Cat. 18. Cliff Walk at Pourville, 1882

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Cat. 18. Cliff Walk at Pourville, 1882. 

Catalogue #: 18 Active: Yes Creator: Claude Monet French, 1840-1926 Work Title: Cliff Walk at Pourville Creation: 1882 Materials: Oil on canvas Credit Line: Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Larned Coburn Memorial Collection Accession: 1933.443 Tombstone:

Cat. 18

Cliff Walk at Pourville1
1882
Oil on canvas; 66.5 x 82.3 cm (26 1/8 x 32 7/16 in.)
The Art Institute of Chicago, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Larned Coburn Memorial Collection, 1933.443

Author: Gloria Groom and Jill Shaw Curatorial Entry:

Return to Normandy

Painted from a cliff top—probably at Val Saint-Nicolas, located between Pourville and Dieppe—Cliff Walk at Pourville is one of nearly one hundred canvases that Monet painted along the Normandy Coast in 1882 (fig. 18.1).2 This cycle of works was part of the artist’s revived interest in painting the English Channel between the early and mid-1880s. Monet was certainly no stranger to the Normandy Coast, as exemplified by his 1867 painting The Beach at Sainte-Adresse (cat. 13). But for much of the 1870s, he had been preoccupied with painting the sites and activities of the urban and suburban Parisian landscape in works such as The Artist’s House at Argenteuil (cat. 15) (fig. 18.2) and Arrival of the Normandy Train, Gare Saint-Lazare (cat. 16) (fig. 18.3). With his move to Vétheuil (about forty miles northwest of Paris) in 1878 and the death of his wife, Camille, in 1879, however, Monet shifted focus. He retreated from his depictions of the city and suburbs and began painting the terrain around Vétheuil, as well as a few still lifes—including the Art Institute’s Apples and Grapes (cat. 17) (fig. 18.4)—and numerous scenes of Normandy’s cliff-filled, coastal sites and shorelines, especially at Fécamp, Dieppe, Pourville, and Varengeville.

Departing from his home base in Poissy—where he had recently relocated with Alice Hoschedé (the wife of his former patron Ernest Hoschedé, whom he would marry in 1892, after her husband’s death) and their families—Monet visited the coast twice in 1882, from early February to mid-April and from mid-June to early October.3 Because most of the paintings from these trips feature similar subjects and titles, it is often difficult to definitively identify which canvases were produced during each trip.4 The bright summer sky and the inclusion of two female figures—often thought to be Alice and one of her daughters, or perhaps her two eldest daughters, Marthe and Blanche—suggest that Monet executed Cliff Walk during his second trip, when he brought Alice and their combined family with him.5

In the paintings he created in the early 1880s in Normandy, Monet experimented with unique viewpoints (from both the top and the base of the cliffs) and the placement of horizon lines, creating compositions that challenged the conventional spatial construction of nineteenth-century French landscape paintings. Composed of three main zones—sky, water, and land—Cliff Walk has a certain flatness to it, but Monet achieved dynamism through his flickering brushwork, as well as the skewed diagonal created by the landmass at the bottom left and the two jutting lobes of land at the center and right. He provided limited suggestions of three-dimensionality by placing patches of dark shadows next to the bright, colorful cliff tops, recalling the way Japanese printmakers juxtaposed contrasting colors to indicate spatial recession.

It is well known that Monet was influenced by Japanese prints—he started his own collection of them in the 1850s or 1860s.6 In addition to his juxtaposition of flat planes of contrasting color in Cliff Walk, his bird’s-eye point of view, the cropping of compositional elements along the edge of the picture frame, the sinuous winding edge of the cliff, and the inclusion of figures and boats to infuse a sense of scale and balance bring to mind prints by Katsushika Hokusai and Utagawa Hiroshige that were in his collection (fig. 18.5) and were increasingly visible (and available) in Paris from the 1860s.7 Monet’s figure types in Cliff Walk also imply the influence of Japanese prints. In constructing his two female subjects, the artist suggested that the women are stylishly dressed, though they do not conform to the meticulous, fashion plate–inspired genre paintings of contemporaries like James Tissot or Alfred Stevens. Monet made his figures’ garments relatively illegible, recalling female figures—often encased in fabric and holding umbrellas—from Japanese prints.

The Picturesque versus the Sublime

The inclusion of the two figures in Cliff Walk at Pourville has resulted in significant art-historical debate. In his treatment of Monet’s paintings of the Normandy Coast, Robert L. Herbert noted that only four of the land- and seascapes from this productive year show tourists; all of these feature two women looking out over the water.8 In relation to this, Herbert assessed: “For Monet as for so many middle-class men, women at leisure characterized summertime generally and seashore vacations in particular. Here the two figures, small but conspicuous by their color and position, are intermediaries between ourselves and the scene; aware of these bourgeois women, we cannot picture ourselves alone. They help form a vacation picture in which all signs of work and city are absent; the two women and we look upon pleasure boating from an outlook marked only by exuberant growth and bright sunshine.”9

Instead of a depiction of the tourist experience, Richard Thomson argued that Monet highlighted the natural grandeur and power of land, sea, and sky, thereby producing a “modern sublime.”10 In Cliff Walk, “the vulnerability of the tiny bourgeoises on the grimly shadowed crag plays up the sublime, and vicariously prompts our own reaction to that experience of being close to the edge.”11 Indeed, the way in which Monet integrated the two figures into the environment suggests that nature has swallowed them up. Unlike the Art Institute’s Beach at Sainte-Adresse (cat. 13), in which Monet clearly included the fishermen and tourist couple as a late addition, here he embedded the figures into the landscape, building them up at the same time as the other areas of the composition and incorporating them into the swirly vegetation on the cliff. It is difficult to tell where strokes of grass end and the fabric of the figures’ garments begins (fig. 18.6). However, it is impossible to ignore the fact that Monet did not depict nature as an angry, fierce, dangerous opponent; sailboats leisurely float on the relatively calm water, and puffy white clouds fill the beautiful blue summer sky.12 The inclusion of the words promenade (walk) and falaise (cliff) in the painting’s title from early in its history heightens this ambiguity; the title at once evokes the natural landscape and the idea that it is something to be trod upon by civilization.

Variations on a Theme

During his 1882 trips, Monet typically painted two to five variations on a single motif.13 It is clear that he was already thinking of his coastal paintings of 1882 serially, an approach that he would fully realize in the three series that he executed between February 1896 and April 1897 and exhibited under the general title Falaises (Cliffs).14 Writing to his dealer, Durand-Ruel, on March 25, 1882, Monet exclaimed that he did not want to send the dealer a new shipment of canvases from Pourville until he could see the “series” all together.15

As Virginia Spate observed, Monet, at this time, particularly seems to have been experimenting with “‘pairs’ of landscapes with and without figures as if speculating on the difference made by the presence or absence of spectator figures.”16 Cliff Walk at Pourville and the related composition Edge of the Cliff at Pourville (fig. 18.7) are suggestive of this.17 The paintings clearly depict the same site—distinguished by the two unusual rocky outcroppings at center and right. There are slight variations in Monet’s points of view—in the Art Institute’s painting, he seems to have pivoted a bit to his left, as evidenced by the more extreme cropping of the cliff at right and the greater expanse of the cliff top at bottom left. The major difference, however, is the inclusion of the figures in the Art Institute’s painting.

It is difficult—and perhaps unproductive—to assume the order in which Monet constructed this pair of paintings. Edge of the Cliff is slightly smaller—painted on a rotated no. 20 portrait figure canvas as opposed to a no. 25 portrait (figure). One wonders if the artist began with the smaller picture and worked his way up to the larger canvas to perhaps accentuate the horizontality or the legibility of the subject. Or was the smaller picture painted after the women had already walked along the edge of the cliff? Indeed, in Edge of the Cliff, one gets the haunting sense that there is an already trodden path composed of pinkish tones that follow the inverted S-curve of the cliff line. A similar pairing can be seen in two other paintings executed during this summer, one that is currently in a private collection and one that is in the Metropolitan Museum of Art (fig. 18.8).18 Notably, Monet chose the former, the larger and more fully developed of this pair—also the one that included more signs of human intervention—to exhibit with Cliff Walk in the solo exhibition of his work at Durand-Ruel, Paris, in 1883.19

Constructing the Landscape

Monet's omission and addition of specific elements in these paintings and his thoughtful selection of them for exhibition suggest that he was meticulously crafting his land- and seascapes of the English Channel. Numerous scholars agree that Monet did not paint them quickly and spontaneously in one outdoor sitting.20 Instead, he labored over them, creating carefully arranged compositions. The artist himself acknowledged this; in a letter he wrote to Alice while on his first trip in 1882, he said that “most of my studies have had ten or twelve sessions, and several of them, twenty.”21

Recent technical examinations concur that Monet executed Cliff Walk at Pourville in multiple sessions. Transmitted infrared (IR) imaging reveals that he originally started the painting as a significantly different composition. In an early stage, he laid in the horizon line almost four inches higher than the one that appears in the final composition (fig. 18.9). It is difficult to determine if this early horizon line—clearly visible at the left edge of the canvas—continues all the way to the right edge. One thing is certain, however: the legible section of this early horizon is not straight and precisely horizontal like that which separates sky and water in the final compositions of Cliff Walk and many other paintings from 1882. Rather, it ascends slightly from the left edge of the canvas toward the center.

Because it is difficult to determine the features of the early composition on the right-hand side and in the lower three-quarters of the canvas, it is challenging to imagine what viewpoint Monet was initially trying to capture. If he was on a cliff top, perhaps he first intended the composition to be similar to The Cliff at Varengeville, in which the distant cliffs ascend from the sea (fig. 18.10).22 Indeed, there appear to be curved lines in the upper-right half of Cliff Walk that may be indicative of the undulating cliff line dominating the right side of that painting. Or perhaps Monet was standing on the beach at the base of the cliff face, as in the two paintings from the same summer entitled The Church at Varengeville, Morning Effect (fig. 18.11 and fig. 18.12).23 A composition like this might explain Monet’s inclusion of the higher, craggy horizon line and the active brushstrokes in the upper half of the painting, which are also visible in the X-radiograph (fig. 18.13). Even more curious is that the canvas on which Cliff Walk was painted has a weave match with the aforementioned Apples and Grapes in the Art Institute’s collection; this suggests that the two now-discrete canvases were cut from the same bolt of fabric. Was this an unused canvas sitting around for some time in Monet’s studio or in the Paris shop of the color merchant H. Vieille et E. Troisgros? Either scenario could be feasible, for the canvas stamp found on the verso of Cliff Walk dates to between 1879 and 1883.24

Monet also made changes to the final composition (see Technical Report). When he first laid in the present horizon line, he extended it further to the right edge of the canvas (fig. 18.14). The sunlit portion of the cliff at right was added early on, before the sky was fully in place, suggesting that the artist always intended for the break between sky and water to be interrupted by part of the cliff top. But Monet amended this and other passages at a later time, after the first paint layer had dried. He tweaked the placement of the sailboats, removing some and adding others; IR (and visible light) shows that he also reduced the rocky outcropping—editing out a lobe that appears in the companion painting, Edge of the Cliff at Pourville—and added the shadowed area at right to achieve the correct balance (fig. 18.15).25

Study of Cliff Walk, Edge of the Cliff, and other “pairs” from 1882 deserves continued attention. However finished the final composition may seem, the Art Institute’s painting reinforces that Monet’s works from Normandy in the early 1880s were part of a developmental phase. Struggling between two worlds, he was on the cusp of abandoning figure paintings for the rest of his career. Though still incorporating human figures in Cliff Walk, he treated them less as modern Parisiennes and more as the abstracted characters from Japanese prints. This tension is manifest not only in the diverse scholarly interpretations the painting has received but also in its physical history.
Gloria Groom and Jill Shaw

Author: Kimberley Muir Technical Report:

Technical Report

Technical Summary

Monet’s Cliff Walk at Pourville was painted on a no. 25 portrait (figure) linen canvas. There is a stamp from the color merchant Vieille et Troisgros on the verso of the canvas. The canvas exhibits a warp match with Monet’s Apples and Grapes (cat. 17), suggesting that the fabric for these paintings came from the same bolt of material. The ground layer is cream-colored and may consist of a double or lisse application. Technical examination has revealed that a different composition was begun on the canvas, although it does not appear to have been fully developed. The final painting has a rich, brush-marked surface with both wet-in-wet and wet-over-dry paint application, the latter suggesting that the painting was carried out in more than one session. The land, sea, and sky were established before the figures were incorporated. The artist then worked up all areas of the composition together. A variety of brushwork was used, ranging from smooth, opaque brushstrokes to more textural strokes of low impasto and finishing touches of local color that skip across the high points of the paint texture beneath. In the final stages, the artist made changes to the right cliff face and to some of the sailboats along the horizon.

Multilayer Interactive Image Viewer

The Multilayer Interactive Image Viewer is designed to facilitate the viewer’s exploration and comparison of the technical images (fig. 18.16).26  

Signature

Signature/stamp:
Signed and dated at the lower-right corner, painted (red): Claude Monet 82 (fig. 18.17). Most of the underlying paint was dry when the signature and date were applied, except for a few strokes of pale purplish-gray paint, which were probably added as final touches just before the painting was signed.

Structure and Technique

Support

Canvas:
Flax (commonly known as linen).27

Standard format:
In the 1972–73 treatment, the stretcher was replaced with one of slightly larger dimensions (see Conservation History). The original dimensions were approximately 65 x 81 cm, which corresponds to a no. 25 portrait (figure) standard-format canvas (81 x 65 cm), turned horizontally.28

Weave:
Plain weave. Average thread count (standard deviation): 19.1V (0.4) x 20.0H (0.7) threads/cm; the vertical threads were determined to correspond to the warp and the horizontal threads to the weft.29 The painting shows a weave (warp) match with Monet’s Apples and Grapes (cat. 17).30 This suggests that the canvases for these two paintings were cut from the same bolt of fabric.

Canvas characteristics:
There is fairly regular cusping around all four edges. It appears to be more pronounced on the left and right sides.

Stretching:
Current stretching: The current stretching dates to the 1972–73 treatment (see Conservation History). The canvas is attached with copper tacks spaced approximately 6–8 cm apart.

Original stretching: Cusping in the canvas corresponds to the placement of the original tack holes, which are spaced approximately 6–7.5 cm apart. There are also a few (3–6) randomly placed pinholes on each tacking margin.

Stretcher/strainer:
Current stretcher: 4-membered ICA redwood spring stretcher dating to the 1972–73 treatment (see Conservation History).

Original stretcher: The stretcher that preceded the 1972–73 treatment may have been the original. It is described in an undated report as 5-membered, including a vertical crossbar with butt-ended, mortise-and-tenon joints, 10 keys, and the following dimensions: overall, 65.5 cm x 81.5 cm; outside depth, 2 cm; inside depth, 2 cm; width, 6.5 cm; distance from canvas position, 0.8 cm; and length of mortise, 5 cm.31

Manufacturer’s/dealer’s marks:
There is a supplier’s stamp on the back of the original canvas. Before the painting was lined in 1973 (see Conservation History), a tracing of the stamp was made. The text (not completely legible) is contained within a palette shape: " . . . H. VIEILLE E. TROISGROS … / 35 RUE DE LAVAL 35 / PARIS / COULEURS FINES / TOILES PANNEAUX (fig. 18.18)." The transmitted infrared image shows traces of the stamp, which is located on the mid-left side of the back of the painting (fig. 18.19).

Preparatory Layers

Sizing:
Not determined, probably glue.32

Ground application/texture:
The ground layer extends to the edges of all four tacking margins, indicating that the canvas was cut from a larger piece of primed canvas. The ground was probably commercially applied.33 It is relatively thick (60–125µm) and may consist of a double or lisse application (fig. 18.20). When the cross section is viewed under ultraviolet light the upper region of the ground exhibits a distinct fluorescence compared with the lower region (fig. 18.21). The Backscattered Electron (BSE),paragraph=44] image shows the lower region to be slightly more compact and richer in lead white, as evidenced by its brighter white appearance (fig. 18.22).34 Several pinholes were observed in the ground layer during microscopic examination of the painting.

Color:
Observing the painting microscopically, the ground appears to be cream-colored, with scattered red, black, and yellow particles (fig. 18.23).

Materials/composition:
The upper and lower regions of the ground were found to have the same composition. This consists of a mixture of lead white and calcium carbonate with some iron-oxide red and bone or ivory black, a little iron-oxide yellow, and traces of silicate minerals, alumina, and silica.35

Compositional Planning/Underdrawing/Painted Sketch

Extent/character:
No underdrawing was observed with infrared reflectography (IRR) or microscopic examination.

Paint Layer

Application/technique and artist’s revision:
The paint layer is fairly continuous throughout the composition, with the cream-colored ground layer visible in only a few localized areas through breaks in the brushstrokes, most notably at the lower corners (fig. 18.24). Brushwork unrelated to the final composition is clearly visible in the transmitted IR image (fig. 18.25), particularly in the upper half of the painting. This indicates that Monet initially planned a different landscape or seascape composition for the canvas. The earlier composition consists of strong directional strokes that delineate the major forms, but it does not appear to have been developed very far. Although the first composition is not easily discernible in the X-radiograph, its presence helps to explain the rather vigorous brushwork seen there, especially when compared with the final image (fig. 18.26). A distinct, three-lobed form, which does not correspond to the final image, is visible in transmitted infrared (IR) in the lower-left quadrant of the painting (fig. 18.27); however, it is unclear what this form represents.

In the final composition, the three main areas—sky, sea, and cliff—were worked up simultaneously. The earliest paint layers in each area seem to consist of more subdued colors than those used in the upper layers. The sky has a pale blue-gray underlayer that is visible intermittently along the horizon line and is used for the light-gray tones of the clouds (fig. 18.28). Areas around the edges of the clouds, where this underlayer is left exposed, represent some of the more translucent passages of paint application (fig. 18.29). The artist then applied thicker strokes of lead-white paint, subtly toned with traces of cobalt blue and vermilion, to further build up the clouds. The more intense blue paint in the upper part of the sky was applied around the clouds, coming up over their edges in places (fig. 18.30). The sea was painted in with a pale greenish-gray hue, which remains readily evident through the network of individual strokes applied over top of it (fig. 18.31). In contrast, the dense brushwork of the grassy cliff top makes it difficult to discern the earliest layers in that area of the composition. Small glimpses suggest that the underpainting is more variable there than in the sky and water: a thin, dull green paint was observed in some places (fig. 18.32), and a pale pinkish-beige appeared in others. The presence of a fairly consistent overall underpainting layer in the sky and water ­­­is somewhat unusual when compared with other Monet paintings studied for this project and may have been applied to cover the earlier composition in the areas where it was most developed before the artist began the final composition. Both the sea and the cliffs were built up using individual touches of color, applied in roughly horizontal, curving strokes for the waves and more randomly oriented strokes in the wind-swept grass. In these areas, the artist made use of low impasto brushwork and light strokes that skip across the highpoints of the underlying texture (fig. 18.33 and fig. 18.34), a combination that helps to create a sense of depth and movement. Monet often picked up two or more colors on his brush that he laid onto the canvas in strokes of unmixed color. The two figures seem to have been added after the elements of the landscape were already established in the initial painting stage (fig. 18.35). Several places around the edges of the figures show that the underlying layers of the cliff, water, and sky were already dry when they were painted (fig. 18.36). The figures and the landscape elements were then all worked up simultaneously. The garments consist of a thick buildup of strokes applied wet-in-wet, but with little actual blending of colors on the canvas (fig. 18.37). Some of the final strokes of the grass and figures were applied back and forth, wet-in-wet, blurring the boundary between them.

At an earlier stage of the painting of the final composition, the horizon line extended further to the right edge of the canvas (fig. 18.38). The shadowed area of the cliff at right was a later addition to the composition.36 Where there are small losses and gaps in the dark brown paint of the shadow, lighter paint (pale pink, green, blue, and cream) relating to the water and sky is visible (fig. 18.39). Tiny areas of interlayer cleavage suggest that the underlying layers were at least surface dry when the paint of the cliff shadow was applied on top of them, resulting in poor adhesion between the layers. The compositional change could indicate that the artist altered his viewpoint after the painting was begun or that the revision was an aesthetic decision. The adjacent sunlit portion of the cliff at the far right, however, seems to have been part of the composition from early on. The paint in this area is fairly continuous, with few breaks in the brushwork, but where it is visible (mainly along the left edge), only the pale-gray underpainting of the sky, and not the more intense blue of the finished sky, continues underneath the cliff (fig. 18.40). This suggests that the extreme right part of the cliff was in place before the sky was fully developed. A small modification was made at the upper-left contour of the right cliff face, where it originally bulged further to the left (fig. 18.41). This was then painted over with blue paint from the sky. The still-wet dark-green and brown paint from the cliff was probably wiped away first, as only traces are visible through the thin blue paint (fig. 18.42). It appears that the artist also made some changes to the small sailboats, modifying them at different stages of the painting process. In two places—one between the heads of the two women and another just in front of the white-sailed boat on the far right—short brushstrokes rich in lead white below the surface suggest that two additional sailboats were originally included in these areas and then subsequently painted out (fig. 18.43). The white sailboat on the far right of the finished painting (fig. 18.44) was added before the intense blue of the water, which covers part of the large sail, was applied, whereas the boat on the far left was added last, after the water was completed (fig. 18.45), further demonstrating the back-and-forth nature of the painting process.

Painting tools:
Brushes, including 1 and 1.5 cm width and possibly smaller for finer details. There are several brush hairs embedded in the paint layer.

Palette:
Analysis indicates the presence of the following pigments: lead white, chrome yellow, cadmium yellow, cobalt blue, ultramarine blue, viridian, emerald green, vermilion, and red lakes (fig. 18.46).37

Binding media:
Oil (estimated).38

Surface Finish

Varnish layer/media:
The painting is currently unvarnished. A synthetic varnish applied in 1973 was removed in 2011; it is not known when the natural resin varnish, which was removed in 1973, was applied (see Conservation History).

Frame

Design/origin:
Current frame (installed by April 6, 1932): “Durand-Ruel” Régence Revival frame with molded corner and center cartouches on a cross-hatched ground, and front leaf-tip and shell ornaments (fig. 18.47fig. 18.48, and fig. 18.49).39

Previous frame: A photograph of the painting in the 1905 Durand-Ruel exhibition at the Grafton Galleries, London, shows the painting framed in a “Durand-Ruel” Louis XVI Revival frame with burnished ribbon-and-stave moldings.40

Conservation History

In 1972–73 yellowed varnish and overpaint were removed. The canvas was lined with wax/resin and restretched on a new ICA stretcher. The surface was coated with polyvinyl acetate AYAA, and inpainting was carried out at small losses and around the edges. A spray coat of methacrylate resin L-46 was applied, followed by a final coating of polyvinyl acetate AYAA.41

In 2011 the synthetic varnish layers were removed along with residues from an earlier natural resin varnish. The painting was left unvarnished. Fills from a previous treatment were left intact around the edges, and, where necessary, new fills were added and existing fills leveled or textured. Small losses were inpainted.42

Condition Summary

The work is in good condition overall. The canvas is lined with wax/resin. It is flat and stretched taut on a spring stretcher. The paint layer is in good condition, with only a few tiny paint losses and localized interlayer cleavage in the cliff shadow and sky at right. All areas are secure. There are several brush hairs embedded in the paint. Slight flattening and moating around areas of low impasto are probably due to the lining procedure. There is a general network of light mechanical cracks over the paint surface and areas of fine drying cracks in the dark shadows of the cliffs. Light stretcher-bar cracks are visible, most notably on the left side and over the area of the original vertical crossbar. There are series of tiny splatters running horizontally across the upper sky, midway down the water on the left side, and near the lower-left corner. These have etched slightly into the paint, causing matte brown discolorations.43 These small spots have been inpainted, along with areas of loss and abrasion at the original foldovers. The painting is currently unvarnished. It has a soft, subtly variable surface depending on the qualities of the paint application.
Kimberley Muir

Provenance:

Provenance

Acquired by Hermann Kapferer, Paris, from an unknown owner, by July 17, 1888.44

Sold to Durand-Ruel, Paris, July 17, 1888, for 1,200 fr.45

Probably sold to Mrs. Lewis Larned (Annie Swan) Coburn (died 1932), Chicago, by Apr. 6, 1932.46

Bequeathed to the Art Institute of Chicago, 1933.47

Exhibitions:

Exhibition History

Paris, Durand-Ruel, Exposition des oeuvres de Cl. Monet, Mar. 1–25, 1883, cat. 20.48

London, Dowdeswell and Dowdeswell, Paintings, Drawings and Pastels by Members of “La Société des impressionnistes,Apr.–July 1883, cat. 32.49

Possibly Weimar, Permanenten Ausstellung für Kunst und Kunstgewerbe, c. June 1–c. Dec. 12, 1890.50

Brussels, Libre Esthétique, Exposition des peintres Impressionnistes, Feb. 25–Mar. 29, 1904, cat. 109.51

London, Grafton Galleries, A Selection from the Pictures by Boudin, Cézanne, Degas, Manet, Monet, Morisot, Pissarro, Renoir, Sisley, Jan.–Feb. 1905, cat. 157 (ill.).52

Manchester, England, Manchester City Art Gallery, Exhibition of Modern French Paintings, Winter 1907–08, cat. 78.53

Paris, Durand-Ruel, Exposition de paysages par Claude Monet et Renoir, May 18–June 6, 1908, cat. 33.54

Paris, Durand-Ruel, Tableaux par Claude Monet, Mar. 2–28, 1914, cat. 30.55

Chicago, Art Institute of Chicago, Exhibition of the Mrs. L. L. Coburn Collection: Modern Paintings and Watercolors, Apr. 6–Oct. 9, 1932, cat. 22 (ill.).

Chicago, Art Institute of Chicago, A Century of Progress Exhibition of Paintings and Sculpture, May 23–Nov. 1, 1933, cat. 295 (fig. 18.50).56

Chicago, Art Institute of Chicago, A Century of Progress Exhibition of Paintings and Sculpture, June 1–Oct. 31, 1934, cat. 214.57

Chicago, Art Institute of Chicago, The Paintings of Claude Monet, Apr. 1–June 15, 1957, no cat.58

Chicago, Art Institute of Chicago, Paintings by Monet, Mar. 15–May 11, 1975, cat. 55 (ill.).

Albi, Musée Toulouse-Lautrec, Trésors impressionnistes du Musée de Chicago, June 27–Aug. 31, 1980, cat. 12 (ill.).

Los Angeles, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, A Day in the Country: Impressionism and the French Landscape, June 28–Sept. 16, 1984, cat. 117 (ill.); Art Institute of Chicago, Oct. 23, 1984–Jan. 6, 1985; Paris, Galeries Nationales d’Exposition du Grand Palais, Feb. 4–Apr. 22, 1985 [as L’impressionnisme et le paysage français].

Canberra, National Gallery of Australia, Monet and Japan, Mar. 9–June 11, 2001, cat. 13 (ill.); Perth, Art Gallery of Western Australia, July 7–Sept. 16, 2001.

Tokyo, Seiji Togo Memorial Yasuda Kasai Museum of Art, loan exchange, Oct. 12, 2001–June 12, 2002.59

Edinburgh, Royal Scottish Academy, Monet: The Seine and the Sea 1878–1883, Aug. 6–Oct. 26, 2003, cat. 65 (ill.).

Chicago, Art Institute of Chicago, Seurat and the Making of “La Grande Jatte,” June 19–Sept. 19, 2004, cat. 96 (ill.).

San Francisco, Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, Monet in Normandy, June 17–Sept. 17, 2006, cat. 30 (ill.); Raleigh, North Carolina Museum of Art, Oct. 15, 2006–Jan. 14, 2007; Cleveland, Ohio, Cleveland Museum of Art, Feb. 18–May 20, 2007.

Paris, Galeries Nationales, Grand Palais, Claude Monet, 1840–1926, Sept. 22, 2010–Jan. 24, 2011, cat. 62 (ill.).

Selected References:

Selected References

Dowdeswell and Dowdeswell/Société des Impressionnistes, Catalogue of Paintings, Drawings and Pastels by Members of “La Société des impressionnistes,” exh. cat. (Dowdeswell and Dowdeswell, 1883) p. 11, cat. 32.60

Georges Lecomte, L’Art impressionniste d’après la collection privée de M. Durand-Ruel (Chamerot et Renouard, 1892), pp. 246–47.

Octave Maus, Exposition des peintres impressionnistes, exh. cat. (Libre Esthétique, 1904), p. 40, cat. 109.61

Theodore Duret, “Claude Monet und der Impressionismus,” Kunst und Künstler (Mar. 1904), p. 245 (ill.).

André Mellerio, “Correspondance de Belgique: Exposition des peintres impressionnistes à la ‘Libre Esthétique,’” La Chronique des arts et de la curiosité 13 (Mar. 26, 1904), p. 104.62

Grafton Galleries, A Selection from the Pictures by Boudin, Cézanne, Degas, Manet, Monet, Morisot, Pissarro, Renoir, Sisley, exh. cat. (Durand-Ruel and Sons, 1905), p. 23, cat. 157 (ill.).63

Manchester City Art Gallery, Handbook to the Exhibition of Modern French Paintings, exh. cat. (Taylor, Garnett, Evans, 1907), p. 18, cat. 78.64

Galeries Durand-Ruel, Paris, Exposition de paysages par Claude Monet et Renoir, exh. cat. (Galeries Durand-Ruel, 1908), cat. 33.65

Édouard Sarradin, “Notes d’art: Paysages de Claude Monet et de Renoir,” Journal des débats politiques et littéraires 120, 143 (May 23, 1908), p. 3.

Charles Louis Borgmeyer, “The Master Impressionists,” Fine Arts 28, 6 (June 1913), p. 328 (ill.).

Galeries Durand-Ruel, Paris, Tableaux par Claude Monet, exh. cat. (Imp. de l’art, 1914), cat. 30.66

Arsène Alexandre, Claude Monet (Éditions Bernheim-Jeune, 1921), p. 78.

Gustave Geffroy, Claude Monet: Sa vie, son temps, son oeuvre (Éditions G. Crès et Cie, 1922), p. 107.67

Madeleine Octave Maus, “Exposition des peintres impressionnistes,” in Trente années de lutte pour l’art, 1884–1914 (Librairie l’Oiseau Bleu, 1926), p. 324.68

Art Institute of Chicago, Exhibition of the Mrs. L. L. Coburn Collection: Modern Paintings and Watercolors, exh. cat. (Art Institute of Chicago, 1932), pp. 19, no. 22; 48, no. 22 (ill.).

Daniel Catton Rich, “The Mrs. L. L. Coburn Collection,” in Art Institute of Chicago, Exhibition of the Mrs. L. L. Coburn Collection: Modern Paintings and Watercolors, exh. cat. (Art Institute of Chicago, 1932), p. 7.

Daniel Catton Rich, “The Bequest of Mrs. L. L. Coburn,” Bulletin of the Art Institute of Chicago 26, 6 (Nov. 1932), p. 66.

Art Institute of Chicago, Catalogue of A Century of Progress Exhibition of Paintings and Sculpture, exh. cat. (Art Institute of Chicago, 1933), p. 43, cat. 295.

Art Institute of Chicago, Catalogue of A Century of Progress Exhibition of Paintings and Sculpture, exh. cat. (Art Institute of Chicago, 1934), p. 37, cat. 214.

Charles Fabens Kelley, untitled article, Christian Science Monitor (Dec. 18, 1935), p. 11 (ill.).

Oscar Reuterswärd, Monet: En Konstnärshistorik (Bonnier, 1948), p. 284.

Art Institute of Chicago, An Illustrated Guide to the Collections of the Art Institute of Chicago (Art Institute of Chicago, 1956), p. 34.

A. C., The Art Institute of Chicago Quarterly 51, 2 (Apr. 1, 1957), pp. 24, 29 (ill.), 33.

William C. Seitz, Claude Monet (Harry N. Abrams, 1960), pp. 30; 116–17 (ill.).

Art Institute of Chicago, Paintings in the Art Institute of Chicago: A Catalogue of the Picture Collection (Art Institute of Chicago, 1961), p. 319.

Frederick A. Sweet, “Great Chicago Collectors,” Apollo 84 (Sept. 1966), p. 203.

Denis Rouart, “Apparences et reflets,” in Denis Rouart and Jean-Dominique Rey (with a catalogue raisonné by Robert Maillard), Monet, nymphéas: Ou les miroirs du temps (F. Hazan, 1972), p. 26.69

Susan Wise, “An Exhibition of Paintings by Claude Monet,” Midwest Museum Conference of the American Association of Museums: Quarterly 35, 1 (Winter 1974–75), p. 9 (ill.).

Susan Wise, ed., Paintings by Monet, exh. cat. (Art Institute of Chicago, 1975), p. 109, cat. 55 (ill.).

Guy Hubbard and Mary J. Rouse, Art: Discovering and Creating (Benefic Press, 1977), pp. 22 (ill.), 81 (ill.).

Luigina Rossi Bortolatto, L’opera completa di Claude Monet: 1870–1889, Classici dell’arte 63 (Rizzoli, 1978), p. 49, pl. 33; 103, no. 230 (ill.).

Brian Petrie, Claude Monet: The First of the Impressionists (Phaidon, 1979), pp. 58; 61, pl. 50.

Daniel Wildenstein, Claude Monet: Biographie et catalogue raisonné, Tome II, 1882–1886, Peintures (Bibliothèque des Arts, 1979), pp. 78; 79, cat. 758 (ill.).

Musée Toulouse-Lautrec and Art Institute of Chicago, Trésors impressionnistes du Musée de Chicago, exh. cat. (Musée Toulouse-Lautrec, 1980), pp. 32, no. 12 (ill.); 67.

William C. Seitz, Monet: 25 Masterworks (Harry N. Abrams, 1982), pp. 44–45 (ill.).

Sylvie Gache-Patin and Scott Schaefer, “Impressionism and the Sea,” in A Day in the Country: Impressionism and the French Landscape, exh. cat. ed. Andrea P. A. Belloli (Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 1984), pp. 272 (detail); 276; 284; 286, no. 117; 288; 290.

Robert Rosenblum and H. W. Janson, Nineteenth-Century Art (Harry N. Abrams, 1984), pp. 400, fig. 321; 401.70

Sylvie Gache-Patin and Scott Schaefer, “La mer,” in Réunion des Musées Nationaux, L’impressionnisme et le paysage français, exh. cat. (Réunion des Musées Nationaux, 1985), pp. 295; 306–07, no. 117 (ill.).

John House, Monet: Nature into Art (Yale University Press, 1986), p. 185, pl. 228.

Richard R. Brettell, French Impressionists (Art Institute of Chicago/Harry N. Abrams, 1987), pp. 74–75 (detail), 76 (ill.), 118.

Robert L. Herbert, Impressionism: Art, Leisure, and Parisian Society (Yale University Press, 1988), pp. 299; 300, fig. 305.

David Bomford, Jo Kirby, John Leighton, and Ashok Roy, Art in the Making: Impressionism (National Gallery/Yale University Press, 1990), p. 109, fig. 52.

Rodolphe Rapetti, Monet (Anaya Editoriale/Giorgio Mondadori, 1990), p. 62, pl. 40.71

Karin Sagner-Düchting, Claude Monet, 1840–1926: Ein Fest für die Augen (Benedikt Taschen Verlag, 1990), pp. 125, 127 (ill.).

Bernard Denvir, Impressionism: The Painters and the Paintings (Studio Editions, 1991), pp. 134; 136, pl. 123.

Frank Milner, Monet (Mallard Press, 1991), pp. 19, 78–79 (ill.).72

Sylvie Patin, Monet: “Un oeil . . . mais, bon Dieu, quel oeil!” (Gallimard/Réunion des Musées Nationaux, 1991), p. 81 (ill.).73

Sophie Fourny-Dargère, Monet, Profils de l’art (Chêne, 1992), pp. 100–01, fig. 2.

Scott Reyburn, Monet (Medici Society, 1992), cover (ill.).

Virginia Spate, Claude Monet: Life and Work (Rizzoli, 1992), pp. 154; 156; 158–59, ill. 177.

Marianne Alphant, Claude Monet: Une Vie dans le paysage (Hazan, 1993), p. 334.

Christoph Heinrich, Claude Monet, 1840–1926 (Benedikt Taschen, 1993), p. 51 (ill.).

Introduction by James N. Wood, Treasures of 19th- and 20th-Century Painting: The Art Institute of Chicago (Art Institute of Chicago/Abbeville Press, 1993), p. 89 (ill.).

Robert L. Herbert, Monet on the Normandy Coast: Tourism and Painting, 1867–1886 (Yale University Press, 1994), pp. 45, fig. 49; 46–47 (detail); 135.

Henri Lallemand, Monet: Impressions of Light (Todtri Productions, 1994), pp. 85, 101 (ill.).

Steven Z. Levine, Monet, Narcissus, and Self-Reflection: The Modernist Myth of the Self (University of Chicago Press, 1994), pp. 30, 33.

Richard Thomson, Monet to Matisse: Landscape Painting in France, 1874–1914, exh. cat. (National Galleries of Scotland, 1994), p. 164, note 10.

Andrew Forge, Monet, Artists in Focus (Art Institute of Chicago, 1995), pp. 25; 28; 71 (detail); 78, pl. 7.

John Russell Taylor, Claude Monet: Impressions of France, From Le Havre to Giverny (Collins and Brown, 1995), p. 91 (ill.).

Daniel Wildenstein, Monet, or the Triumph of Impressionism, vol. 1, Monet: Catalogue raisonné (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), pp. 179; 180–81 (detail).

Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné, vol. 2 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), pp. 282, cat. 758 (ill.); 283–84.

Anne-Marie Bergeret-Gourbin, Monet: La Normandie (Herscher, 1997), pp. 48–49 (ill.).

Carla Rachman, Monet, Art and Ideas (Phaidon, 1997), pp. 160–61, fig. 107.

Susanne Weiss, Claude Monet: Ein distanzierter Blick auf Stadt und Land, Werke 1859–1889 (Reimer, 1997), pp. 153; 264, fig. 58.

James Henry Rubin, Impressionism, Art and Ideas (Phaidon, 1999), pp. 92–93, fig. 50 (detail); 128–29, fig. 76; 306; 307.

Hendrik Ziegler, “‘Klein Paris’ in Weimar,” in Aufstieg und Fall der Moderne, exh. cat. ed. Rolf Bothe and Thomas Föhl (Hatje Cantz, 1999), pp. 18, fig. 3; 19; 28.

Selected by James N. Wood, Impressionism and Post-Impressionism in the Art Institute of Chicago (Art Institute of Chicago/Hudson Hills Press, 2000), p. 74 (ill.).

Maria Teresa Benedetti, Monet: I luoghi (Giunti, 2001), p. 26 (ill.).

National Gallery of Australia, Monet and Japan, exh. cat. (National Gallery of Australia/University of Washington Press, 2001), pp. 90, cat. 13 (ill.); 195.

Karin Sagner-Düchting, ed., Monet and Modernism, exh. cat. (Prestel, 2001), pp. 47, 50 (ill.).

Norio Shimada and Keiko Sakagami, Kurōdo Mone meigashū: Hikari to kaze no kiseki (Claude Monet: 1881–1926), vol. 2 (Nihon Bijutsu Kyōiku Sentā, 2001), p. 14 (ill.).

Virginia Spate and David Bromfield, “A New and Strange Beauty: Monet and Japanese Art,” in National Gallery of Australia, Monet and Japan, exh. cat. (National Gallery of Australia/University of Washington Press, 2001), p. 33 (ill.).

Angus Trumble, “Canberra and Perth, Monet and Japan,” Burlington Magazine 143, 1181 (Aug. 2001), pp. 522; 523, fig. 78.

Hendrik Ziegler, Die Kunst der Weimarer Malerschule: von der Pleinairmalerei zum Impressionismus (Böhlau, 2001), pp. 182–83.74

Michael Clarke and Richard Thomson, Monet: The Seine and the Sea, 1878–1883, exh. cat. (National Galleries of Scotland, 2003), pp. 136, cat. 65 (ill.); 137; 171.

Guy Cogeval et al., Édouard Vuillard, exh. cat. (National Gallery of Art, 2003), pp. 440, fig. 1; 441.

Debra N. Mancoff, Monet: Nature into Art (Publications International, 2003), pp. 52–54 (ill.).

Richard Thomson, “Looking to Paint: Monet 1878–1883,” in Michael Clarke and Richard Thomson, Monet: The Seine and the Sea, 1878–1883, exh. cat. (National Galleries of Scotland, 2003), pp. 14–15 (detail); 31.

Robert L. Herbert et al., Seurat and the Making of “La Grande Jatte,” exh. cat. (Art Institute of Chicago/University of California Press, 2004), pp. 57; 58; 59, cat. 96 (ill.); 62.

Madeleine Korn, Exhibitions of Modern French Art and Their Influence on Collectors in Britain, 1870–1918: The Davies Sisters in Context,” Journal of the History of Collections 16, 2 (2004), pp. 199; 200, fig. 7.

Isabelle Cahn, L’impressionnisme, ou l’oeil naturel, L’Aventure de l’art (Chêne, 2005), pp. 160–61 (detail), 215 (ill.), 222.

Frances Fowle, “Making Money out of Monet: Marketing Monet in Britain 1870–1905,” in Monet and French Landscape: Vétheuil and Normandy, ed. Frances Fowle (National Galleries of Scotland, 2006), p. 145.

Frances Fowle, ed., Monet and French Landscape: Vétheuil and Normandy (National Galleries of Scotland, 2006), p. 43, pl. 11.

Robert L. Herbert, “Monet’s Neo-Romantic Seascapes, 1881–1886,” in Monet and French Landscape: Vétheuil and Normandy, ed. Frances Fowle (National Galleries of Scotland, 2006), p. 75.

Heather Lemonedes, Lynn Federle Orr, and David Steel, Monet in Normandy, exh. cat. (Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco/North Carolina Museum of Art/Cleveland Museum of Art, 2006), pp. 89; 104–07, cat. 30 (ill.), fig. 52; 158; 184.

Anna Gruetzner Robins, “‘Slab of Pink and Lumps of Brown’: The Critical Reaction to the Exhibition of a Monet Grainstack Painting in Britain in 1893,” in Monet and French Landscape: Vétheuil and Normandy, ed. Frances Fowle (National Galleries of Scotland, 2006), p. 161.

Norio Shimada, Claude Monet, Great Masters of Western Art 1 (Shogakukan, 2006), p. 73 (ill.).

Nathalia Brodskaïa, Impressionism, trans. Rebecca Brimacombe and Richard Swanson (Parkstone Press, 2007), p. 93 (ill.).

Eric M. Zafran, “Monet in America,” in Claude Monet (1840–1926): A Tribute to Daniel Wildenstein and Katia Granoff, exh. cat. (Wildenstein, 2007), p. 127.

Susie Hodge, Monet: His Life and Works in 500 Images (Lorenz, 2009), p. 181 (ill.).

Gloria Groom and Douglas Druick, with the assistance of Dorota Chudzicka and Jill Shaw, The Age of French Impressionism: Masterpieces from the Art Institute of Chicago (Art Institute of Chicago/Yale University Press, 2010), p. 118, cat. 57 (ill.).

Ségolène Le Men, Monet (Citadelles and Mazenod, 2010), pp. 226–27, ill. 184; 229; 235.

Réunion des Musées Nationaux, Claude Monet, 1840–1926, exh. cat. (Réunion des Musées Nationaux/Musée d’Orsay, 2010), p. 184, cat. 62 (ill.).

Richard Thomson, “La Côte normande dans les années 1880,” in Réunion des Musées Nationaux, Claude Monet, 1840–1926, exh. cat. (Réunion des Musées Nationaux/Musée d’Orsay, 2010), p. 176.

Hendrik Ziegler, “Produktive Begegnungen: Die Weimarer Malerschule und der französische Impressionismus,” in Klassik Stiftung Weimar, Hinaus in die Natur!: Barbizon, die Weimarer Malerschule und der Aufbruch zum Impressionismus, exh. cat. ed. Gerda Wendermann (Kerber, 2010), p. 228.

Other Documentation:

Other Documentation

Additional Archival Documentation from the Durand-Ruel Archives

Stock Durand-Ruel Paris 995 et 168775
Stock Durand-Ruel Paris 995, Promenade sur la falaise, Pourville, Livre de stock Paris 1891; stock Durand-Ruel Paris 1687, Promenade, mer, Livre de stock Paris 1888 (Durand-Ruel renumérote ses livres de stock de Paris jusqu’en 1891).

Photo Durand-Ruel Paris 222
Promenade sur la falaise, Pourville, en 1891 (pas de date ni de mois plus précis)76

Labels and Inscriptions

Undated

Label
Location: backing board
Method: printed label with typewritten script
Content: THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO / artist Claude Monet / title Cliff Walk at Pourville / medium oil on canvas / credit / acc. # 1933.443 / LZ-341-001 IM 1/90 (Rev. 1/90) (fig. 18.51)

Label
Location: stretcher back
Method: printed label with handwritten script and green ink inventory stamp
Content: THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO / CHICAGO ILLINOIS 60603, U.S.A. / To / Monet, Claude / The Cliff Walk (Pourville) / 1933.443
Inventory stamp: Inventory—1980–1981 (fig. 18.52)

Inscription
Location: stretcher back
Method: handwritten in ink
Content: 1933.443 (fig. 18.53)

Inscription
Location: frame back
Method: handwritten in pencil
Content: 1933.443 (fig. 18.54)

Inscription
Location: frame back
Method: handwritten in pencil
Content: 29 x 35 ½ (fig. 18.55)

Post-1980

Label
Location: backing board
Method: printed label
Content: rmn / Claude Monet 1840–1926 / Galeries nationales, Grand Palais / 22/09/2010–24/01/2011 / 65 / Chicago / The Art Institute of Chicago / Promenade sur la falaise, Pourville / inv. 1933-443 / huile sur toile (fig. 18.56)

Label
Location: backing board
Method: printed label
Content: Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, June 17–September 17, 2006 / North Carolina Museum of Art, October 15, 2006–January 14, 2007 / The Cleveland Museum of Art, February 18–May 20, 2007 / Exhibition: Monet in Normandy / Artist: Claude Monet (French, 1840–1926) / Title: The Cliff Walk, Pourville, 1882 / Lender: The Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL [W758; cat. #30] (fig. 18.57)

Label
Location: backing board
Method: printed label
Content: THE CLEVELAND MUSEUM OF ART 11150 East Boulevard Cleveland, Ohio 44106-1797 / Monet in Normandy / (6/17/2006–5/28/2007) / Claude Monet (French, 1840–1926) / The Cliff Walk, Pourville, 1882 / Oil on canvas / 1882 / The Art Institute of Chicago, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Larned / Coburn Memorial Collection, 1933.443 / CAT#: 30 / 1933.443 (fig. 18.58)

Label
Location: backing board
Method: printed label
Content: Monet: THE SEINE AND THE SEA—Vétheuil and Normandy, / UK, Edinburgh, Royal Scottish Academy Crate TELNG 03.069 / 065 / Claude Monet / Cliff Walk at Pourville / Oil on canvas / 66.50 x 82.30 cm / USA, Chicago, The Art Institute (fig. 18.59)

Stamp
Location: stretcher back
Method: green ink stamp
Content: Inventory—1980–1981 (fig. 18.60)

Examination and Analysis Techniques

X-radiography
Westinghouse X-ray unit, scanned on Epson Expressions 10000XL flatbed scanner.

Infrared Reflectography (IRR)
FUJIFILM S5 Pro with X-Nite1000B—2mm filter (1.0–1.1 µm); examination only (no capture) with Inframetrics Infracam with 1.5–1.73 µm filter.

Transmitted infrared
FUJIFILM S5 Pro with X-Nite1000B—2mm filter (1.0–1.1 µm).

Visible light
Normal-light, raking-light, and transmitted-light overalls and macrophotography: FUJIFILM S5 Pro with X-NiteCC1 filter.

Ultraviolet light
FUJIFILM S5 Pro, with X-NiteCC1 filter and Kodak Wratten 2E filter.

High-resolution visible light (and UV)
Sinar P3 camera with Sinarback evolution 75H (B+W 486 UV IR cut MRC filter).

Microscopy and photomicrographs
Cross-section analysis using Zeiss Axioplan2 Research Microscope equipped with reflected-light/UV fluorescence and a Zeiss AxioCam MRc5 digital camera (types of illumination used: darkfield, Differential Interference Contrast [DIC], and UV fluorescence). In situ photomicrographs with Wild Heerbrugg M7A StereoZoom Microscope equipped with Olympus DP71 microscope digital camera.

X-Ray Fluorescence Spectroscopy (XRF)
Several spots on the painting were analyzed in situ with a Bruker/Keymaster TRACeR III-V with Rhodium tube.

Polarized Light Microscopy (PLM)
Zeiss Universal Research Microscope.

Scanning Electron Microscopy coupled with Energy Dispersive X-Ray Spectroscopy (SEM/EDX)
Cross sections were analyzed after carbon coating with a Hitachi S3400-N-II VPSEM with Oxford EDS and Hitachi solid state BSE. Analysis was performed in the EPIC facility of the NUANCE Center at Northwestern University.

Automated thread counting
Thread count and weave information determined by Thread Count Automation Software.77

Image registration
Overlay images registered by Damon M. Conover (GW), Dr. John K. Delaney (GW, NGA), and Murray H. Loew (GW) of the School of Engineering and Applied Science, The George Washington University, and the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., using a novel image-based correlation algorithm.78

Image Inventory (fig. 18.61)

Footnotes:

Cliff Walk at Pourville has had the following titles over the course of its history:
Apr. 1883: Promenade sur la falaise [Dowdeswell and Dowdeswell/Société des Impressionnistes, Catalogue of Paintings, Drawings and Pastels by Members of “La Société des impressionnistes,” exh. cat. (Dowdeswell and Dowdeswell, 1883), p. 11, cat. 32; and Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné, vol. 2 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), pp. 283–84, cat. 758.].
July 17, 1888: Promenade, mer or Promenade sur la falaise [Durand-Ruel, Paris, Livre de stock Paris 1888 (stock 1687); see Paul-Louis Durand-Ruel and Flavie Durand-Ruel to the Art Institute of Chicago, Oct. 5, 2010. Curatorial Object File, Art Institute of Chicago.].
Possibly June 1890Strand von Pourville [According to Hendrik Ziegler, “‘Klein Paris’ in Weimar,” in Aufstieg und Fall der Moderne, exh. cat. ed. Rolf Bothe and Thomas Föhl (Hatje Cantz, 1999), p. 19; Hendrik Ziegler, Die Kunst der Weimarer Malerschule: Von der Pleinairmalerei zum Impressionismus (Böhlau, 2001) pp. 182–83; and Hendrik Ziegler, “Produktive Begegnungen: Die Weimarer Malerschule und der französische Impressionismus,” in Klassik Stiftung Weimar, Hinaus in die Natur!: Barbizon, die Weimarer Malerschule und der Aufbruch zum Impressionismus, exh. cat. (Kerber, 2010), p. 228–29.]. 
Feb. 25, 1904: Falaises de Dieppe. [Octave Maus, Exposition des Peintres Impressionnistes, exh. cat. (Libre Esthétique, 1904), p. 40, cat. 109; and Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné, vol. 2 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), pp. 283–84, cat. 758.].
Mar. 1904: Spaziergang auf den Felsen [Theodore Duret, “Claude Monet und der Impressionismus,” Kunst und Künstler (Mar. 1904), p. 245 (ill.).].
Jan. 1905: The Walk on the Cliffs. 1882. [Grafton Galleries, A Selection from the Pictures by Boudin, Cézanne, Degas, Manet, Monet, Morisot, Pissarro, Renoir, Sisley, exh. cat. (Durand-Ruel and Sons, 1905), p. 23, cat. 157 (ill.).].
Winter 1907: The Cliffs, Pourville (1882) [Manchester City Art Gallery, Handbook to the Exhibition of Modern French Paintings, exh. cat. (Taylor, Garnett, Evans, 1907), p. 18, cat. 78; and Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné, vol. 2 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), pp. 283–84, cat. 758.].
May 18, 1908: Promenade sur la falaise—1882. [Galeries Durand-Ruel, Paris, Exposition de paysages par Claude Monet et Renoir, exh. cat. (Galeries Durand-Ruel, 1908), cat. 33.].
May 23, 1908: La Promenade sur la falaise [Édouard Sarradin, “Notes d’art: Paysages de Claude Monet et de Renoir,” Journal des débats politiques et littéraires 120, 143 (May 23, 1908), p. 3.].
June 1913: Promenade sur la falaise, 1882 (Walk on the Cliffs, 1882) [Charles Louis Borgmeyer, “The Master Impressionists,” Fine Arts 28, 6 (June 1913), p. 328 (ill.).].
Mar. 2, 1914: Promenade sur la falaise. 1882. [Galeries Durand-Ruel, Paris, Tableaux par Claude Monet, exh. cat. (Imp. de l’art, 1914), cat. 30; and Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné, vol. 2 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), pp. 283–84, cat. 758.].
The Art Institute currently uses the title that resulted from the research for the exhibition A Day in the Country: Impressionism and the French Landscape. See Mary Kuzniar, European Painting and Sculpture, Art Institute of Chicago, memo, June 21, 1984. Curatorial Object File, Art Institute of Chicago.

Daniel Wildenstein identified Val Saint-Nicolas as the location for another painting that depicts a scene similar to the Art Institute’s painting; see Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné, vol. 2 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), p. 283, cat. 757. A number of publications were particularly helpful in elucidating Monet’s biographical and art-historical chronology at this moment: Robert L. Herbert, Monet on the Normandy Coast: Tourism and Painting, 1867–1886 (Yale University Press, 1994); Michael Clarke and Richard Thomson, Monet: The Seine and the Sea, 1878–1883, exh. cat. (National Galleries of Scotland, 2003); and Richard Brettell’s essays in Heather Lemonedes, Lynn Federle Orr, and David Steel, Monet in Normandy, exh. cat. (Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco/North Carolina Museum of Art/Cleveland Museum of Art, 2006). For a detailed chronology of Monet’s life, see Charles F. Stuckey and Sophia Shaw, Claude Monet, 1840–1926, exh. cat. (Art Institute of Chicago/Thames and Hudson, 1995).  

In Feb. 1882, Monet traveled to Dieppe (and on to nearby Pourville) from Poissy. Returning home to Poissy in mid-Apr., the artist brought almost forty paintings back with him; later that same month, he sold his dealer, Durand-Ruel, twenty-three works. See Daniel Wildenstein, Claude Monet: Biographie et catalogue raisonné, Tome II, 1882–1886, Peintures (Bibliothèque des Arts, 1979), p. 6. Considering his successful trip in Feb., Monet’s eagerness to return to the area from mid-June to early Oct. is understandable. Robert L. Herbert offered a discussion regarding the increased market for Monet’s seascapes at this time, noting that “we cannot look upon his marines as disinterested visual poetry. They were his produce, sent back to the capital to be sold.” See Robert L. Herbert, Monet on the Normandy Coast: Tourism and Painting, 1867–1886 (Yale University Press, 1994), pp. 43–44.

Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné, vol. 2 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), attempts to identify many of the locations, titles, and dates.

See, for example, Robert L. Herbert, Monet on the Normandy Coast: Tourism and Painting, 1867–1886 (Yale University Press, 1994), p. 45; and Heather Lemonedes, Lynn Federle Orr, and David Steel, Monet in Normandy, exh. cat. (Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco/North Carolina Museum of Art/Cleveland Museum of Art, 2006), p. 104.  

For more on the influence of Japanese art on Monet, see National Gallery of Australia, Monet and Japan, exh. cat. (National Gallery of Australia/University of Washington Press, 2001). For the influence of Japanese art on Impressionism more generally, see Karin Breuer, Japanesque: The Japanese Print in the Era of Impressionism, exh. cat. (Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco/Delmonico Books/Prestel, 2010).

Robert L. Herbert, Monet on the Normandy Coast: Tourism and Painting, 1867–1886 (Yale University Press, 1994), p. 45. Herbert claimed the other three paintings with vacationers are Sur la Falaise à Dieppe (On the Cliff at Dieppe), La Plage de Pourville (The Beach at Pourville), and Coucher de soleil à Pourville (Sunset at Pourville). See Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné, vol. 2 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), cats. 754, 780–81.

Robert L. Herbert, Monet on the Normandy Coast: Tourism and Painting, 1867–1886 (Yale University Press, 1994), pp. 45–46.

Richard Thomson, “Looking to Paint: Monet 1878–1883,” in Michael Clarke and Richard Thomson, Monet: The Seine and the Sea, 1878–1883, exh. cat. (National Galleries of Scotland, 2003), pp. 28–29.

Richard Thomson, “Looking to Paint: Monet 1878–1883,” in Michael Clarke and Richard Thomson, Monet: The Seine and the Sea, 1878–1883, exh. cat. (National Galleries of Scotland, 2003), p. 31.

Robert L. Herbert, Monet on the Normandy Coast: Tourism and Painting, 1867–1886 (Yale University Press, 1994), pp. 45–46; and Robert L. Herbert, “Monet’s Neo-Romantic Seascapes, 1881­–1886,” in Monet and French Landscape: Vétheuil and Normandy, ed. Frances Fowle (National Galleries of Scotland, 2006), p. 75.

There was one exception—the customs house located between Pourville and Varengeville, which Monet depicted some fifteen times in this year and would return to in 1896 and 1897 (see cat. 34).

 

Paul Tucker, Monet in the ‘90s: The Series Paintings, exh. cat. (Museum of Fine Arts/Yale University Press, 1989), pp. 190, 196–203.

A transcription of the original French letter appears in Daniel Wildenstein, Claude Monet: Biographie et catalogue raisonné, Tome II, 1882–1886, Peintures (Bibliothèque des Arts, 1979), p. 217, letter 260: “J’en ai déjà de finies, mais si cela ne vous fait rien, je préférais vous montrer toute la série de mes études à la fois, désireux que je suis de les voir toutes ensemble chez moi.” See also Charles F. Stuckey and Sophia Shaw, Claude Monet, 1840–1926, exh. cat. (Art Institute of Chicago/Thames and Hudson, 1995), p. 208.

Virginia Spate, Claude Monet: Life and Work (Rizzoli, 1992), p. 326, note 66.

Edge of the Cliff at Pourville (Bords de la falaise à Pourville) is identified in Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné, vol. 2 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), p. 283, cat. 757. Oddly, this pair of paintings has not been considered extensively. They are both illustrated on the same page in Virginia Spate, Claude Monet: Life and Work (Rizzoli, 1992), p. 158. Richard Thomson also mentioned the comparison in his entry for the Art Institute’s painting in Michael Clarke and Richard Thomson, Monet: The Seine and the Sea, 1878–1883, exh. cat. (National Galleries of Scotland, 2003), p. 136; however, his discussion is limited to their similar motifs. The many differences between the two paintings are not considered.

The work in the private collection is called Bord des falaises à Pourville (Edge of the Cliffs at Pourville) and measures 61 x 100 cm. See Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné, vol. 2 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), cat. 751. The Metropolitan Museum's painting, On the Cliff at Pourville, measures 60.3 x 81.3 cm. See Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné, vol. 2 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), cat. 752.

Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné, vol. 2 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), pp. 281, 283; and Michael Clarke and Richard Thomson, Monet: The Seine and the Sea, 1878–1883, exh. cat. (National Galleries of Scotland, 2003), p. 137. The two paintings were exhibited in London shortly after the Paris show.

See, for example, John House, Monet: Nature into Art (Yale University Press, 1986), p. 185; Virginia Spate, Claude Monet: Life and Work (Rizzoli, 1992), p. 154; Robert L. Herbert, Monet on the Normandy Coast: Tourism and Painting, 1867–1886 (Yale University Press, 1994), p. 53; and Richard Thomson, “Looking to Paint: Monet 1878–1883,” in Michael Clarke and Richard Thomson, Monet: The Seine and the Sea, 1878–1883, exh. cat. (National Galleries of Scotland, 2003), p. 31.

Claude Monet to Alice Hoschedé, Apr. 6, 1882. The English translation comes from Robert L. Herbert, Monet on the Normandy Coast: Tourism and Painting, 1867–1886 (Yale University Press, 1994), pp. 53–54. A transcription of the original French letter appears in Daniel Wildenstein, Claude Monet: Biographie et catalogue raisonné, Tome II, 1882–1886, Peintures (Bibliothèque des Arts, 1979), p. 218, letter 264: “la plupart de mes etudes ont dix et douze séances et plusieurs, vingt.”

Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné, vol. 2 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), cat. 806.

Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné, vol. 2 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), cats. 794 (sold, Christie’s New York, Nov. 14, 1989, lot 40), and 795 (sold, Christie’s New York, May 4, 2011, lot 36).

According to Stéphanie Constantin, “The Barbizon Painters: A Guide to Their Suppliers,” Studies in Conservation 46, 1 (2001), pp. 53–54, 63. Although the early horizon line is perhaps similar in form to those he included in his many Vétheuil landscapes of 1879, it seems highly unlikely that Monet started the initial composition at that time, took it with him to the coast in 1882, and painted over it. In 1881 Monet renewed his business relationship with Durand-Ruel, making it his best year for total art sales since 1873; see Charles F. Stuckey and Sophia Shaw, Claude Monet, 1840–1926, exh. cat. (Art Institute of Chicago/Thames and Hudson, 1995), p. 207. Furthermore, if, as Robert L. Herbert suggested, there was a revitalized market for Monet’s marines and they “were his produce, sent back to the capital to be sold,” it is difficult to conceive that he had a hard time acquiring new painting supplies in the summer of 1882. See Robert L. Herbert, Monet on the Normandy Coast: Tourism and Painting, 1867–1886 (Yale University Press, 1994), p. 44.

This observation was also noted in John House, Monet: Nature into Art (Yale University Press, 1986), p. 185. The painting has been the topic of investigation for several exhibition catalogues and monographs, and various interpretations of the X-ray have been surmised from House. Richard Thomson noted that Monet “broke the flat horizon of the sea by arbitrarily adding an extra bluff to the right” and that this “right-hand shoulder in the Chicago canvas was not originally in the painting, but was added.” See Richard Thomson, “Looking to Paint: Monet 1878–1883,” in Michael Clarke and Richard Thomson, Monet: The Seine and the Sea, 1878–1883, exh. cat. (National Galleries of Scotland, 2003), p. 31; and his entry for the Art Institute’s painting in Michael Clarke and Richard Thomson, Monet: The Seine and the Sea, 1878–1883, exh. cat. (National Galleries of Scotland, 2003), p. 136. The entry for the painting in Heather Lemonedes, Lynn Federle Orr, and David Steel, Monet in Normandy, exh. cat. (Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco/North Carolina Museum of Art/Cleveland Museum of Art, 2006), p. 106, states that the X-ray suggests a third figure may have been included in the painting. Our evidence does not correspond with these observations, however.

For Monet's collection of Japanese prints, see Geneviève Aitken et Marianne Delafond, La Collection d'estampes Japonaises de Claude Monet à Giverny (Maison de Monet/Bibliothèque des Arts, 1983).

The fibers were identified by microscopic cross-sectional fiber analysis. See Inge Fiedler, “1933_443_Monet_analytical_report,” Oct. 21, 2011. Conservation Object File, Art Institute of Chicago.

The original dimensions of the painting are based on a visual estimate of the original foldovers.

 

Thread count and weave information determined by Thread Count Automation Software; see C. Richard Johnson Jr., Don H. Johnson, and Robert G. Erdmann, “Thread Count Report: Cliff Walk at Pourville Claude Monet 1882 (W0758/1933.443),” July 2011. Conservation Object File, Art Institute of Chicago.

See “W546-758_warp match.” Conservation Object File, Art Institute of Chicago.

See “Examination Record of Auxiliary Support,” n.d. Conservation Object File, Art Institute of Chicago. A sample of wood from the stretcher was retained.

The presence of a sizing layer is difficult to confirm from cross sections due to previous conservation treatment, including wax-resin lining.

 

Evidence that the canvas was cut from a larger piece of primed fabric, combined with the presence of a supplier’s stamp on the back of the canvas, suggests that the canvas was purchased pre-primed and stretched. It has been noted that a supplier’s stamp on the back of the canvas “would usually indicate the retailer of the stretched canvas, who was not necessarily its manufacturer.” David Bomford, Jo Kirby, John Leighton, and Ashok Roy, Art in the Making: Impressionism (National Gallery/Yale University Press, 1990), p. 49.

The identification of single versus multiple layers of a single ground formulation from cross-section analysis can be difficult due to changes that occur in the materials with drying and aging. For a discussion of the challenges and caveats of interpreting ground layers in cross sections, see Leslie Carlyle, Jaap J. Boon, Ralph Haswell, and Martje Stols-Witlox, “Historically Accurate Ground Reconstructions for Oil Paintings,” in Preparation for Painting: The Artist’s Choice and Its Consequences, ed. Joyce H. Townsend et al. (Archetype, 2008), pp. 110–22.

 

The ground was analyzed using Scanning Electron Microscopy coupled with Energy Dispersive X-Ray Spectroscopy (SEM/EDX) and X-Ray Fluorescence spectroscopy (XRF). For more detailed results and conditions used, see Inge Fiedler, “1933_443_Monet_analytical_report,” Oct. 21, 2011; and Kimberley Muir, “Mon_CliffWalk_33_443_XRF_Results,” July 15, 2011. Conservation Object File, Art Institute of Chicago.

 

 

 

 

The central cliff shadow seems to have been part of the original conception for the final composition.

The pigments were identified by the following methods: lead white, cadmium yellow, viridian, emerald green, vermilion, and cobalt blue (XRF, SEM/EDX, PLM); chrome yellow (SEM/EDX, PLM); ultramarine blue and red lakes (PLM). Analysis was carried out on selected areas and may not include all pigments present in the painting. For more detailed results and conditions used, see Kimberley Muir, “Mon_CliffWalk_33_443_XRF_Results,” July 15, 2011; and Inge Fiedler, “1933_443_Monet_analytical_report,” Oct. 21, 2011. Conservation Object File, Art Institute of Chicago.

 

 

 

 

 

The binding medium was not analyzed. The estimation of an oil medium is based on visual examination of the painting, as well as knowledge of Monet’s technique and published analyses of other Monet paintings.

Paul Mitchell and Lynn Roberts, A History of European Picture Frames (Paul Mitchell/Merrell Holberton, 1996), p. 52; and Paul Mitchell and Lynn Roberts, Frameworks: Form, Function and Ornament in European Portrait Frames (Paul Mitchell/Merrell Holberton, 1996), pp. 176–78. A photograph, showing Cliff Walk at Pourville in the interior of Mrs. Lewis Larned (Annie Swan) Coburn’s Blackstone Hotel apartment in Chicago, dates to before Apr. 6, 1932, when the painting was exhibited in the Art Institute of Chicago’s Exhibition of the Mrs. L. L. Coburn Collection: Modern Paintings and Watercolors, Apr. 6–Oct. 9, 1932. Art Institute of Chicago Archives. Mrs. Coburn died during the course of the exhibition, and the paintings remained at the Art Institute after the exhibition.

Paul Mitchell and Lynn Roberts, A History of European Picture Frames (Paul Mitchell/Merrell Holberton, 1996), p. 52. A photograph of the painting in the 1905 exhibition is located in the Durand-Ruel Archives; it was also published in David Bomford, Jo Kirby, John Leighton, and Ashok Roy, Art in the Making: Impressionism (National Gallery/Yale University Press, 1990), p. 109, fig. 52.

See Alfred Jakstas, “Treatment Report,” Mar. 30, 1973. Conservation Object File, Art Institute of Chicago.

See Kelly Keegan, “Treatment Report,” July 14, 2011. Conservation Object File, Art Institute of Chicago.

The cause of these marks is unknown, but they appear to be of long standing. They are documented in the 1973 pretreatment photographs, and a note in the Art Institute’s files regarding a photograph of the painting taken in 1957 is annotated with the word “stained,” which could relate to these “splatters.” See Receipt 5300, Registrar’s Records, Art Institute of Chicago.

Any pair of images may be selected in the slider bar, which may be moved to transition between the two layers. Line annotations designed to draw attention to significant features in associated technical images may be turned on and off.  The red annotation lines associated with the natural-light image trace some of the painting’s key compositional features. When overlaid onto the technical image (X-ray, infrared reflectogram [IRR], transmitted infrared [IR], ultraviolet, etc.), the outlines help the viewer to better observe how features in the technical image relate to or diverge from the surface composition. The four-arrow icon in the lower-right corner can be used to switch from page view to full-image view. The circular arrow icon is used to revert to the image’s default settings. The jagged arrow icon brings up a list of available annotations, which may be turned on or off in any combination. In the upper-right corner are the key to the activated annotations and a navigation arrow to orient the detail within the context of the overall image. The vertical slider tool in the upper right is used to zoom into or out of the image. When viewing a detail of the overall, the image may be moved within the window by dragging it to the desired position.

According to the Durand-Ruel Archives, “Acheté par Durand-Ruel Paris (stock 1687) à Hermann Kapferer, Paris, le 17 juillet 1888 pour 1200 francs, Promenade, mer ou Promenade sur la falaise.” Durand-Ruel, Livre de stock Paris 1888 (stock 1687); see Paul-Louis Durand-Ruel and Flavie Durand-Ruel to the Art Institute of Chicago, Oct. 5, 2010. Curatorial Object File, Art Institute of Chicago. Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné, vol. 2 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), pp. 283–84, cat. 758, does not include Hermann Kapferer in the painting’s provenance; it says the painting was “purchased from Monet by Durand-Ruel in October 1882.” According to Claire Durand-Ruel Snollaerts to Gloria Groom, Mar. 29, 2010, “nous n’avons aucune preuve de cette acquisition”; there is nothing in the Durand-Ruel Archives to support the claim that Durand-Ruel purchased the painting from Monet in Oct. 1882. Curatorial Object File, Art Institute of Chicago. Hermann Kapferer was no relation to collectors Henri or Marcel Kapferer.

According to the Durand-Ruel Archives, “Acheté par Durand-Ruel Paris (stock 1687) à Hermann Kapferer, Paris, le 17 juillet 1888 pour 1200 francs, Promenade, mer ou Promenade sur la falaise.” Durand-Ruel, Livre de stock Paris 1888 (stock 1687). See Paul-Louis Durand-Ruel and Flavie Durand-Ruel to the Art Institute of Chicago, Oct. 5, 2010. Curatorial Object File, Art Institute of Chicago. Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné, vol. 2 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), pp. 283–84, cat. 758, does not include this in the provenance. 

See Art Institute of Chicago, Exhibition of the Mrs. L. L. Coburn Collection: Modern Paintings and Watercolors, exh. cat. (Art Institute of Chicago, 1932), p. 19, cat. 22. There is a notation on the Art Institute's Museum Registration Department Artists Sheets that reads, “Durand-Ruel 995 4/26/28,” and one on Receipt 5300 that states “P995 D-R Ap ’26.” Registrar’s Records, Art Institute of Chicago. It is possible that this notation means that Mrs. Coburn purchased the painting from Durand-Ruel, Paris, on Apr. 26, 1928; however, that information cannot be confirmed. According to the Durand-Ruel Archives, “on perd sa trace dans le stock Paris (995) en 1921. Nous ne savons pas à qui et quand Mrs Coburn l’a acquis” and “nous n’avons pas la moindre indication que Durand-Ruel ait vendu cette peinture à quelqu’un d’autre que Mrs. Coburn.” See Paul-Louis Durand-Ruel and Flavie Durand-Ruel to the Art Institute of Chicago, Oct. 5, 2010. Curatorial Object File, Art Institute of Chicago.

See Annie Swan Coburn’s will; Walter S. Brewster to Art Institute Director Dr. Robert B. Harshe, Mar. 15, 1934; and Records of the Board of Trustees, Apr. 26, 1940, p. 24, all in the Art Institute of Chicago Archives.

According to Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné, vol. 2 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), pp. 283–84, cat. 758.

According to Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné, vol. 2 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), pp. 283–84, cat. 758; Frances Fowle, “Making Money out of Monet: Marketing Monet in Britain 1870–1905,” in Monet and French Landscape: Vétheuil and Normandy, ed. Frances Fowle (National Galleries of Scotland, 2006), p. 145; and Anna Gruetzner Robins, “‘Slabs of Pink and Lumps of Brown’: The Critical Reaction to the Exhibition of a Monet Grainstack Painting in Britain in 1893,” in Monet and French Landscape: Vétheuil and Normandy, ed. Frances Fowle (National Galleries of Scotland, 2006), p. 161. Wildenstein and Fowle noted that this exhibition was organized by Durand-Ruel. In the exhibition catalogue, cat. 32 is listed as Promenade sur la falaise with an asking price of 100£. See Dowdeswell and Dowdeswell/Société des Impressionnistes, Catalogue of Paintings, Drawings and Pastels by Members of “La Société des impressionnistes, exh. cat. (Dowdeswell and Dowdeswell, 1883), p. 11, cat. 32.

According to Sabine Walter, assistant curator, Kunstsammlungen zu Weimar, to Miranda Hofelt, Jan. 20, 1997, and Apr. 2, 1997, the Art Institute’s painting may have been one of the two Monet paintings exhibited in Weimar in 1890 under the title Frühling in den Dünen (Spring in the Dunes) or Strand von Pourville (Beach of Pourville). Curatorial Object File, Art Institute of Chicago. Hendrik Ziegler also argued that the Chicago painting was probably exhibited as Strand von Pourville in Weimar from June 1, 1890, in Hendrik Ziegler, “‘Klein Paris’ in Weimar,” in Aufstieg und Fall der Moderne, exh. cat. ed. Rolf Bothe and Thomas Föhl (Hatje Cantz, 1999), p. 19; Hendrik Ziegler, Die Kunst der Weimarer Malerschule: Von der Pleinairmalerei zum Impressionismus (Böhlau, 2001) pp. 182–83; and Hendrik Ziegler, “Produktive Begegnungen: Die Weimarer Malerschule und der französische Impressionismus,” in Klassik Stiftung Weimar, Hinaus in die Natur!: Barbizon, die Weimarer Malerschule und der Aufbruch zum Impressionismus, exh. cat. (Kerber, 2010), p. 228. Ziegler claimed that a painting by Ludwig von Gleichen-Russwurm from summer 1890 called Auf den Klippen von Helgoland has strong similarities to Cliff Walk at Pourville, which, he argued, may indicate that it was on view in Weimar in 1890; he also cited period newspapers and Walther Scheidig, Christian Rohlfs (Verlag der Kunst, 1965), p. 316. Based on his transcription of the “Akten Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Weimar, Commissionsbuch I, der Permanenten Kunstaustellung fol. 9. 1890. 27. Mai,” Scheidig noted that “Strand von Purville [sic]” was received from Goupil and Co., Paris, and sent back to Paris on Dec. 12, 1890. Goupil and Co., Paris, is not part of the known provenance of this painting, however. Exhibition dates listed here are deduced from the above sources.

According to Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné, vol. 2 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), pp. 283–84, cat. 758.

According to the catalogue, this exhibition was “exhibited by Messrs. Durand-Ruel and Sons, of Paris, at the Grafton Galleries, 8, Grafton Street, London, 1905.” The exhibition dates are not indicated in the catalogue, but are listed as Jan.–Feb. in Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné, vol. 4 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), p. 1019. According to Paul-Louis Durand-Ruel and Flavie Durand-Ruel to the Art Institute of Chicago, Oct. 5, 2010, “Ce tableau a participé à l’exposition en 1905 à Londres aux Grafton Gallery no. 280.” Curatorial Object File, Art Institute of Chicago. The catalogue includes the Art Institute’s painting as cat. 157; cat. 280 is a painting by Alfred Sisley, A Street at Louveciennes. A photograph of the Art Institute’s painting in the 1905 exhibition is located in the Durand-Ruel Archives; it was also published in David Bomford, Jo Kirby, John Leighton, and Ashok Roy, Art in the Making: Impressionism (National Gallery/Yale University Press, 1990), p. 109, fig. 52.

According to Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné, vol. 2 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), pp. 283–84, cat. 758. The 1907–08 exhibition catalogue states, “The Art Gallery Committee desires to express its gratitude to Messieurs Durand-Ruel & Sons, of Paris, and to the Executors of the late J. Staats Forbes, Esq., for the loan of the pictures comprising the present Exhibition.”

Édouard Sarradin’s 1908 account of the exhibition mentions a painting that has a description matching the Art Institute’s work. See Édouard Sarradin, “Notes d’art: Paysages de Claude Monet et de Renoir,” Journal des débats politiques et littéraires 120, 143 (May 23, 1908), p. 3; and Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné, vol. 2 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), pp. 283–84, cat. 758.

According to Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné, vol. 2 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), pp. 283–84, cat. 758. There is an asterisk next to cat. 30 in the 1914 catalogue; the catalogue states, “Les Tableaux marqués d’un astérisque (*) ne sont pas à vendre.” The exhibition catalogue dates the exhibition to Mar. 2–28, 1914 (Galeries Durand-Ruel, Paris, Tableaux par Claude Monet, exh. cat. [Imp. de l’art, 1914]), but Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné, vol. 4 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), p. 1022, gives the dates as Mar. 2–21, 1914.

The exhibition catalogue lists the dates as June 1–Nov. 1, 1933, but newspaper articles confirm the exhibition opened on May 23. See India Moffett, “Art Show of 1,500 World Famous Treasures Is Opened at Institute,” Chicago Daily Tribune, May 23, 1933, p. 17; and Virginia Gardner, “Record Throng of 1,367,000 Views Art Show,” Chicago Daily Tribune, Oct. 29, 1933, p. 7.

The exhibition catalogue lists the dates as June 1–Nov. 1, 1934, but newspaper articles confirm the exhibition closed on Oct. 31. See “Fair Art Exhibition Closes Forever at 5:30 This Afternoon,” Chicago Daily Tribune, Oct. 31, 1934, p. 2; and “Shippers Start Dismantling Art Exhibition Today,” Chicago Daily Tribune, Nov. 1, 1934, p. 3.

See Art Institute of Chicago, “Exhibitions,” The Art Institute of Chicago Quarterly 51, 2 (Apr. 1, 1957), p. 36. The original exhibition dates were Apr. 1–30, but the show was extended until June 15; see Edith Weigle, “The Wonderful World of Art,” Chicago Daily Tribune, May 26, 1957, p. E2, for an exhibition review and date extension. Although there was no exhibition catalogue, the Apr. 1957 issue of The Art Institute of Chicago Quarterly was largely dedicated to the Monet works in the Art Institute’s collection. The exhibition marked the first time the Art Institute’s thirty works by Monet were shown together in the museum.

According to Receipt of Object 44766, Registrar’s Records, Art Institute of Chicago, this work was on loan to the Seiji Togo Memorial Yasuda Kasai Museum of Art in exchange for its loan to Art Institute of Chicago, Van Gogh and Gauguin: The Studio of the South, Sept. 22, 2001–Jan. 13, 2002; Amsterdam, Van Gogh Museum, Feb. 9–June 2, 2002. See also e-mail from Bart Ryckbosch to Jill Shaw, Oct. 18, 2011. Curatorial Object File, Art Institute of Chicago.

According to Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné, vol. 2 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), pp. 283–84, cat. 758; and Frances Fowle, “Making Money out of Monet: Marketing Monet in Britain 1870–1905,” in Monet and French Landscape: Vétheuil and Normandy, ed. Frances Fowle (National Galleries of Scotland, 2006), p. 145. Both of these publications note that this exhibition was organized by Durand-Ruel. In the exhibition catalogue, cat. 32 is listed as Promenade sur la falaise with an asking price of 100£.

According to Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné, vol. 2 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), pp. 283–84, cat. 758.

According to Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné, vol. 2 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), pp. 283–84, cat. 758.

According to Paul-Louis Durand-Ruel and Flavie Durand-Ruel to the Art Institute of Chicago, Oct. 5, 2010, “Ce tableau a participé à l’exposition en 1905 à Londres aux Grafton Gallery no. 280.” Curatorial Object File, Art Institute of Chicago. The catalogue includes the Art Institute’s painting as cat. 157; cat. 280 is a painting by Alfred Sisley, A Street at Louveciennes. A photograph of the Art Institute’s painting in the 1905 exhibition is located in the Durand-Ruel Archives; it was also published in David Bomford, Jo Kirby, John Leighton, and Ashok Roy, Art in the Making: Impressionism (National Gallery/Yale University Press, 1990), p. 109, fig. 52.

According to Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné, vol. 2 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), pp. 283–84, cat. 758.

Édouard Sarradin’s 1908 account of the exhibition mentions a painting with a description that matches the Art Institute’s work. See Édouard Sarradin, “Notes d’art: Paysages de Claude Monet et de Renoir,” Journal des débats politiques et littéraires 120, 143 (May 23, 1908), p. 3; and Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné, vol. 2 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), pp. 283–84, cat. 758.

According to Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné, vol. 2 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), pp. 283–84, cat. 758.

This article mentions the painting Promenade sur la falaise, exhibited in 1883 in Paintings, Drawings and Pastels by Members of “La Société des impressionnistes” in London at Dowdeswell and Dowdeswell. Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné, vol. 2 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), pp. 283–84, cat. 758; and Frances Fowle, “Making Money out of Monet: Marketing Monet in Britain 1870–1905,” in Monet and French Landscape: Vétheuil and Normandy, ed. Frances Fowle (National Galleries of Scotland, 2006), p. 145, claim that this is the Art Institute’s painting.

According to Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné, vol. 2 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), pp. 283–84, cat. 758. This publication reprints (although no catalogue numbers are included) the exhibition catalogue checklist from the 1904 Exposition des peintres impressionnistes in Brussels.  

Revised and translated into English in Denis Rouart, “Appearances and Reflections,” in Denis Rouart and Jean-Dominique Rey, with a catalogue raisonné by Julie Rouart, Monet, Water Lilies: The Complete Series, trans. David Radzinowicz (Flammarion/Rizzoli, 2008), p. 25. It was simultaneously revised and published in French as Denis Rouart and Jean-Dominique Rey, with a catalogue raisonné by Julie Rouart, Monet, les nymphéas (Flammarion, 2008).

Republished in Robert Rosenblum and H. W. Janson, Nineteenth-Century Art, rev. ed. (Prentice Hall, 2005), p. 415, fig. 401.

The English translation of this book is Rodolphe Rapetti, Monet, Masters’ Gallery, trans. Richard Crevier (Arch Cape Press/Outlet Book Co., 1990), p. 62, pl. 40.

Republished in Frank Milner, Monet (PRC Publishing, 2001), pp. 19, 78–79 (ill.).

The English translation of this book is Sylvie Patin, Monet: The Ultimate Impressionist, trans. Anthony Roberts (Harry N. Abrams, 1993), p. 81 (ill.).

Ziegler mentioned his inclusion of the Art Institute’s painting in his dissertation: "Hendrik Ziegler, Die Kunst der Weimarer Malerschule: von der Pleinairmalerei zum Impressionismus" (Ph.D. diss., Freie Universität Berlin, 1999), p. 18, fig. 3.  

See Paul-Louis Durand-Ruel and Flavie Durand-Ruel to the Art Institute of Chicago, Oct. 5, 2010. Curatorial Object File, Art Institute of Chicago.

Located in the Durand-Ruel Archives; see Paul-Louis Durand-Ruel and Flavie Durand-Ruel to the Art Institute of Chicago, Oct. 5, 2010. Curatorial Object File, Art Institute of Chicago.

See Don Johnson, C. Richard Johnson, et al., “A Thread Counting Algorithm for Art Forensics,” Proceedings of the 13th Annual IEEE Digital Signal Processing Workshop (Jan. 2009), pp. 679–84, DSP 12.2.

See Damon M. Conover, John K. Delaney, Paola Ricciardi, and Murray H. Loew, “Towards Automatic Registration,” Computer Vision and Image Analysis of Art II, Proceedings of SPIE 7869 (2011).