View allAll Photos Tagged Monet
The scenery at a pond in a local park reminded me of a Monet painting and so edited the photo in Topaz Impression. This is something I haven't sone in a long time although personally I like this effect.
Morning sun touching the rose Claude Monet, late autumn at the Lady Norwood Rose Garden, Wellington, New Zealand. A hybrid rose first bred in the United States in 1992 and named in honour of the French impressionism painter and garden lover Claude Monet 14/11/1840 - 5/12/1926.
Created for a "Kreative Kollaboration" challenge found in the
Kreative People group www.flickr.com/groups/1752359@N21/
explored
Everytime I'm here, seeing this bridge and area in a speial light I'm thinking of Monet
I helped him a bit with the colors tho
It's like cursing in the church, isn't it
Helping a pro
But who doesn't want a helping hand from time to time
I would say that if you can accept help then you have understood one of the important values in life
Being humble, not thinking that you are somehow divine and unreachable and the best there is in this world, believing that you are superior and manage everything best yourself
Asking for help gives you so much more then just the help you wanted
It lets you grow from within and it gives a good feeling for the ones that are helping you too
We interact
We are supposed to do that here on Earth
Being humble makes you look within, you shorten your sight and then you will see yourself with your own eyes and not everybody elses eyes, either it is critical or admiring eyes
I think he would have said Yes, thank you
Metropolitan Museum of Art
Monet spent these months in the Italian Riviera in early 1884.He wrote a friend, "everything is superb and I want to paint it all... there are many experiments to make.This landscape is a new experience for me."Installing himself in the town of Bordighera,Monet explored the scenic terrain.Here.he employed light,bright tones to depict the snowy Maritime Alps along the border with France.Nestled among the hills is the village of Camporosso on the banks of the Nervia not far from the river's outlet in the Mediterranean Sea.
After spending what seemed like forever looking for the "Magic Cottage..". i realised i had already been there..... what could be more magic than Monet's house ...?
Some of the most memorable and easily recognized artworks associated with Monet are the more than 300 paintings of water lilies. In a letter, Monet described how he had planted the water lilies for fun... however, once they established themselves they became his source of inspiration. He wrote: "I saw all of a sudden, that my pond had become enchanted... Since then, I have had no other model."
(I've added some images in comments)
It was raining when I took this picture; so the exposure light was good and colors were saturated. Giverny, France. All Rights Reserved.
This reflection is a pond in the Seattle Japanese Garden, the abstract reminds me of Monet.
jpm5150@live.com
An interesting autumn reflection in the ponds at Hardwick Hall with signature style and colours similar to that of a Monet painting.
There was just enough breeze to make it look like actual brush strokes.
Claude Monet lived and painted in Giverny from 1883 to his death in 1926, and directed the renovation of the house. Monet gained much of his inspiration from his gardens and believed it was important to surround himself with nature and paint outdoors. When Monet died in 1926, the entire estate was passed on to his younger son Michel.
Monet spent the summer on1867 with his family at Saint-Adresse,a seaside resort near at Le Havre.It was there that he painted this buoyant,sunlit scene of contemporary leisure,enlisting his father (shown seated in a panama hat) and other relatives as models.By adopting an elevated viewpoint and painting the terrace,sea,and sky as three distinct bands of high keyed color,Monet emphasized the flat surface of the canvas.His approach-daring for its time-reflects his admiration for Japanese prints.Twelve years after it was made,Monet exhibited the picture at the fourth Impressionist exhibition of 1879 at Jardin à Sainte-Adresse.
Musée Marmottan Monet features over three hundred Impressionist and Post-Impressionist paintings by Claude Monet, including his 1872 Impression, Sunrise.
Marmottan Museum's fame is the result of a donation in 1966 by Michel Monet, Claude's second son and only heir.
Sometimes I think I was born a little late. It would have been great to have lived during the impressionistic period.. but that is not the case. In stead I try to photograph like the great impressionists of then, like Monet and Van Gogh. Hope you like it.
This scene looked so romantic and reminded me of the paintings of Monet. The fresh green has such an energy to it, one feels refreshed just being out in nature surrounded by bright green.
For me personally, this fresh green has been a tremendous help in regaining joy and optimism.