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Claude Monet | Snow Scene at Argenteuil, 1875


Snow at Argenteuil / Rue sous la neige, Argenteuil - is an oil-on-canvas landscape painting from the Impressionist artist Claude Monet.
It is the largest of no fewer than eighteen works Monet painted of his home commune of Argenteuil while it was under a blanket of snow during the winter of 1874-1875.
This painting - number 352 in Wildenstein's catalogue of the works of Monet - is the largest of the eighteen.
The attention to detail evident in the smaller paintings is less evident in this larger picture. Instead, Monet has rendered large areas of the canvas in closely like tones and colours of blue and grey.

Claude Monet | Self-portrait, 1886

The application of smaller strokes of greens, yellows, reds and darker blues breaks up these large expanses, and the almost choreographed dispersal of these various colours helps bind the picture together.
Paint at the depicted road surface is thicker than elsewhere in the painting, and impasto is suggestive of the feel of disturbed snow.
Most of Monet's Snow at Argenteuil pictures from the winter of 1874-1875 were painted from locations close to the house on the boulevard Saint-Denis (now number 21 boulevard Karl Marx) into which Monet and his family had just moved.

This particular painting shows the boulevard Saint-Denis looking in the direction of the junction with the rue de la Voie-des-Bans, with the river Seine out of sight to the rear, and the local railway station behind Monet's back as he painted.

In December 1879 the painting was acquired from Monet by Théodore Duret. Recalling a conversation with the artist Édouard Manet, Duret years later reported that: 'One winter he [Manet] wanted to paint a snow scene. I had in my possession just such a piece from Monet. After seeing it, he said "It is perfect! I would not know how to do better", whereupon he gave up painting snow'.
The picture was acquired from Duret by the art dealers Boussod, Valadon et Cie of Paris in 1892; then by Harris Whittemore of Naugatuck, Connecticut in 1893. Acquavella Galleries of New York acquired the painting in the early 1970s, and then it was purchased by Simon Sainsbury in or around 1973.
It was bequeathed by him to the National Gallery, London, in 2006 and it has remained there since. | © Wikipedia

Claude Monet | Le train dans la neige, 1875 | Musée Marmottan Monet

Claude Monet | The frost at Giverny

Claude Monet | Winter Landscape with Evening Sky

Claude Monet | Winter Sun at Lavacourt

Claude Monet | Glaçons, Effet Blanc, 1893

Claude Monet | The Winter near Lavacourt, 1880

Claude Monet | Road to Giverny in Winter, 1885

Claude Monet | The Magpie, 1868-1869 | Musée d'Orsay

Scena di neve ad Argenteuil è un dipinto di Claude Monet. Eseguito nel 1875, è conservato nella National Gallery di Londra.
Si tratta di uno dei diciotto dipinti che Monet eseguì per immortalare l'eccezionale nevicata che colpì Argenteuil nell'inverno 1874-75.
Il centro della composizione è il boulevard Saint-Denis, dove il pittore viveva; l'essenzialità dell'impianto compositivo e disegnativo è motivata dalla ricerca della resa atmosferica, caratterizzata da una quasi monocromia giocata sulle sfumature dei grigi e dei blu.