Claude Monet — "I'm absolutely furious. Everything is going wrong."
I'm absolutely furious. Everything is going wrong.
I'm absolutely furious. Everything is going wrong.
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"I have never had a studio, and I do not understand shutting oneself up in a room. To draw, yes; to paint, no."
"I want to paint the light, and I want to paint the air."
"I'm having a very bad time. I'm completely miserable."
"I'm absolutely miserable. I hate everything."
"It is a tragedy that we live in a world where physical courage is so common, and moral courage is so rare."
French Impressionist painter whose Impression, Sunrise (1872) named the movement, and whose late Water Lilies series anticipated 20th-century abstraction. Closely associated with Pierre-Auguste Renoir (Impressionist co-founder) and Camille Pissarro (Impressionist mentor figure). For an intellectual contrast, see the Académie des Beaux-Arts and the Salon, the French art establishment of the 1860s-70s — The Académie rejected Monet and the Impressionists throughout the 1860s-70s, forcing them to organize the 1874 Salon des Refusés that became Impressionism's launch. Monet's career is the canonical example of an artistic revolution that bypassed institutional gatekeeping — the Académie's rejection inadvertently created modernism.
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