About this finishing
Print. The image is printed on the top quality 10-ink HP Z9PS printer on HP matte 270 g / m2 paper. You can choose any size to an accuracy of 1 cm. A margin of 5 cm around the image is added to the size of the motif.
You can find a detailed description about our finishings
here.
Ms. Monet and her son III.
Woman with a Parasol - Madame Monet and her son
impressionist painting from 1875. Monet captured it on his wife and son for a walk in a windy summer day. This feeling induce primarily a flowing white dress, veil, rippling grass in the meadow. His son, then seven years old is caught in the tall grass nearby, the mother. The picture was painted in one afternoon and exhibited in 1876 in the gallery of Paul Durand-Ruela. Ten years later, Monet returned to this theme, and painted
a similar picture the daughter of his second wife, Suzanne Hoschedé the meadow at Giverny.
Prevailing color of this fine art print is blue and its shape is portrait. This image is printed on demand - you can choose material, size and finishing.
Claude Oscar Monet (1840-1926). A native Parisian, who thoroughly developed the idea of
Impressionism. Monet almost scientifically studied the effect of light on different objects. He devoted himself to so called transitory states, which quickly led him to work with colour and light, his paintings acting on the viewer from the first impression. His use of open-air painting and objects which were special only because of light opened the way for the beginnings of modern painting. Monet’s
Impression, Sunrise (1874) not only gave the name to the whole art movement, but secured Monet a place among the best painters of all times. At one time, he resided in London and created his famous study
Houses of Parliament (Monet wondered, How could the English painters paint Parliament when it cannot be seen for the fog?). In the
Giverny, which became his favourite retreat after the death of his wife, he painted motifs from his garden and the popular series
Water Lilies - the world of the water was as poetic and mysterious as a primordial paradise.