Water Lilies and Bory Latour-Marliac

Water Lilies and Bory Latour-Marliac
Author: Caroline Holmes
Publisher: Antique Collector's Club
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2015
Genre: Gardening
ISBN: 9781870673839

This volume meticulously records our enduring love affair with the most beautiful and exotic of plants, the water lily.

Monet: Water Lilies

Monet: Water Lilies
Author: Jean-Dominique Rey
Publisher: Flammarion
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2008-09-09
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9782080300768

Monet, the father of French impressionist painting, devoted twenty-five years to a series of paintings of the water lilies that floated in the pond of his lavish garden in Giverny. This volume is dedicated to those paintings, and opens with a biography of Monet that links the artist’s childhood passion for nature and for drawing to his later fascination with light. Monet’s experiments with how to best capture light and its effect on the sky and on water at different times of the day include paintings such as Impression, Sunrise (1872), which inspired the name of the impressionist movement. A critical text analyzes Monet’s ingenuity, audacity, and modernity, as well as his influence on other artists, from Zao Wou-ki to music to Shirley Goldfarb. This definitive catalog is completed by 210 color reproductions of the water lily paintings with annotated captions, period shots of Giverny by photographers such as Cartier-Bresson, and rare documents including Monet’s personal letters to his optometrist regarding his failing eyesight, which has been linked to his development of the impressionist style. The large-format volume features an eight-page gatefold of the murals at the Orangerie in Paris, and it serves as both an accessible introductory work and a complete reference guide to an important component in the history of art.

Katie and the Waterlily Pond

Katie and the Waterlily Pond
Author: James Mayhew
Publisher: Orchard Books
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2011-07-12
Genre: Art appreciation
ISBN: 9781408304648

Can Katie capture the magic of the Monet masterpieces? There's an art competition at the gallery and Katie is desperate to win. All she has to do is paint a picture in the style of Claude Monet. Surely Katie can manage that ... can't she?

The Flower of Empire

The Flower of Empire
Author: Tatiana Holway
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 339
Release: 2013-03-01
Genre: Gardening
ISBN: 0199911169

In 1837, while charting the Amazonian country of Guiana for Great Britain, German naturalist Robert Schomburgk discovered an astounding "vegetable wonder"--a huge water lily whose leaves were five or six feet across and whose flowers were dazzlingly white. In England, a horticultural nation with a mania for gardens and flowers, news of the discovery sparked a race to bring a live specimen back, and to bring it to bloom. In this extraordinary plant, named Victoria regia for the newly crowned queen, the flower-obsessed British had found their beau ideal. In The Flower of Empire, Tatiana Holway tells the story of this magnificent lily, revealing how it touched nearly every aspect of Victorian life, art, and culture. Holway's colorful narrative captures the sensation stirred by Victoria regia in England, particularly the intense race among prominent Britons to be the first to coax the flower to bloom. We meet the great botanists of the age, from the legendary Sir Joseph Banks, to Sir William Jackson Hooker, director of the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew, to the extravagant flower collector the Duke of Devonshire. Perhaps most important was the Duke's remarkable gardener, Joseph Paxton, who rose from garden boy to knight, and whose design of a series of ever-more astonishing glass-houses--one, the Big Stove, had a footprint the size of Grand Central Station--culminated in his design of the architectural wonder of the age, the Crystal Palace. Fittingly, Paxton based his design on a glass-house he had recently built to house Victoria regia. Indeed, the natural ribbing of the lily's leaf inspired the pattern of girders supporting the massive iron-and-glass building. From alligator-laden jungle ponds to the heights of Victorian society, The Flower of Empire unfolds the marvelous odyssey of this wonder of nature in a revealing work of cultural history.

Mad Enchantment

Mad Enchantment
Author: Ross King
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 416
Release: 2016-09-08
Genre: Art
ISBN: 1408861968

Claude Monet's water lily paintings are among the most iconic and beloved works of art of the past century. Yet these entrancing images were created at a time of terrible private turmoil and sadness for the artist. The dramatic history behind these paintings is little known; Ross King's Mad Enchantment tells the full story for the first time and, in the process, presents a compelling and original portrait of one of our most popular and cherished artists. By the outbreak of war in 1914, Monet, then in his mid-seventies, was one of the world's most famous and successful painters, with a large house in the country, a fleet of automobiles and a colossal reputation. However, he had virtually given up painting following the death of his wife Alice in 1911 and the onset of blindness a year later. Nonetheless, it was during this period of sorrow, ill health and creative uncertainty that – as the guns roared on the Western Front – he began the most demanding and innovative paintings he had ever attempted. Encouraged by close friends such as Georges Clemenceau, France's dauntless prime minister, Monet would work on these magnificent paintings throughout the war years and then for the rest of his life. So obsessed with his monumental task that the village barber was summoned to clip his hair as he worked beside his pond, he covered hundreds of yards of canvas with shimmering layers of pigment. As his ambitions expanded with his paintings, he began planning what he intended to be his legacy to the world: the 'Musée Claude Monet' in the Orangerie in Paris. Drawing on letters and memoirs and focusing on this remarkable period in the artist's life, Mad Enchantment gives an intimate portrayal of Claude Monet in all his tumultuous complexity, and firmly places his water lily paintings among the greatest achievements in the history of art.

Monet's Water Lilies

Monet's Water Lilies
Author: Simon R. Kelly
Publisher: St Louis Art Museum
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2011
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9780891780953

Published in connection with an exhibition held at the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Apr. 9-Aug. 7, 2011, the Saint Louis Art Museum, Oct. 2, 2011-Jan. 22, 2012, and the Cleveland Museum of Art, 2015.

Water Gardening

Water Gardening
Author: Peter Robinson
Publisher: Penguin Books, Limited (UK)
Total Pages: 216
Release: 2003
Genre: Aquatic plants
ISBN: 9781405300957

From choosing a site to laying the final stepping stone, this comprehensive guide is packed with hands on advice and design projects. Specially commissioned photographs and artworks illustrate the artistic and practical aspects of water gardening, and highlight the latest trends. Easy reference, and a wealth of ideas, including water in even the smallest garden, make this guide both a practical and inspiring addition to any gardener's book shelf.

Monet's Water Lilies

Monet's Water Lilies
Author: Vivian Russell
Publisher: Frances Lincoln
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2011-07-26
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9780711232310

'It took me a long time to understand my water lilies,' Monet wrote of his pond at Giverny. 'I had planted them for the pure pleasure of it, and I grew them without thinking of painting them...And then, all of a sudden, I had the revelation of the enchantment of my pond. I took up my palette. Since then I've had no other model.' The pond became Monet's most enduring motif, the water lilies the most celebrated flowers he ever painted. This book tells the story of their role as a central source of artistic inspiration, bringing exciting insights into Monet's work as a gardener and painter. Vivian Russell also describes the making of the water garden which, in contrast to the flower garden, was to be meditative and mysterious, in tune with the Japanese aesthetic. She reveals how Monet chose his water lilies from plants bred specially by Joseph Bory Latour-Marliac at his nursery near Bordeaux. Her superb photographs capturing the ephemeral beauty of the flowers, and the way they appear to float on clouds and undulating rushes, portray the changing moods of the pond, complementing Monet's own serene poems to light.

Claude Monet

Claude Monet
Author: Georges Clemenceau
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2017
Genre:
ISBN: 9781946011008

"In 1928, the former French Prime Minister Georges Clemenceau published Claude Monet : les nymphéas (The water-lilies), a memoir of his longtime friend. Bruce Michelson has produced a new English translation, presented here with useful notes and illustrations. Michelson's translations of three short essays on art by Clemenceau, originally published by La justice in the late XIX c., are included as appendices"--