Japanese Footbridge is an oil painting by Claude Monet.
It was painted in 1899. It measures 81.3 x 101.6 cm (32 x 40 in.) It hangs in the National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC.
In the last decades of Monet's life, his prized water garden at Giverny became a subject the artist explored obsessively, painting it 250 times between 1900 and his death. Eventually, it was his only subject.
He began construction of the water garden as soon as he moved to Giverny, petitioning local authorities to divert water from a nearby river.
The resulting landscape was Monet's invention entirely, and he used it as his creative focus and inspiration.