View allAll Photos Tagged Monet
Attempt numero dos for the elusive Monet look. This time I used glass but I suspect it wasn't funky enough. One more try after a trip to Menards or Home Depot for the real beveled stuff and we'll see what results. Ho Hum.
---Update: I bore myself so if it doesn't happen immediately, I'm pretty much done.
View LARGE an get dizzy! Taken many falls ago in the Bronx, New York. When I got this Kodacrome 64 slide back it took me a while to figure out which way was up. I always like when I can look at a photo from other angles and still enjoy it.. There is just a touch of shoreline and the rest is reflection without saturation unless you count Mother Nature and great morning light.
"The Prince and the Waterlily"
All my own work....:)
Background: Solstock
Frog: Deviant
Texture: JoesSistah
I'm experimenting with an old Olympus OM-1 with a home made pinhole lens on it. These are the first test shots taken through that camera. I'm going to be uploading a picture of that camera and few others soon. So check back if you're interested.
Copyright © 2007 Sabine Simons. All rights reserved. Use without permission is illegal.
View On black is a must!
"Now I really feel the landscape, I can be bold and include every tone of blue and pink: it's enchanting, it's delicious."
Claude Monet
Wishing you all a great day, full of happy colors and good things!!
I'm of to school now and will comment later on your pictures
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.
wonderful moment to find this had made the explore pages... thank you for all your comments and the fav's for this shot, will hurry along to see your photos soon. : )
A photo my hubby took of me at the Monet Immersion Experience, and then I edited it for Sliders Sunday.
Not too much like a Monet. But, it was fun working on this image of Monet's waterlily garden using Topaz Studio.
Oscar-Claude Monet was a French painter, a founder of French Impressionist painting and the most consistent and prolific practitioner of the movement's philosophy of expressing one's perceptions before nature, especially as applied to "plein air" landscape painting.
Monet Magic
Took a photo of a water lily at Holkham Hall in Norfolk and well, I just had to do it didn't I!
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.
Huile sur toile, 81 x 82 cm, 1891, National Gallery of Scotland, Edimbourg.
Les élégants peupliers des berges de la rivière Epte, vus sous un ciel d'été bleu et irrégulier, fusionnent avec leur image réfléchie dans un réseau de coups de pinceau aux couleurs vives. Il s'agit d'une œuvre de la célèbre série de peintures de peupliers de Monet réalisée entre le printemps et l'automne 1891, l'année après son installation à Giverny. Il a utilisé un bateau comme studio flottant et a magnifiquement capturé les effets chatoyants de la lumière du soleil sur l'eau. Les arbres étaient prêts à être vendus pour leur bois, mais Monet, en partenariat avec un marchand de bois, les acheta aux enchères afin de pouvoir continuer à les peindre (cf. National Gallery of Scotland).
A tree in the garden at Giverny, Monet's famous home in southern Normandy, not far north of Paris. The tour of his famous garden--crowded with other tourists like myself on a sunny autumn weekday--was a highlight of my trip!
Over 40 years here, Monet and his gardeners created a paradise in green and color that inspired his late art.
worldinparis.com/paris-to-giverny-day-trip-visit-monets-g...
HTmT!
For your consideration; an Infrared photograph hopefully in the style of Claude Monet. Shot at Uppark House in West Sussex.
‘Where have the colours gone? Where did all the people come from?’
Water lily pond and Japanese bridge
Claude Monet's house and gardens in Giverny, Département Eure
Normandy, France 22.08.2023
www.youtube.com/watch?v=wLxDd3dlM_c
Monets Albtraum
"Wo sind die Farben hin? Wo kommen die vielen Leute her?"
Seerosenteich und Japanische Brücke
Haus und Gärten von Claude Monet in Giverny, Département Eure
Normandie, Frankreich 22.08.2023
Polaroid Go
Polaroid Go Film
A little watery looking, like a Monet because this sunrise shot was blurry.
Étretat is best known for its chalk cliffs, including three natural arches and a pointed formation called L'Aiguille or the Needle, which rises 70 metres (230 ft) above the sea. The Etretat Chalk Complex, as it is known, consists of a complex stratigraphy of Turonian and Coniacian chalks. Some of the cliffs are as high as 90 metres (300 ft).
These cliffs and the associated resort beach attracted artists including Eugène Boudin, Gustave Courbet and Claude Monet.
Haystacks is the common English title for a series of impressionist paintings by Claude Monet. The principal subject of each painting in the series is stacks of harvested wheat (or possibly barley or oats: the original French title, Les Meules à Giverny, simply means The Stacks at Giverny). The title refers primarily to a twenty-five canvas series which Monet began near the end of the summer of 1890 and continued through the following spring, though Monet also produced five earlier paintings using this same stack subject. A precursor to the series is the 1884 Haystack Near Giverny.
The series is famous for the way in which Monet repeated the same subject to show the differing light and atmosphere at different times of day, across the seasons and in many types of weather.
The series is among Monet's most notable works. The largest Haystacks collections are held at the Musée d'Orsay and Musée Marmottan Monet in Paris, and in the Art Institute of Chicago. Other collections include the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, the Metropolitan Museum and Museum of Modern Art in New York, the National Museum of Western Art in Tokyo, and the Musée de l'Orangerie in Paris. The Art Institute of Chicago collection includes six of the twenty-five Haystacks.
Other museums that hold parts of this series include the Getty Center in Los Angeles, the Hill-Stead Museum in Farmington, Connecticut (which also has one of five from the earlier 1888–89 harvest), the Scottish National Gallery, the Minneapolis Institute of Arts, Kunsthaus Zürich, Tel Aviv Museum of Art and the Shelburne Museum, Vermont. Private collections hold the remaining Haystacks paintings.