Claude Monet — "I'm having a very bad day. I feel like crying."
I'm having a very bad day. I feel like crying.
I'm having a very bad day. I feel like crying.
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"I perhaps owe having become a painter to flowers."
"I'm sick of this weather. It's always raining or cloudy."
"These palm trees [in Bordighera, Italy] are driving me crazy; and also the motifs are extremely difficult to render, to put down on canvas; everywhere is so lush."
"I'm so tired of these struggles. I wish I could just give up."
"I despise the opinion of the press and the so-called critics."
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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