired by Japanese art. The colossal size of the paintings gives off a sense of calm and purity characteristic of Japanese prints. The Waterlily Pond, Green Harmony echoes this. Monet endows these landscapes with an almost sacred look.

©Sophie Boegly

©Sophie Boegly

©Sophie Boegly
TRENDING
-
Four Unmissable Beers to Try in Japan
Did you know that craft only arrived in Japan 25 years ago? Some of them have already made history however!
-
Hiroshi Senju, the Artist who Paints Waterfalls
A proponent of nihonga (traditional Japanese paintings), Hiroshi Senju is known for his large-scale waterfall paintings and has his own museum in Karuizawa.
-
At 82, Keiichi Tanaami is Still the King of Pop Art
Animation, comic book illustrations, collages, experimental films, paintings, sculpture... Keiichi Tanaami has been working in Pop Art for over 50 years.
-
The short film In the Still Night, shot in Tokyo with Eric Wareheim, to be shown on Canal+
The first fiction film from French director Jean-Baptiste Braud is featured in France on the programme for Sunday 30th June’s edition of 'Top of the Shorts'.
-
Paris, Kyoto: Kohei Nawa
The Japanese sculptor Kohei Nawa talks us about his monumental work Throne currently displayed under the Pyramid of the Musée du Louvre in Paris.
3:26