Cat. 16 Arrival of the Normandy Train, Gare Saint-Lazare, 1877
Catalogue #: 16 Active: Yes Tombstone:Arrival of the Normandy Train, Gare Saint-Lazare1
1877
Oil on canvas; 60.3 × 80.2 cm (23 3/4 × 31 1/2 in.)
Signed and dated: Claude Monet 77 (lower left corner, name in dark purplish-brown paint, year in dark reddish-brown paint)
The Art Institute of Chicago, Mr. and Mrs. Martin A. Ryerson Collection, 1933.1158
By the end of 1876 Monet had grown restless in Argenteuil, the picturesque suburb northwest of Paris that had served as his home and the setting for many of his paintings since 1871.2 With the financial assistance of his independently wealthy friend, the artist Gustave Caillebotte, Monet rented a ground-floor space at 17, rue Moncey in Paris to use as his studio.3 The apartment was conveniently located just a few blocks from the Gare Saint-Lazare, the terminus for the Normandy rail line that serviced Argenteuil. Although Monet continued to live and work in Argenteuil, he began to commute into Paris more often, with the station connecting his home life and the business of art found in the city.
The Saint-Lazare train station was, moreover, equidistant from Argenteuil and the Château de Rottembourg, in Montgeron, where the department store owner and art collector Ernest Hoschedé and his wife Alice owned a country house. By the end of 1876, Monet was finishing a commission for four large, decorative panels inspired by the château and the grounds on the property.4 This project required an extended stay, so Monet likely made periodic trips back to Argenteuil and Paris.5 It may well have been that the gare took on added significance during this time as the midpoint between Monet’s work on an important commission for Hoschedé for a generous patron and his own family life, fraught with financial strain and concern over his wife Camille’s declining health.
Following the interlude at Rottembourg, Monet began a series of works featuring the Gare Saint-Lazare. Monet had not painted in Paris for several years, and his gradual shift of focus toward the capital coincided with new approaches as well as fresh subject matter.6 The resolutely urban cityscape was a bracing antidote to the picturesque settings of Argenteuil, which had dominated his oeuvre since his move there. The Gare Saint-Lazare was a bustling hub, then the capital’s largest and busiest station. First opened in 1837, the station had recently been expanded by the newly constructed Pont de l’Europe, an engineering marvel consisting of interlocking bridges stretching over the railway yard, which allowed for increased traffic.7 A starkly modern addition to the Parisian landscape when it was completed in 1868, the bridge inspired Caillebotte’s large-scale painting Le Pont de l’Europe (fig. 16.1), which would be exhibited along with Arrival of the Normandy Train, Gare Saint-Lazare, in April 1877 at the third Impressionist exhibition.8
Having set himself up in his Paris studio in January 1877, Monet immediately sought official permission to paint inside the station.9 He seems to have begun work at once upon receiving a favorable reply from the director of the Chemins de Fer de l’Ouest. The conditions inside required dramatically different working methods, and this may account for why he executed pencil sketches in sketchbooks (or carnets), which was unusual for Monet, as he devised solutions to the difficulties involved in capturing the continual bustle of the station.10 The Art Institute’s painting retains a sketch-like, improvisational, and graphic quality within the overall balanced and highly calculated composition; this is particularly evident in comparison with a related drawing (fig. 16.2 [D153]).11
A central lamppost aligns exactly with the apex of the building’s glass canopy, bifurcating the composition in much the same way as the green streetlight does in Caillebotte’s monumental Paris Street; Rainy Day (fig. 16.3), which Monet would almost certainly have known was in progress.12 With the exception of these topographical elements, however, there is no narrative detail in this liminal space. Monet expressed the breakdown of industrial materials under the weightlessness of clouds and steam in a variety of techniques that ranged from leaving the primed [glossary:canvas] exposed (fig. 16.4) to wet-on-wet applications of dense layers of pigment on top of painted surfaces (fig. 16.5 and fig. 16.6; see also Technical Report).
In his initial [glossary:lay-in] Monet carefully sketched in the roofline for Arrival of the Normandy Train, leaving in reserve an area for the billows of steam (fig. 16.7). In situ he would have observed the effects of steam against the panes of glass overhead.13 For the iron armature of the ceiling, seen more precisely delineated in both the version at the Musée d’Orsay (fig. 16.8 [W438]) and the Fogg Art Museum version (fig. 16.9 [W439]), the artist applied narrow individual strokes of blue and green through still-wet paint (fig. 16.10).14 Although the gridwork is less visible on the right side of the final composition, the infrared reflectography (IRR) image reveals that it was a part of the earlier conception and was ultimately painted over with thick whitish-gray brushstrokes suggesting smoke and steam (fig. 16.11).
The art historian Juliet Wilson-Bareau has described Monet’s group of twelve Gare paintings as varying in technique, composition, and canvases or supports. She categorizes them as works executed on previously used canvases; those that appear as single-session sketches, those painted entirely on the motif, and ones “that seem to hover on the borderline between initial sketch and work in progress.”15 As mentioned, the Art Institute’s painting is sketch-like, yet the application of paint [glossary:wet-on-wet] and [glossary:wet-over-dry] suggests a process that lasted several sessions (see Technical Report). The picture was probably worked both on site and in the studio, given the subtle but significant changes Monet made on seemingly random areas of the composition. He fiddled with elements on the left, such as the tracks, and altered the amount of detail he wanted to include. The rails were added first, and they continue underneath the [glossary:pentimento] of a whirling pattern of strokes at the foot of the train at left that were painted over; these may have represented the circular front of a train engine (fig. 16.12).
Although hardly decipherable in the traditional sense, the workers milling about on the left and the people waiting on the platforms before boarding time are legible. Dark strokes of paint with daubs of reddish-brown suggest flesh sometimes beneath hats and hair (fig. 16.13 and fig. 16.14). Monet indicates gender and style only through silhouettes made up of a few economical strokes, with a male figure in the left foreground sporting a recognizable hairstyle and garments as the lone exception (fig. 16.15). Monet here, as in so many of his post-1860s figure paintings, was drawn to distilling the sensation of modern life in action rather than focusing on the individual, a goal that distinguished him from Realist writers and painters, such as Honoré Daumier, for whom the motif of the train represented a social experiment in which different classes were forced to interact. Monet’s indifference to specific individuals is clear in the Chicago version: the intangibles of urgency, deadlines, and speed are visualized with urgent strokes to denote crowds of people poised to move, while the billowing clouds, in shades of bluish-gray, give tangible shape to the suggestion of smoke, steam, and sky suspended overhead.
At the third Impressionist exhibition, held in April 1877, Monet showed the present painting, along with six other versions of the Gare Saint-Lazare.16 Émile Zola commended Monet for having successfully expressed the excitement and energy of the modern train station, “the rumble of trains surging forward, . . . the torrents of smoke winding through vast engine sheds.”17 The group as a whole received largely positive reviews,18 with one critic singling out the Chicago version as “excellent,” for imparting “an accurate, clear impressionism,” and for being “unpretentious and well done.”19
Of the seven Saint-Lazare paintings identified as having been exhibited in 1877, Arrival of the Normandy Train, Gare Saint-Lazare bears a more detailed title, specifying both the railway line and its direction. Although not the largest or most finished of those included, it was probably the most “legible to a nineteenth-century viewer of oil sketches.”20 For this composition, Monet positioned himself inside the station where the Normandy lines pull in, which was also the side closest to the rue d’Amsterdam, the street leading to the boulevard de Clichy and to his studio on the rue Moncey (fig. 16.16).21
The nearest analogue in viewpoint and handling to the Art Institute’s painting is the version now in the National Gallery, London, The Gare St-Lazare (1877, fig. 16.17 [W441]), which was not exhibited in 1877.22 Both show the arched bays of the parcel depot beyond the roof on the rue d’Amsterdam side of the station; the vaulted rooflines and tracks are seen in a contemporary photograph (fig. 16.18).23 And both versions are closely related to a drawing from a sketchbook that Monet kept at this time (fig. 16.2).
Monet had realized some success with the gare paintings before the start of the third Impressionist exhibition. Three of the seven had already been sold to collectors, a fact advertised by the inclusion of their names in the accompanying catalogue.24 By March 1877, he had sold at least four paintings to collectors, including Ernest Hoschedé, who acquired the Chicago painting and two others (Arrival at Saint-Lazare Station [Fogg Art Museum (W439)] and Tracks Coming Out of Saint-Lazare Station [private collection (W445)]), and Georges de Bellio, who purchased The Pont de l’Europe, Saint-Lazare Station (W442) and who would later acquire the Chicago painting as well.25 Although the group of Saint-Lazare canvases lacks the temporal and iconographical cohesiveness of the series Monet would begin in the 1890s, they mark a new direction for his work that was unprecedented in the history of modern art. Novel too was Monet’s decision to exhibit the Gare paintings together as a group presaging the exhibition strategies he would use two decades later with his series Stacks of Wheat (cats. 27–32).
Gloria Groom, with research assistance by Genevieve Westerby
Claude Monet’s Arrival of the Normandy Train, Gare Saint-Lazare was painted on a [glossary:pre-primed], no. 25 landscape ([glossary:paysage]) linen [glossary:canvas]. The painting appears to retain its original [glossary:stretcher]. The off-white [glossary:ground] consists of two layers. The painting was built up from a broadly applied [glossary:lay-in] that blocked out the main compositional forms, leaving space in reserve for the large cloud of steam and the skylight in the station roof. Throughout the painting, the brushwork remains open and the compositional forms sketchily rendered. Areas of exposed ground and canvas texture remain visible throughout and are juxtaposed with more fluid, smooth paint applications and areas of thicker brushstrokes and [glossary:impasto], creating a varied surface texture. Most of the compositional elements were executed with concise strokes of the brush, often worked [glossary:wet-in-wet]. The artist originally included a grid of iron tie rods underneath the right side of the station roof, creating symmetry with the left side. These were subsequently covered by the puffs of gray steam coming from the locomotive below. Painted-over brushwork in the lower left corner, visualized with the aid of [glossary:infrared reflectography], indicates that the artist made a change in this area of the composition; however, the nature of the underlying form is unclear.26
The multilayer interactive image viewer is designed to facilitate the viewer’s exploration and comparison of the technical images (fig. 16.19).27
Signed and dated: Claude Monet 77 (lower left corner, name in dark purplish-brown paint, year in dark reddish-brown paint28) (fig. 16.20, fig. 16.21, fig. 16.22). The underlying paint was dry when the signature and date were applied.
Flax (commonly known as linen).29
The dimensions correspond closely to a no. 25 landscape (paysage) standard-size [glossary:stretcher] (60 × 81 cm).30
[glossary:Plain weave]. Average [glossary:thread count] (standard deviation): 15.7V (0.4) × 19.2H (1.1) threads/cm.31 The vertical threads were determined to correspond to the [glossary:warp] and the horizontal threads to the [glossary:weft]. No [glossary:weave match] was found with other Monet paintings analyzed for this project.
There is strong, fairly even [glossary:cusping] along the right edge; cusping on the other sides is absent or very slight.
Current stretching: Dates to [glossary:aqueous lining] applied prior to acquisition of painting in 1933 (see Conservation History). The tacks, spaced approximately 1–8.5 cm apart, do not correspond to the cusping along the right edge.32 The [glossary:tacking margins] could not be fully examined due to the presence of paper edge strips.
Original stretching: Spacing of the original tacks could not be determined due to the presence of paper edge strips.
Current stretcher: The current stretcher may be original to the painting. It consists of five members, including a vertical [glossary:crossbar], with butt-ended, [glossary:mortise and tenon joints] and ten [glossary:keys] (fig. 16.23).33 Dimensions: stretcher bar width, 6.5 cm; crossbar width, 6.0 cm; depth, 1.5 cm.
Original stretcher: See above.
None observed in current examination or documented in previous examinations.34
In [glossary:UV] light, evidence of a light blue [glossary:fluorescence] between the canvas and the ground suggests the presence of an organic layer, possibly glue [glossary:sizing] (fig. 16.24).35
The ground extends to the edges of all four tacking margins, indicating that the canvas was cut from a larger piece of primed fabric, which was probably commercially prepared. [glossary:Cross-sectional analysis] indicates that two layers are present. The lower layer ranges from 25 to 100 µm in thickness. The upper layer ranges from 100 to 125 µm in thickness (fig. 16.25, fig. 16.26).36 Numerous tiny bubble holes were observed in the ground layer where it is exposed at the edges and also throughout the composition where the paint was thinly applied (fig. 16.27).
When the painting surface is observed microscopically, only the upper ground layer is visible. It has a warm, off-white color, with some dark (possibly black) and red pigment particles (fig. 16.28).
Analysis indicates that the lower layer contains calcium carbonate (chalk), with traces of iron oxide, various silicates, and calcium sulfate. Several intact microfossils were observed in the chalk layer (fig. 16.29). The upper layer contains primarily lead white and barium sulfate (barite), with traces of bone black and iron oxide red, various silicates, silica, calcium carbonate, and calcium sulfate. Barite is present in a wide range of sizes, including very large particles (fig. 16.30).37 Binder: [glossary:Oil] (estimated).
No [glossary:underdrawing] was observed with [glossary:infrared reflectography] (IRR) or microscopic examination.38
Overall, the brushwork is open and somewhat sketchy, with areas of exposed ground left visible through thinly painted passages and at breaks in the brushstrokes. The composition was laid in using thin layers of paint to block out the main forms. The painting was then built up using smooth, fluid paint applications (fig. 16.31), more-bodied paint and low impasto (fig. 16.32), and lightly dragged and dry-brush strokes that skip across the surface of the painting (fig. 16.33). This range of brushwork creates a varied surface texture, which is highlighted when the painting is viewed in raking light (fig. 16.34).
The station roof was blocked in using very thin applications of paint in dull hues ranging from dark brown and purple to shades of gray (fig. 16.35). These initial layers were broadly applied but are not continuous, leaving the ground layer visible in places (fig. 16.36). The roof was then built up using deeper shades of blue and green. An area of the right side of the roof was left in reserve for the large cloud of steam, which was painted directly over the ground layer, or in some places, over the initial thin lay-in of the roof structure (fig. 16.37). The panes of glass at the peak of the roof were also painted directly on top of the ground. The linear strokes of the skylight framework were laid in first using thin applications of dark green and blue paint. The glass was then painted using individual strokes of thicker, lead white–rich paint, leaving the creamy white tone of the ground layer visible in places (fig. 16.38). In the space just below the roof, where the grid of iron tie rods appears, some of the pale blue-gray strokes of the steam and the sky were laid down first, including the thick, white, diagonal strokes (fig. 16.39). The iron tie rods were then drawn through the wet paint using a fine brush (fig. 16.40), with additional strokes of steam applied on top. The [glossary:infrared reflectogram] shows that the artist originally painted in some of the iron tie rod grid work under the right side of the roof (fig. 16.41). This was subsequently covered by the billows of steam from the locomotive below (fig. 16.42). The compositional forms are mostly rendered with a few quick brushstrokes, without significant blending, modeling, or articulation of details. The figures, for example, basically consist of long vertical strokes of dark blue and green to denote the bodies, with daubs of warm reddish-brown paint to indicate areas of flesh (fig. 16.43). Only the tall figure in the foreground contains any specificity of detail (fig. 16.44)—his hair, jacket, pants, and left hand are all discernible—but even this was done with a few economical strokes of the brush (fig. 16.45).
The work contains both wet-over-dry and wet-in-wet paint application. The thinly applied underlayers look like they were dry before the painting was built up, as the ridges of the brushstrokes were not disturbed by subsequent paint applications. Much of the buildup of the painting was executed with localized areas of wet-in-wet brushwork. For example, the foreground lantern consists of a thick lead white–rich stroke, with the metal structure described by subsequent fine strokes of green paint that were dragged through the white (fig. 16.46). Some of the light-colored details and contours of the front of the locomotive were added over the still-wet underlayers, mixing wet-in-wet (fig. 16.47). The foreground consists of thin, relatively flat, opaque layers of light green and gray paint. A few final strokes were lightly dragged over the surface when the underlying layers were already dry. The presence of wet-over-dry paint application at different stages of the painting process indicates that the work was carried out in more than one session.
In the lower left corner, just above the signature, the infrared reflectogram reveals some sweeping brushstrokes coming from the bottom of the train car, down over the area currently occupied by the rail tracks (fig. 16.48); the texture of the underlying brushstrokes is visible in raking light (fig. 16.49). The brushwork is rather cursory, and it is unclear what the forms represented. When viewed under magnification, some of these brushstrokes are relatively thick and light in hue, containing a high proportion of lead white paint, but other areas were covered by the artist using a slightly different, more brownish-green hue compared to the cooler green of the adjacent platform (fig. 16.50). It seems that the rail tracks were laid in first and that they continue underneath the [glossary:pentimento]. When the area was subsequently painted over, the lines of the tracks were reinforced on top (fig. 16.48). The artist made some small changes in the area of the locomotive. The cloud of steam emanating from the chimney initially covered a larger area but was then partially covered when the chimney was extended in height (fig. 16.51). The roofline of the building behind, on the left side, also appears to have been altered slightly. There is an area of disturbed paint close to the top edge, near the center of the painting, where it appears that the paint was pushed and scraped while it was still soft.39 Losses in that area were subsequently retouched, possibly by the artist in some places. The retouching was not precisely done and the damage remains visible on close viewing (fig. 16.52).
Brushes, including approximately 0.2 cm, 0.5 cm, and 1.0 cm width, flat ferrule (based on width and shape of brushstrokes). There are several brush hairs embedded in the paint layers.
Analysis indicates the presence of the following [glossary:pigments]: lead white, cadmium yellow, chrome yellow, iron oxides including iron oxide yellow and possibly burnt sienna, vermilion, red lake,40 viridian, ultramarine blue, cobalt blue, and bone black.41 Examination of the painting under UV light suggests the use of red lake in the signature and the sky.42
Oil (estimated).43
The painting is currently coated with a spray application of polyvinyl acetate (PVA) AYAA, which was applied in 1961. Yellowed [glossary:natural-resin varnish] residues are visible in the recesses of the paint texture; these residues probably relate to the [glossary:varnish] that was removed in 1961 (see Conservation History).
There are no records of conservation treatment prior to 1961, however, the painting is currently lined with an aqueous adhesive which was probably applied prior to its acquisition in 1933.
In 1961, a discolored surface film was removed. A spray coat of polyvinyl acetate (PVA) AYAA was applied and localized [glossary:retouching] was carried out along the edges. A final spray coat of AYAA was applied.44
The painting is in good condition. It is lined with an aqueous adhesive and appears to retain its original stretcher. The stretcher has been keyed out, causing the ends of the top and bottom members to project slightly on the left and right sides. The bottom member is slightly bowed. There is a slight bulge at the lower right corner, but otherwise, the canvas is in plane. There is some abrasion in the frame rebate area, as well as embedded wood fibers that are probably related to framing when the paint was still soft. There are a few tiny, old flake losses in the paint and ground layers. Cracking is minimal and very fine. There are a couple of localized areas of [glossary:drying cracks]. Retouching is minimal and is focused mainly along the bottom edge. The synthetic varnish imparts an even surface sheen.
Kimberley Muir
Current frame: The frame is not original to the painting. It is a French (Parisian), nineteenth-century (1860/80), wedge-shaped, molding frame capped by a torus with an astragal and ogee sight molding. The frame is water gilded over red-brown bole and burnished on the torus and astragal; all other surfaces are matte. The sides and outside scotia are painted with yellow casein, and the frame retains the original gilding and glue [glossary:size]. The pine molding is mitered and joined with angled dovetail splines. The molding, from perimeter to interior, is scotia side; torus (three-quarter-round); beveled face; astragal; and ogee sight (fig. 16.53).45
Previous frame (installed in the 1960s; removed in 2008): A stylized, mid-twentieth-century, American reproduction of a Louis XVI architrave frame with a small fluted scotia and beaded sight molding and an independent fillet liner with a cove sight (fig. 16.54).46
Previous frame (installed by 1933; removed in the 1960s): The work was previously housed in an early-twentieth-century, Louis XV frame with swept sides and foliate rocaille miter and foliate shell center cartouches, and an independent liner (fig. 16.55).
Kirk Vuillemot
Sold by the artist to Ernest Hoschedé, Paris and Montgeron, Mar. 1877.47
Acquired by Georges de Bellio, Paris, 1878.48
By descent from Georges de Bellio (died 1894), Paris, to his daughter Victorine (de Bellio) Donop de Monchy and son-in-law Eugène Donop de Monchy, Paris, 1894.49
Acquired by Bernheim-Jeune, Paris, around 1899.50
Acquired by Paul Rosenberg, Paris, by Oct. 13, 1911.51
Sold by Paul Rosenberg, Paris, to Durand-Ruel, Paris, Oct. 13, 1911, for 13,000 francs.52
Sold by Durand-Ruel, New York, to Martin A. Ryerson, Chicago, Dec. 16, 1911, for $7,000.53
Bequeathed by Martin A. Ryerson (died 1932), Chicago, to the Art Institute of Chicago, 1933.
Exhibitions:Paris, 6, rue Le Peletier, 3e exposition de peinture [third Impressionist exhibition], Apr. 1877, cat. 97, as Arrivée du train de Normandie, gare St-Lazare, appartient à M. H . . . .
Paris, Galerie Georges Petit, 6e exposition international e de peinture et de sculpture, May 8–June 8, 1887, no cat. no.54
Paris, Galerie Georges Petit, Claude Monet—A. Rodin, June 21–Sept. 21, 1889, cat. 33, as Gare Saint-Lazare. 1877. Appartient à M. de Bellio.55
Paris, Grand Palais des Champs-Élysées, Exposition Universelle de 1900, L’exposition centennale de l’art français de 1800 a 1889, May 1–Nov. 12, 1900, cat. 484, as Le Train de Normandie (à M. Alexandre Bernheim jeune [sic]).56
Brussels, Libre Esthétique, Exposition des peintres impressionnistes, Feb. 25–Mar. 29, 1904, cat. 98, as La Gare Saint-Lazare. Exposition centennale, 1900. Appartient à MM. J. et G. Bernheim jeune [sic].
New York, Durand-Ruel, Monet, Dec. 2–23, 1911, cat. 8.57
Art Institute of Chicago, “A Century of Progress”: Loan Exhibition of Paintings and Sculpture, May 23–Nov. 1, 1933, cat. 299.58 (fig. 16.56)
Art Institute of Chicago, “A Century of Progress”: Loan Exhibition of Paintings and Sculpture for 1934, June 1–Oct. 31, 1934, cat. 219.59
Boston, Museum of Fine Arts, Independent Painters of Nineteenth Century Paris, Mar. 15–Apr. 28, 1935, cat. 32.
New York World’s Fair, European & American Paintings, 1500–1900: Masterpieces of Art, May–Oct. 1940, cat. 322.
Dayton (Ohio) Art Institute, The Railroad in Painting: An Exhibition of Paintings Shown at the Dayton Art Institute, Apr. 19–May 22, 1949, cat. 50 (ill.).
Cambridge, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Charles Hayden Memorial Library, The Painter and the City, May 8–June 15, 1950, no cat. no. (ill.).
Philadelphia Museum of Art, Diamond Jubilee Exhibition: Masterpieces of Painting, Nov. 3, 1950–Feb. 11, 1951, cat. 70 (ill.).60
Paris, Musée de l’Orangerie, De David à Toulouse-Lautrec: Chefs-d’oeuvres des collections américaines, Apr. 20–July 3, 1955, cat. 42 (ill.).61
Art Institute of Chicago, The Paintings of Claude Monet, Apr. 1–June 15, 1957, no cat. no.62
Munich, Haus der Kunst München, Französische Malerei des 19. Jahrhunderts: Von David bis Cézanne, Oct. 7, 1964–Jan. 6, 1965, cat. 191 (ill.).
Minneapolis Institute of Arts, The Past Rediscovered: French Painting, 1800–1900, July 3–Sept. 7, 1969, cat. 60 (ill.).
New York, Wildenstein and Company, “One Hundred Years of Impressionism:” A Tribute to Durand-Ruel, Apr. 2–May 9, 1970, cat. 37 (ill.).
Art Institute of Chicago, Paintings by Monet, Mar. 15–May 11, 1975, cat. 42 (ill.). (fig. 16.57)
Art Institute of Chicago, Art at the Time of the Centennial, June 19–Aug. 8, 1976, no cat.63
Washington, D.C., National Gallery of Art, Manet and Modern Paris, Dec. 5, 1982–Mar. 6, 1983, cat. 14 (ill.).
Los Angeles County Museum of Art, A Day in the Country: Impressionism and the French Landscape, June 28–Sept. 16, 1984, cat. 32 (ill.); Art Institute of Chicago, Oct. 23, 1984–Jan. 6, 1985; Paris, Galeries Nationales, Grand Palais, as L’impressionnisme et le paysage français, Feb. 4–Apr. 22, 1985, cat. 70 (ill.).
Washington, D.C., National Gallery of Art, The New Painting: Impressionism, 1874–1886, Jan. 17–Apr. 6, 1986, cat. 51 (ill.); Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco and M. H. de Young Memorial Museum, Apr. 19–July 6, 1986.
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago’s Dream, a World’s Treasure: The Art Institute of Chicago, 1893–1993, Nov. 1, 1993–Jan. 9, 1994, not in cat.64
Nagaoka, Niigata Prefectural Museum of Modern Art, Shikago bijutsukan ten: Kindai kaiga no 100-nen [Masterworks of modern art from the Art Institute of Chicago], Apr. 20–May 29, 1994, cat. 7 (ill.); Nagoya, Aichi Prefectural Museum of Art, June 10–July 24, 1994; Yokohama Museum of Art, Aug. 6–Sept. 25, 1994.
Art Institute of Chicago, Claude Monet, 1840–1926, July 22–Nov. 26, 1995, cat. 50 (ill.). (fig. 16.58)
Vienna, Österreichische Galerie, Claude Monet, Mar. 14–June 16, 1996, cat. 24 (ill.).
Copenhagen, Ordrupgaard, Impressionister i byen, Sept. 6–Dec. 1, 1996, cat. 44 (ill.).
Paris, Musée d’Orsay, Manet, Monet and the Gare Saint-Lazare, Feb. 9–May 17, 1998, cat. 47 (ill.), Washington, D.C., National Gallery of Art, June 14–Sept. 20, 1998.
Florence, Sala Bianca di Palazzo Pitti, Claude Monet: La poesia della luce; Sette capolavori dell’Art Institute di Chicago a Palazzo Pitti, June 2–Aug. 29, 1999, no cat. no. (ill.).
Moscow, State Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts, Klod Mone [Claude Monet], Nov. 26, 2001–Feb. 21, 2002, cat. 17 (ill.), Saint Petersburg, State Hermitage Museum, May 1–15, 2002.65
New York, Wildenstein and Company, Claude Monet (1840–1926): A Tribute to Daniel Wildenstein and Katia Granoff, Apr. 27–June 15, 2007, cat. 21 (ill.).
Fort Worth, Tex., Kimbell Art Museum, The Impressionists: Master Paintings from the Art Institute of Chicago, June 29–Nov. 2, 2008, cat. 17 (ill.).
Paris, Galeries Nationales, Grand Palais, Claude Monet, 1840–1926, Sept. 22, 2010–Jan. 24, 2011, cat. 44 (ill.).
Selected References:Catalogue de la 3e exposition de peinture, exh. cat. (E. Capiomont et V. Renault, 1877), p. 9, cat. 97.66
A. P[othey], “Beaux arts,” Le petit parisien, Apr. 7, 1877, p. 2.67
“Exposition des impressionnistes: 6, rue Le Peletier; 6,” La petite république française Apr. 10, 1877, p. 2. Reprinted in Ruth Berson, ed., The New Painting: Impressionism, 1874–1886, Documentation, vol. 1, Reviews (Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco/University of Washington Press, 1996), p. 176.
Ernest Fillonneau, “Les impessionnistes,” Moniteur des arts, Apr. 20, 1877, p. 1.68
Charles Bigot, “Causerie artistique. L’exposition des ‘impressionnistes,’” La revue politique et littéraire, Apr. 28, 1877, p. 1047.
Gustave Geffroy, “Salon de 1887. Hors du Salon: Claude Monet,” La justice, pt. 2, June 2, 1887, p. 1.69
Galerie Georges Petit, Claude Monet—A. Rodin, exh. cat. (Imp. de l’Art, 1889), p. 31, cat. 33.70
J. A., “Beaux-Arts. Exposition de la galerie Georges Petit,” Art et critique 5 (June 29, 1889), p. 76.
Gustave Geffroy, “Histoire de l’impressionnisme,” La vie artistique 3, 2 (1894), p. 68.71
André Mellerio, L’exposition de 1900 et l’impressionnisme (H. Floury, 1900), p. 20.
Ludovic Baschet, ed., Catalogue officiel illustré de l’Exposition centennale de l’art français de 1800 à 1889, exh. cat. (Lemercier, 1900), p. 211, cat. 484.72
Octave Maus, Exposition des peintres impressionnistes, exh. cat. (Libre Esthétique, 1904), p. 39, cat. 98.
Art Institute of Chicago, General Catalogue of Paintings Sculpture and Other Objects in the Museum (Art Institute of Chicago, 1914), p. 211, cat. 2138.
Gustave Geffroy, Claude Monet: Sa vie, son temps, son oeuvre (G. Crès, 1922) pp. 92; 118; opp. p. 136 (ill.); 272.73
Camille Mauclair, Claude Monet (F. Rieder, 1924), pp. 61; pl. 20. Translated by J. Lewis May as Claude Monet (Dodd, Mead, 1924), pp. 5; pl. 20.74
Art Institute of Chicago, A Guide to the Paintings in the Permanent Collection (Art Institute of Chicago, 1925), p. 162, cat. 2140.75
M. C., “Monets in the Art Institute,” Bulletin of the Art Institute of Chicago 19, 2 (Feb. 1925), p. 19 (ill.).
Florent Fels, Claude Monet, Les peintres français nouveaux 22 (Gallimard, 1925), p. 45 (ill.).
Madeleine Octave Maus, “Exposition des peintres impressionnistes,” in Trente années de lutte pour l’art, 1884–1914 (L’Oiseau Bleu, 1926), p. 323.76
Louis Réau, L’art français aux États-Unis: Ouvrage illustré de vingt-quatre planches hors texte (Henri Laurens, 1926), p. 163.
Léon Werth, Claude Monet (G. Crès, 1928), pl. 26.
Xenia Lathom, Claude Monet (Philip Allan, 1931), pl. 16 (ill.).
Anthony Bertram, Claude Monet, World’s Masters (Studio/William Edwin Rudge, 1931), pl. 11.
Daniel Catton Rich, “The Paintings of Martin A. Ryerson,” Bulletin of the Art Institute of Chicago 27, 1 (Jan. 1933), pp. 9, 11 (ill.).
Art Institute of Chicago, Catalogue of “A Century of Progress”: Exhibition of Paintings and Sculpture; Lent from American Collections, ed. Daniel Catton Rich, 3rd ed., exh. cat. (Art Institute of Chicago, 1933), p. 44, cat. 299.
Daniel Catton Rich, “Französische Impressionisten im Art Institute zu Chicago,” Pantheon: Monatsschrift für freunde und sammler der kunst 11, 3 (Mar. 1933), p. 77. Translated by C. C. H. Drechsel as “French Impressionists in the Art Institute of Chicago,” Pantheon/Cicerone (Mar. 1933), p. 18.
Art Institute of Chicago, Catalogue of “A Century of Progress”: Exhibition of Paintings and Sculpture, 1934, ed. Daniel Catton Rich, exh. cat. (Art Institute of Chicago, 1934), pp. 37–38, cat. 219.
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Independent Painters of Nineteenth Century Paris, exh. cat. (Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, [1935]), p. 24, cat. 32.
Art Institute of Chicago, A Brief Illustrated Guide to the Collections (Art Institute of Chicago, 1935), p. 28.77
Hans Tietze, Meisterwerke Europäischer Malerei in Amerika (Phaidon, 1935), pp. 289 (ill.); 344–45, no. 289.
George Slocombe, “Giver of Light,” Coronet (Mar. 1938), p. 20 (ill.).
Lionello Venturi, Les archives de l’impressionnisme: Lettres de Renoir, Monet, Pissarro, Sisley et autres; Mémoires de Paul Durand-Ruel; Documents, vol. 2 (Durand-Ruel, 1939), pp. 260, 303.
Thomas Craven, ed., A Treasury of Art Masterpieces, From the Renaissance to the Present Day (Simon & Schuster, 1939), pp. 506–07, pl. 123.
Walter Pach, Catalogue of European and American Paintings, 1500–1900: Masterpieces of Art, New York World’s Fair, biographies and notes compiled by Christopher Lazare, with the assistance of Anne A. Wallis, Marion Haviland, and Simonetta de Vries, exh. cat. (Art Aid, [1940]), p. 223, cat. 322.
Alfred M. Frankfurter, “383 Masterpieces of Art: The World’s Fair Exhibition of Paintings of Four Centuries Loaned from American Public and Private Collections,” Art News, May 25, 1940, pp. 41 (ill.), 64.
Regina Shoolman and Charles E. Slatkin, The Enjoyment of Art in America, with an introduction by George Harold Edgell (Lippincott, 1942), pp. 557; 609, pl. 537.
Hans Huth, “Impressionism Comes to America,” Gazette des beaux-arts 29 (1946), pp. 238, fig. 13; 239, n. 22; 240.
Oscar Reuterswärd, Monet: En Konstnärshistorik (Bonniers, 1948), opposite p. 104 (ill.); pp. 112, 281.
George Besson, Claude Monet (1840–1926), Collection les maîtres 32 (Braun, [1949]), pl. 34.78
Kenneth Clark, Landscape into Art (John Murray, 1949), pl. 89; p. 102.
Dayton Art Institute, The Railroad in Painting, exh. cat. (Dayton Art Institute, 1949), cat. 50 (ill.).
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, The Painter and the City, ed. Gyorgy Kepes, with the assistance of Jane M. Bagg, exh. cat. (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1950), (ill.).
Philadelphia Museum of Art, Diamond Jubilee Exhibtion: Masterpieces of Painting, exh. cat. (Philadelphia Museum of Art, 1950), cat. 70 (ill.).
Lionello Venturi, Impressionisti e Simbolisti: Da Manet a Lautrec (Del Turco, 1950), pp. 59; 211, fig. 56. Translated by Francis Steegmuller as Impressionists and Symbolists (Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1950), pp. 61; fig. 56.
Louis Zara, ed., Masterpieces, Home Collection of Great Art 1 (Ziff-Davis, 1950), p. 118 (ill.).
Art Institute of Chicago, Masterpieces in the Art Institute of Chicago (Art Institute of Chicago, 1952), n.pag. (ill.).
M. K. R., “An Exhibition for Paris,” Art Institute of Chicago Quarterly 49, 2 (Apr. 1, 1955), pp. 28, 30.
Musée de l’Orangerie, De David à Toulouse-Lautrec: Chefs-d’oeuvre des collections américaines, exh. cat. (Musée de l’Orangerie, 1955), pp. 60–61, cat. 42 and pl. 41; 129, pl. 41 and cat. 42. James Thrall Soby, “Foreword/Introduction,” in Musée de l’Orangerie, De David à Toulouse-Lautrec: Chefs-d’oeuvre des collections américaines, exh. cat. (Musée de l’Orangerie, 1955), pp. 20, 29.
Art Institute of Chicago, “Homage to Claude Monet,” Art Institute of Chicago Quarterly 51, 2 (Apr. 1, 1957), pp. 21–22 (ill.).
Art Institute of Chicago, “Catalogue,” Art Institute of Chicago Quarterly 51, 2 (Apr. 1, 1957), p. 33.
Denis Rouart, Claude Monet, trans. James Emmons (Skira, 1958), p. 70.
Art Institute of Chicago, Paintings in the Art Institute of Chicago: A Catalogue of the Picture Collection (Art Institute of Chicago, 1961), pp. 279 (ill.), 318–19.79
Leopold Reidemeister, Auf den Spuren der Maler der Ile de France: Topographische Beiträge zur Geschichte der französischen Landschaftsmalerei von Corot bis zu den Fauves (Propyläen, 1963), p. 114 (ill.).
Remus Niculeseu, “Georges de Bellio, l’ami des impressionnistes,” Revue roumaine d’histoire de l’art 1, 2 (1964), pp. 215, 241, 250, 252, 253, 258, 264.
Haus der Kunst München, Französische Malerei des 19. Jahrhunderts: Von David bis Cézanne, with a preface by Germain Bazin, exh. cat. (Haus der Kunst München [1964]), pp. 416–17, cat. 191 (ill.).
Frederick A. Sweet, “Great Chicago Collectors,” Apollo 84 (Sept. 1966), pp. 201, fig. 31; 202.
Daniel Wildenstein, “Claude Monet,” in Kindlers Malerei Lexikon, vol. 4 (Kindler, [1967]), pp. 464 (ill.), 470.
Minneapolis Institute of Arts, The Past Rediscovered: French Paintings, 1800–1900, exh. cat. (Minneapolis Institute of Arts, 1969), pp. 18; 146–47, cat. 60 (ill.).
Remus Niculescu, “Georges de Bellio, l’ami des Impressionnistes (I),” Paragone 247 (Sept. 1970), pp. 34, 40, 53.80
Remus Niculescu, “Georges de Bellio, l’ami des Impressionnistes (II),” Paragone 249 (Nov. 1970), pp. 47, n. 2; 62; 65–66.81
John Maxon, The Art Institute of Chicago (Abrams, 1970), p. 82 (ill.), 284.82
Wildenstein and Company, “One Hundred Years of Impressionism”: A Tribute to Durand-Ruel, with a preface by Florence Gould, exh. cat. (Wildenstein, 1970), pl. 37.
Art Institute of Chicago, “Lecturer’s Choice,” Bulletin of the Art Institute of Chicago 67, 4 (Jul. –Aug. 1973), p. 11.
Donald E. Gordon, Modern Art Exhibitions, 1900–1916: Selected Catalogue Documentation, vol. 2 (Prestel, 1974), p. 90.
Daniel Wildenstein, Claude Monet: Biographie et catalogue raisonné, vol. 1, Peintures, 1840–1881 (Bibliothèque des Arts, 1974), pp. 84; 304; 305, cat. 440 (ill.); 447, pièces justificatives 60–63, 65, 68.
Grace Seiberling, “The Evolution of an Impressionist,” in Paintings by Monet, ed. Susan Wise, exh. cat. (Art Institute of Chicago, 1975), pp. 27, 28.
Susan Wise, ed., Paintings by Monet, exh. cat. (Art Institute of Chicago, 1975), p. 96, cat. 42 (ill.).
M. Therese Southgate, “About the Cover,” JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association 233, 3 (July 21, 1975), cover (ill.); p. 259 (ill.).
Guy Hubbard and Mary J. Rouse, Art: Discovering and Creating (Benefic, 1977), p. 178 (ill.).
Art Institute of Chicago, 100 Masterpieces (Art Institute of Chicago, 1978), pp. 92–93, pl. 50.
Luigina Rossi Bortolatto, L’opera completa di Claude Monet: 1870–1889, Classici dell’arte 63 (Rizzoli, 1978), pp. 97, cat. 140 (ill.); 98.
Roger Terry Dunn, “The Monet-Rodin Exhibition at the Galerie Georges Petit in 1889” (Ph.D. diss., Northwestern University, 1978), p. 247.
Daniel Wildenstein, Claude Monet: Biographie et catalogue raisonné, vol. 3, Peintures, 1887–1898 (Bibliothèque des Arts, 1979), p. 249, letter 986.
J. Patrice Marandel, The Art Institute of Chicago: Favorite Impressionists Paintings (Crown, 1979), pp. 56, 57 (ill.).
J. Patrice Marandel, “New Installation of Earlier Paintings,” Bulletin of the Art Institute of Chicago 73, 1 (Jan.–Feb., 1979), p. 15 (ill.).
Rodolphe Walter, “Saint-Lazare l’impressionniste,” L’oeil 292 (Nov. 1979), pp. 52, 53.
Diane Kelder, The Great Book of French Impressionism (Abbeville, 1980), p. 205 (ill.).83
Diane Kelder, The Great Book of French Impressionism, Tiny Folios (Abbeville, 1980), p. 121, pl. 13.
Theodore Reff, Manet and Modern Paris, exh. cat. (National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C./Eastern, 1982), pl. 7 and cat. 14.
Robert Gordon and Andrew Forge, Monet (Abrams, 1983), pp. 77 (ill.), 290.
Andrea P. A. Belloli, ed., A Day in the Country: Impressionism and the French Landscape, exh. cat. (Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 1984), p. 365.
Hélène Adhémar, “Ernest Hoschedé,” in Aspects of Monet: A Symposium on the Artist’s Life and Times, ed. John Rewald and Frances Weitzenhoffer (Abrams, 1984), pp. 69, n. 23; 70, n. 30.
Richard R. Brettell, “The Impressionist Landscape and the Image of France,” in A Day in the Country: Impressionism and the French Landscape, ed. Andrea P. A. Belloli, exh. cat. (Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 1984), p. 48.
Sylvie Gache-Patin, “The Urban Landscape,” in A Day in the Country: Impressionism and the French Landscape, ed. Andrea P. A. Belloli, exh. cat. (Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 1984), pp. 114; 116; 125, no. 32 (ill.); 126.
Charles F. Stuckey, ed., Monet: A Retrospective (Hugh Lauter Levin, 1985), p. 61 (ill.).
Richard R. Brettell, “Le paysage impressionniste et l’image de la France,” in Réunion des Musées Nationaux, L’impressionnisme et le paysage français, exh. cat. (Réunion des Musées Nationaux, 1985), p. 39.
Sylvie Gache-Patin, “Le paysage urbain,” in Réunion des Musées Nationaux, L’impressionnisme et le paysage français, exh. cat. (Réunion des Musées Nationaux, 1985), pp. 184; 188; 190–91; 196–97, no. 70 (ill.).
John House, “Monet and the Genesis of His Series,” in Auckland City Art Gallery, Claude Monet: Painter of Light, exh. cat. (Auckland City Art Gallery/NZI, 1985), pp. 12; 17, fig. 7.
Richard H. Love, Theodore Earl Butler: Emergence from Monet’s Shadow (Haase-Mumm, 1985), pl. 9.
Guy Cogeval, Les années post-impressionnistes (Nouvelles Éditions Françaises, 1986), p. 11, fig. 15.
Charles S. Moffett, ed., The New Painting: Impressionism, 1874–1886, exh. cat. (Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, 1986), pp. 205; 222–23, cat. 51 (ill.).
Richard R. Brettell, “The ‘First’ Exhibition of Impressionist Painters,” in The New Painting: Impressionism, 1874–1886, ed. Charles S. Moffett, exh. cat. (Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, 1986), pp. 189, 198.
Richard R. Brettell, French Impressionists (Art Institute of Chicago/Abrams, 1987), front cover (detail); pp. 42 (ill.), 43, 118, back cover (ill.).
Art Institute of Chicago, Master Paintings in the Art Institute of Chicago, selected by James N. Wood and Katharine C. Lee (Art Institute of Chicago/New York Graphic Society Books/Little, Brown, 1988), pp. 9, 59 (ill.), 167.
Claire De Narbonne-Fontanieu, “Journey through a Cultural Landscape,” France Magazine 10 (Spring 1988), p. 20 (ill.).
Musée Rodin, Claude Monet—Auguste Rodin: Centenaire de l’exposition de 1889, exh. cat. (Musée Rodin, 1989), pp. 54, 79 (ill.).
Anne Distel, Les collectionneurs des impressionnistes (Bibliothèque des Arts, 1989), p. 115. Translated by Barbara Perroud-Benson as Impressionism, The First Collectors, 1874–1886 (Abrams, 1990), p. 115.
David Bomford, Jo Kirby, John Leighton, and Ashok Roy, Art in the Making: Impressionism, exh. cat.(National Gallery, Washington, D.C./Yale University Press, 1990), pp. 166, pl. 163; 170–71.
Bernard L. Myers, Monet, Methods of the Masters (Brian Trodd, 1990), p. 67 (ill.).
Karin Sagner-Düchting, Claude Monet, 1840–1926: Ein Fest für die Augen (Benedikt Taschen, 1990), pp. 95 (ill.), 96. Translated Karen Williams Claude Monet, 1840–1926: A Feast for the Eyes (Taschen, 2004), p. 95 (ill.), 96.
Norma Broude, Impressionism: A Feminist Reading, The Gendering of Art, Science, and Nature in the Nineteenth Century (Rizzoli, 1991), pp. 74; 75; 108, pl. 30; 109, pl. 32 (detail).
Ingo F. Walther and Peter H. Feist, Malerei des Impressionismus, 1860–1920: Der Impressionismus in Frankreich, vol. 1 (Benedikt Taschen, 1992), pp. 152, 170 (ill.).
Sophie Fourny-Dargère, Monet, Profils de l’art (Chêne, 1992), pp. 82; 87, fig. 2.
Art Institute of Chicago, The Art Institute of Chicago: The Essential Guide, selected by James N. Wood and Teri J. Edelstein, entries written and compiled by Sally Ruth May (Art Institute of Chicago, 1993), p. 155 (ill.).84
Art Institute of Chicago, Treasures of 19th- and 20th-Century Painting: The Art Institute of Chicago, with an introduction by James N. Wood (Art Institute of Chicago/Abbeville, 1993), p. 70 (ill.).
Jeffrey Coven, Baudelaire’s Voyages: The Poet and His Painters, exh. cat. (Heckscher Museum/Little, Brown, 1993), p. 90, fig. 56; 170.
Art Institute of Chicago and Niigata Prefectural Museum of Modern Art, Shikago bijutsukan ten: Kindai kaiga no 100-nen [Masterworks of modern art from the Art Institute of Chicago], exh. cat. (Asahi Shinbunsha, 1994), pp. 52, cat. 7; 53 (ill.).
Charles F. Stuckey, “Chicago’s Fortune: Patrons of Modern Paintings and The Art Institute of Chicago,” in Art Institute of Chicago and Niigata Prefectural Museum of Modern Art, Shikago bijutsukan ten: Kindai kaiga no 100-nen [Masterworks of modern art from the Art Institute of Chicago], exh. cat. (Asahi Shinbunsha, 1994), p. 18.
George T. M. Shackelford, “The Age of Impressionism,” in Emily Ballew Neff and George T. M. Shackelford, American Painters in the Age of Impressionism, exh. cat. (Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, 1994), pp. 19; 20, fig. 7.
Andrew Forge, Monet, Artists in Focus (Art Institute of Chicago, 1995), pp. 22–24; 76, pl. 5; 106.
Charles F. Stuckey, with the assistance of Sophia Shaw, Claude Monet, 1840–1926, exh. cat. (Art Institute of Chicago/Thames & Hudson, 1995), pp. 16, 73, cat. 50 (ill.); 202.
Lynn Federle Orr, “Monet: An Introduction,” in New Orleans Museum of Art and Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, Monet: Late Paintings of Giverny from the Musée Marmottan, exh. cat. (New Orleans Museum of Art/Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco/Abrams, 1995), pp. 18; 19, fig. 5.
Robert Rosenblum, “Impressionismen, byen og det modern liv,” in Impressionister i byen, ed. Anne-Birgitte Fonsmark and Mikael Wivel, exh. cat. (Ordrupgaard, 1996), pp. 16, fig. 5 and cat. 44; 18. Translated as “Impressionism, the City and Modern Life,” in Impressionists in Town, ed. Anne-Birgitte Fonsmark and Mikael Wivel, exh. cat. (Ordrupgaard, 1996), pp. 16, fig. 5 (cat. 44); 18.
Anne-Birgitte Fonsmark and Mikael Wivel, eds., Impressionister i byen, exh. cat. (Ordrupgaard, 1996), p. 105, cat. 44. Translated as Impressionists in Town, exh. cat. (Ordrupgaard, 1996), p. 106, cat. 44.
Ruth Berson, ed., The New Painting: Impressionism, 1874–1886, Documentation, vol. 1, Reviews (Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco/University of Washington Press, 1996), pp. 119, 134, 146, 173, 176.
Ruth Berson, ed., The New Painting: Impressionism, 1874–1886, Documentation, vol. 2, Exhibited Works (Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco/University of Washington Press, 1996), pp. 76, 94 (ill.).
Daniel Wildenstein, Monet, or The Triumph of Impressionism, cat. rais., vol. 1 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), pp. 125, 128.
Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné/Werkverzeichnis, vol. 2, Nos. 1–968 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), pp. 178, cat. 440 (ill.); 179–80.
Stephan Koja, Claude Monet, exh. cat. (Österreichische Galerie, Belvedere, Vienna/Prestel, 1996), pp. 67; 71, cat. 24 (ill.); 216. Translated by John Brownjohn as Claude Monet, exh. cat. (Österreichische Galerie/Prestel, 1996), pp. 67; 71, cat. 24 (ill.); 216.
Elisabeth West FitzHugh, ed., Artists’ Pigments: A Handbook of Their History and Characteristics, vol. 3 (National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C./Oxford University Press, 1997), pp. 286; 287, fig. 12.
M. Therese Southgate, The Art of JAMA: One Hundred Covers and Essays from the Journal of the American Medical Association (Mosby, 1997), pp. 8–9 (ill.).
Meyer Schapiro, Impressionism: Reflections and Perceptions (Braziller, 1997), p. 104, fig 41.
Juliet Wilson-Bareau, Manet, Monet, and the Gare Saint-Lazare, exh. cat. (National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C./Yale University Press, 1998), frontispiece (detail); pp. 111; 112, fig. 99 (cat. 47); 188, n. 83; 199.
Juliet Wilson-Bareau, Manet, Monet, la Gare Saint-Lazare, trans. Isabelle Taudière, exh. cat. (Réunion des Musées Nationaux/Yale University Press, 1998), frontispiece (detail); pp. 111; 112, fig. 99 (cat. 47); 189, n. 83.
Brigitte Béranger-Menand, “Les huit expositions impressionnistes. Profil d’un groupe: 1874–1886,” in Alain Tapié, Brigitte Béranger-Menand, and Yona Beldimaw, Chemins de l’impressionnisme:Normandie–Paris, 1860–1910, exh. cat. (Landesmuseum Joanneum, 1998), p. 26.
Emily D. Bilski, Berlin Metropolis: Jews and the New Culture, 1890–1918, exh. cat. (University of California Press/Jewish Museum, 1999), pp. 119; 120, fig. 101.
Art Institute of Chicago, Master Paintings in the Art Institute of Chicago, selected by James N. Wood (Art Institute of Chicago/Hudson Hills, 1999), pp. 8, 54, 55 (ill.).
Simonella Condemi and Andrew Forge, Claude Monet: La poesia della luce; Sette capolavori dell’Art Institute di Chicago a Palazzo Pitti, exh. cat. (Giunti Gruppo, 1999), pp. 26, 27 (ill.), 28, 29 (detail).
Thomas McBurney, Artistic Greatness: A Comparative Exploration of Michelangelo, Beethoven, and Monet (Galde Press, 1999), p. 277 (ill.)
Gina Frese, Dow Chemical Portrayed, exh. cat. (Chemical Heritage Foundation, 2000), pp. 4, 5 (ill.).
Art Institute of Chicago, Impressionism and Post-Impressionism in the Art Institute of Chicago, selected by James N. Wood (Art Institute of Chicago/Hudson Hills, 2000), p. 54 (ill.).
Art Institute of Chicago, Treasures from the Art Institute of Chicago, selected by James N. Wood, commentaries by Debra N. Mancoff (Art Institute of Chicago/Hudson Hills, 2000), pp. 183, 205 (ill.).
Richard R. Brettell, Impression: Painting Quickly in France, 1860–1890, exh. cat. (Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute/Yale University Press, 2000), p. 136, n. 27.
A. G. Kostenevich, Klod Mone [Claude Monet], exh. cat. (Khudozhnik i Kniga, 2001), pp. 62–65; cat. 17 (ill. and detail).
Richard R. Brettell, “Monet e Parigi,” in Monet: I luoghi della pittura, ed. Marco Goldin, exh. cat. (Linea d’Ombra, 2001), pp. 124, 125 (ill.).
Marco Goldin, L’impressionismo e l’età di Van Gogh, exh. cat. (Linea d’Ombra, 2002), p. 43 (ill.).
Richard R. Brettell, From Monet to Van Gogh: A History of Impressionism, vol. 2 (Teaching Co., 2002), pp. 6, 16, 174.
Judith Hayward, “Nature and Progress: Winslow Homer, His Critics and His Oils, 1880–1900” (Ph.D. diss., Columbia University, 2003), pp. 172; 362; 385, ill. 48.
Michel Laclotte, ed., The Art and Spirit of Paris, vol. 2 (Abbeville, 2003), p. 1049, fig. 6.127; 1052.
Richard Thomson, “Monet 1870–1890: Evoluzione, tradizione e decorazione,” in Turner e gli impressionisti: La grande storia del paesaggio moderno in Europa, ed. Marco Goldin, exh. cat. (Linea d’Ombra/Museo di Santa Giulia, 2006), p. 261, n. 8.
David L. Pike, Metropolis on the Styx: The Underworlds of Modern Urban Culture, 1800–2001 (Cornell University Press, 2007), pp. 221; 224, fig. 4.3.
Wildenstein and Co., Claude Monet (1840–1926): A Tribute to Daniel Wildenstein and Katia Granoff, exh. cat. (Wildenstein, 2007), pp. 238, cat. 21 (ill.); 300–301; 303.
Joseph Baillio and Cora Michael, “Chronological and Pictorial Survey of the Life and Career of Claude Monet,” in Wildenstein and Co., Claude Monet (1840–1926): A Tribute to Daniel Wildenstein and Katia Granoff, exh. cat. (Wildenstein, 2007), p. 166.
Joseph Baillio and Cora Michael, “Highlights of the Exhibition,” in Wildenstein and Co., Claude Monet (1840–1926): A Tribute to Daniel Wildenstein and Katia Granoff, exh. cat. (Wildenstein, 2007), pp. 194; 195 (detail).
Kelly Crow, “For Charity, Gallery Plays Museum,” Wall Street Journal, May 25, 2007. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB118004588897613954.html (accessed Jan. 28, 2013).
Lance Esplund, “A Whole New Light,” New York Sun, May 17, 2007. http://www.nysun.com/arts/whole-new-light/54648/(accessed Jan. 28, 2013).
Paul Hayes Tucker, “Some Notes on Monet’s Practice,” in Wildenstein and Co., Claude Monet (1840–1926): A Tribute to Daniel Wildenstein and Katia Granoff, exh. cat. (Wildenstein, 2007), pp. 74, fig. 12; 75.
Richard Kendall, “Claude Monet, New York,” Burlington Magazine (July 2007), p. 511.
Roberta Smith, “Monet Arrives and Ripens,” New York Times, May 4, 2007, p. E28.
Eric M. Zafran, “Monet in America,” in Wildenstein and Co., Claude Monet (1840–1926): A Tribute to Daniel Wildenstein and Katia Granoff, exh. cat. (Wildenstein, 2007), p. 113.
Gloria Groom and Douglas Druick, with the assistance of Dorota Chudzicka and Jill Shaw, The Impressionists: Master Paintings from the Art Institute of Chicago, exh. cat. (Art Institute of Chicago/Kimbell Art Museum, 2008), pp. 19 (ill.); 54 (detail); 55, cat. 17 (ill.); 57. Simultaneously published as Gloria Groom and Douglas Druick, with the assistance of Dorota Chudzicka and Jill Shaw, The Age of Impressionism at the Art Institute of Chicago (Art Institute of Chicago/Yale University Press, 2008), pp. 19 (ill.); 54 (detail); 55, cat. 17 (ill.); 57.85
James H. Rubin, Impressionism and the Modern Landscape: Productivity, Technology, and Urbanization from Manet to Van Gogh (University of California Press, 2008), p. 116.
Ian Kennedy, “Impressionism and Post-Impressionism,” in Ian Kennedy and Julian Treuherz, The Railway: Art in the Age of Steam, exh. cat. (Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art/Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool/Yale University Press, 2008), p. 159, fig. 56.
Jonathan Mane-Wheoki, “Monet’s Impressions of the Industrial Environment,” in George T. M. Shackelford, Monet and the Impressionists, exh. cat. (Art Gallery of New South Wales/Yale University Press, 2008), p. 149, fig. 33.
Art Institute of Chicago, Master Paintings in the Art Institute of Chicago, selected by James Cuno (Art Institute of Chicago/Yale University Press, 2009), pp. 9, 54, 55 (ill.).
Claudia Beltramo Ceppi, Monet: Il tempo delle ninfee, exh. cat. (Palazzo Reale/Giunti, 2009), pp. 33, fig. 18; 37.
Brian Dudley Barrett, Artist on the Edge: The Rise of Coastal Artists’ Colonies, 1880–1920, with Particular Reference to Artists’ Communities around the North Sea (Amsterdam University Press, 2010), p. 43 (ill.).
Mary Mathews Gedo, Monet and His Muse: Camille Monet in the Artist’s Life (University of Chicago Press, 2010), pp. 189; 190, fig. 13.1.
Ségolène Le Men, Monet (Citadelles & Mazenod, 2010), pp. 19; 194; 216; 217, ill. 172; 218.
Réunion des Musées Nationaux, Claude Monet, 1840–1926, exh. cat. (Réunion des Musées Nationaux/Musée d’Orsay, 2010), p. 153, cat. 44 (ill.).
John House, “Le sujet chez Monet,” in Réunion des Musées Nationaux, Claude Monet, 1840–1926, exh. cat. (Réunion des Musées Nationaux/Musée d’Orsay, 2010), pp. 23, 27.
Paul Stelkens, “Die Hensmann–Villa in Grosskönigsdorf,” in Egon Heeg, Axel Kurth, and Peter Schreiner, eds., Königsdorf im Rheinland, Pulheimer Beiträge zur Geschichte, Sonderveröffentlichung 34 (Verein für Geschichte, 2011), pp. 425, fig. 32; 427; 478, n. 28.
Other Documentation:Inventory number
Stock Durand-Ruel Paris 9749
Livre de stock Paris 190186
Inventory number
Stock Durand-Ruel New York 3502
Livre de stock New York 1904–2487
Photograph number
Photo Durand-Ruel Paris 709988
Label (fig. 16.59)
Label (fig. 16.60)
Inscription (fig. 16.61)
Inscription (fig. 16.62)
Label (fig. 16.63)
Inscription (fig. 16.64)
Label
Location: previous Masonite-type [glossary:backing board] (discarded); transcription in conservation file
Method: not documented
Content: Monet / Old St. Lazare Sta Paris / 23 1/2 x 031 1/2 (fig. 16.65)
Label
Location: previous Masonite-type backing board (discarded); transcription in conservation file
Method: not documented
Content: The Minneapolis Institute of Arts / L 69.120 / Lent by Art Institute of Chicago / 77-'69 (fig. 16.66)
Label
Location: stretcher
Method: handwritten script on printed label
Content: Monet No 3502 / La gare St. / Lazare, 1877 / Paris ibbb (fig. 16.59)
Label
Location: stretcher
Method: handwritten script
Content: Cl. Monet no. 9749 / La gare St Lazare (le train / de Normandie) 1877. - (fig. 16.60)
Label
Location: stretcher
Method: handwritten script on printed label (added markings in blue and red crayon)
Content: Claude Monet / Le Train de Normandie / appartient à Monsieur Gaston Bernh[eim] / Jeune / 51 Rue Pierre Charron [It appears that “Gaston” has been scribbled out with blue crayon and replaced with “Alexandre,” which is written upside down] (fig. 16.67)
Label
Location: stretcher
Method: handwritten script on printed label
Content: P. R. / 2462 / Monet / Gare S Lazare (fig. 16.68)
Label
Location: stretcher
Method: handwritten script on printed label
Content: 13 (fig. 16.69)
Label
Location: stretcher
Method: residues of circular paper label
Content: [?] (fig. 16.70)
Label
Location: stretcher
Method: residues of rectangular paper label
Content: [?] (fig. 16.71)
Inscription
Location: stretcher
Method: handwritten
Content: W27 (fig. 16.72)
Inscription
Location: stretcher
Method: handwritten (passes over brown paper on stretcher back)
Content: (NO 22) (fig. 16.73)
Inscription
Location: stretcher
Method: handwritten
Content: DR 9749 (fig. 16.62)
Inscription
Location: stretcher
Method: handwritten
Content: Ph. 7099 (fig. 16.61)
Inscription
Location: stretcher
Method: handwritten, partially covered by brown paper
Content: [28?] (fig. 16.74)
Label
Location: stretcher
Method: handwritten script on printed label with green ink stamp
Content: THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO / CHICAGO ILLINOIS 60603, U.S.A. / To Monet, Claude / Old St. Lazare Station, Paris / 1933.1158
Stamp: Inventory—1980–1981 (fig. 16.75)
Inscription
Location: stretcher
Method: handwritten
Content: 33.1158 (fig. 16.76)
Inscription
Location: stretcher
Method: handwritten
Content: [app. a M?] Alexandre Bernheim (fig. 16.64)
Label
Location: backing board
Method: typewritten script on printed label
Content: THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO / artist Claude Monet / title Arrival of the Normandy Train / medium cat # 12 / credit crate # 19 / acc. # 1933.1158 (fig. 16.77)
Inscription
Location: previous frame back; 1973 photograph in conservation file
Method: handwritten
Content: ST. LAZARRE [sic] STATION MONET TOP [last word scribbled out] (fig. 16.78)
Label
Location: previous Masonite-type backing board (discarded); transcription in conservation file
Method: not documented
Content: H(torn) ER KUNST MUNCHEN / Bahnhof St. Lazare in Paris / Art Institute of Chicago / 80 x 59.7 / Kat. Nr.: 191 / 42 [circled]89 (fig. 16.79)
Label
Location: backing board
Method: printed label with green circular sticker
Content: [logo] JAPAN / YAMATO TRANSPORT CO.,LTD. / FINE ARTS DIVISION / EXHIBT. JAPAN 94’ シカゴ 美術館展 [Shikago (Chicago) Bijutsukan ten] / CASE NO. 19 / CATAL. NO. / [green sticker] 7 (fig. 16.80)
Label
Location: backing board
Method: printed label
Content: The Art Institute of Chicago / “Claude Monet: 1840–1926” / July 14, 1995–November 26, 1995 / Catalog: 50 / Arrival of the Normandy Train, Saint-Lazare Station / La Gare Saint-Lazare, le train de Normandie / The Art Institute of Chicago, Mr. and Mrs. Martin A. / Ryerson Collection (1933.1158) (fig. 16.81)
Label
Location: backing board
Method: printed label with handwritten script
Content: MANET, MONET / LA GARE SAINT-LAZARE / Musée d’Orsay / 9 février–17 mai 1998 / M’O / CAT. 47 (fig. 16.82)
Label
Location: backing board
Method: typewritten script on printed label (with handwritten check mark in upper right corner)
Content: [logo] National Gallery of Art / Washington, D.C. / Dex ID. 55 / Exhibit: Manet, Monet, and the Gare / Date: 06/14/98–09/20/98 / Artist: Claude Monet / Title: Arrival of the Normandy Train, / Gare Saint-Lazare / Lender: The Art Institute of Chicago / Cat No. 47 (fig. 16.83)
Label
Location: backing board
Method: printed label
Content: rmn [logo] / Claude Monet 1840–1926 / Galeries nationales, Grand Palais / 22/09/2010–24/01/2011 / 42 / Chicago / The Art Institute of Chicago / La Gare Saint-Lazare, train de Normandie / inv. 1933.1158 / huile sur toile (fig. 16.84 )
Westinghouse X-ray unit, scanned on Epson Expressions 10000XL flatbed scanner. Scans digitally composited by Robert G. Erdmann, University of Arizona.
Goodrich/ Sensors Unlimited SU640SDV-1.7RT with H filter (1.1–1.4 µm) and J filter (1.5–1.7 µm); Fujifilm S5 Pro with X-Nite 1000B/2 mm filter (1.0–1.1 µm); Inframetrics Infracam with 1.5–1.73 µm filter.
Fujifilm S5 Pro with X-Nite 1000B/2 mm filter (1.0–1.1 µm).
Natural-light, raking-light, and transmitted-light overalls and macrophotography: Fujifilm S5 Pro with X-NiteCC1 filter.
Fujifilm S5 Pro with X-NiteCC1 filter and Kodak Wratten 2E filter.
Sinar P3 camera with Sinarback eVolution 75 H (PECA 918 UV/IR interference cut filter and Kodak Wratten 2E filter).
Sample and cross-sectional analysis using a Zeiss Axioplan2 Research Microscope equipped with reflected light/[glossary:UV fluorescence] and a Zeiss AxioCam MRc5 digital camera. Types of illumination used: [glossary:darkfield], differential interference contrast ([glossary:DIC]), and UV. In situ photomicrographs with a Wild Heerbrugg M7A StereoZoom Microscope fitted with an Olympus DP71 microscope digital camera.
Several spots on the painting were analyzed in situ with a Bruker/Keymaster TRACeR III-V with rhodium tube.
Zeiss Universal research microscope.
[glossary:Cross sections] were analyzed after carbon coating with a Hitachi S-3400N-II VP-SEM with an Oxford EDS and a Hitachi solid-state [glossary:BSE] detector. Analysis was performed at the Northwestern University Atomic and Nanoscale Characterization Experimental (NUANCE) Center, Electron Probe Instrumentation Center (EPIC) facility.
Applied Research Laboratories (ARL) electron microprobe analyzer. Analysis was carried out at McCrone Associates, Chicago, Illinois
Thread count and [glossary:weave] information were determined by Thread Count Automation Project software.90
Overlay images registered using a novel image-based algorithm developed by Damon M. Conover (GW), John K. Delaney (GW, NGA), and Murray H. Loew (GW) of the George Washington University’s the School of Engineering and Applied Science and the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.91
The image inventory compiles records of all known images of the artwork on file in the Conservation Department, the Imaging Department, and the Department of Medieval to Modern European Painting and Sculpture at the Art Institute of Chicago (fig. 16.85).
Footnotes:[glossary:PLM] and [glossary:XRF] analysis, in conjunction with microscopic and [glossary:UV] examination of the painting surface, indicates that the paint mixture for the signature (t) contains red lake, cobalt blue, viridian, and some angular, opaque, black particles (possibly charcoal). Charcoal particles were also detected in several of the paint samples. Although no [glossary:underdrawing] was detected with [glossary:infrared reflectography] (IRR) or microscopic examination, it is possible that the charcoal particles are associated with limited underdrawing that became incorporated into the paint when painted over. Where charcoal underdrawing was detected in other Monet paintings, the material present was minimal—usually not detectable with IRR—and similar black particles were also observed in the paint samples. XRF analysis indicates that the date contains viridian, cadmium yellow, and cobalt blue. Other [glossary:pigments] may also be present. The paint scraping taken in 1977 was reexamined in 2013. See Inge Fiedler, “1933_1158_Monet_PLM_Results,” Oct. 16, 2013, and Kimberley Muir, “Mon_Gare_33_1158_XRF_Results,” Nov. 16, 2011, on file in the Conservation Department, Art Institute of Chicago.
Flax was confirmed by microscopic cross-sectional fiber identification. See Inge Fiedler, “1933_1158_Monet_analytical_report,” Oct. 25, 2013, on file in the Conservation Department, Art Institute of Chicago.
See, for example, the chart of standard sizes available from Bourgeois Aîné in 1888, reproduced in David Bomford, Jo Kirby, John Leighton, and Ashok Roy, Art in the Making: Impressionism, exh. cat. (National Gallery, London/Yale University Press, 1990), p. 46, fig. 31.
[glossary:Thread count] and [glossary:weave] information determined by Thread Count Automation Project software; see Don H. Johnson and Robert G. Erdmann, “Thread Count Report: Claude Monet, Arrival of the Normandy Train, Gare Saint-Lazare (W0440/1933.1158),” Aug. 2011.
The strong [glossary:cusping] present along the right edge may be [glossary:primary cusping] related to the attachment of the larger [glossary:canvas], from which this canvas was cut, to the commercial priming frame.
The construction and patina suggest that the [glossary:stretcher] may have been original or was added early in the painting’s lifetime.
The construction of the [glossary:stretcher] appears similar to that of The Gare Saint-Lazare (1877; National Gallery, London [W441]), which is a no. 20 landscape format and has the stamp of the stretcher maker Hostellet on the stretcher [glossary:crossbar], as well as the stamp of the supplier Deforge Carpentier on the canvas back; see David Bomford, Jo Kirby, John Leighton, and Ashok Roy, Art in the Making: Impressionism, exh. cat. (National Gallery, London/Yale University Press, 1990), pp. 50, 166. The number preceded by a W refers to the Monet catalogue raisonné; see Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné/Werkverzeichnis, vols. 1–4 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996).
It should be noted, however, that the painting has been lined with an aqueous adhesive and that the fluorescing layer could be related to [glossary:lining] adhesive that has penetrated the [glossary:canvas]. See Inge Fiedler, “1933_1158_Monet_analytical_report,” Oct. 25, 2013, on file in the Conservation Department, Art Institute of Chicago.
See Inge Fiedler, “1933_1158_Monet_analytical_report,” Oct. 25, 2013, on file in the Conservation Department, Art Institute of Chicago.
See Inge Fiedler, “1933_1158_Monet_analytical_report,” Oct. 25, 2013, and Kimberley Muir, “Mon_Gare_33_1158_XRF_Results,” Nov. 16, 2012 on file in the Conservation Department, Art Institute of Chicago. The ground layer of Monet’s The Gare Saint-Lazare (National Gallery, London [W441]), also painted in 1877, was analyzed by [glossary:X-ray] diffraction and laser microprobe and found to contain primarily lead white with lesser amounts of iron and barium. See Ashok Roy, “The Palettes of Three Impressionist Paintings,” National Gallery Technical Bulletin 9 (1985), pp. 12–20. The number preceded by a W refers to the Monet catalogue raisonné; see Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné/Werkverzeichnis, vols. 1–4 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996).
Although no [glossary:underdrawing] was detected, some angular, opaque, black particles (possibly charcoal) were detected in several of the paint samples (see Inge Fiedler, “1933_1158_Monet_PLM_Results,” Oct. 16, 2013, on file in the Conservation Department, Art Institute of Chicago). It is possible that the charcoal particles are associated with limited underdrawing that became incorporated into the paint when painted over. Where charcoal underdrawing was detected in other Monet paintings, the material present was minimal—usually not detectable with [glossary:infrared reflectography] (IRR)—and similar black particles were also observed in the paint samples.
The position of the disturbed paint suggests that it could have been caused by an easel cleat.
[glossary:SEM/EDX] analysis of deep red particles detected tin and aluminum, which may indicate that the red lake is precipitated on a tin and aluminum substrate. See Inge Fiedler, “1933_1158_Monet_analytical_report,” Oct. 25, 2013, on file in the Conservation Department, Art Institute of Chicago. Aluminum and tin were also detected in association with the red lake in Monet’s The Gare Saint-Lazare (National Gallery, London [W441]), also painted in 1877. See David Bomford, Jo Kirby, John Leighton, and Ashok Roy, Art in the Making: Impressionism, exh. cat. (National Gallery, London/Yale University Press, 1990), p. 201.
The [glossary:pigments] were identified by the following methods: lead white, iron oxides, vermilion, viridian, cobalt blue ([glossary:SEM/EDX], [glossary:PLM], [glossary:XRF]); red lake, bone black (PLM, SEM/EDX); cadmium yellow (PLM, XRF); chrome yellow, ultramarine blue (PLM). Starch particles were identified in many of the paint samples analyzed with PLM and SEM/EDX and were probably added by the manufacturer. Analysis was carried out on selected areas and may not include all pigments present in the painting. Paint scrapings taken in 1977 were reexamined in 2013. For more detailed results and conditions used, see Inge Fiedler, “1933_1158_Monet_PLM_Results,” Oct. 16, 2013; Inge Fiedler, “1933_1158_Monet_analytical_report,” Oct. 25, 2013; and Kimberley Muir, “Mon_Gare_33_1158_XRF_Results,” Nov. 16, 2012, on file in the Conservation Department, Art Institute of Chicago.
A few differences between the [glossary:palette] of this painting and Monet’s The Gare Saint-Lazare (National Gallery, London [W441]) also painted in 1877, can be noted. The palette reported for the National Gallery’s painting includes lead white, chrome yellow, vermilion, red lake on an aluminum/tin [glossary:substrate], ultramarine blue, cobalt blue, cerulean blue, viridian, emerald green, and bone black. Notable are the inclusion of cerulean blue and emerald green, and the absence of iron oxides and cadmium yellow in the National Gallery painting. See David Bomford, Jo Kirby, John Leighton, and Ashok Roy, Art in the Making: Impressionism (National Gallery, London/Yale University Press, 1990), pp. 166–71, 201. The number preceded by a W refers to the Monet catalogue raisonné; see Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné/Werkverzeichnis, vols. 1–4 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996).
Identifying the specific type of lake used only by its [glossary:fluorescence] under [glossary:UV] is difficult, as many factors, including the type of [glossary:substrate], binders, varnishes and admixtures with other [glossary:pigments], can ultimately affect the perceived color of the fluorescence. Some types of madder and purpurin [glossary:lake pigments] have been reported to fluoresce orange, but other lakes, such as lacs, may fluoresce as well. The characteristics of red lakes, including their fluorescence under ultraviolet light, are discussed in Helmut Schweppe and John Winter, “Madder and Alizarin,” in Artists’ Pigments: A Handbook of Their History and Characteristics, ed. Elisabeth West FitzHugh, vol. 3 (National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., 1997), pp. 124–26. See also Ruth Johnston-Feller, Color Science in the Examination of Museum Objects: Nondestructive Procedures (Getty Conservation Institute, 2001), p. 207.
The [glossary:binding medium] was not analyzed. The estimation of an [glossary:oil] medium is based on visual examination, as well as on knowledge of Monet’s technique and published analyses of Monet paintings in other collections. Samples analyzed from The Gare Saint-Lazare (1877; National Gallery, London [W441]) were found to include linseed oil and poppy oil, alone and mixed together. See David Bomford, Jo Kirby, John Leighton, and Ashok Roy, Art in the Making: Impressionism , exh. cat. (National Gallery, London/Yale University Press, 1990), pp. 72–75. The number preceded by a W refers to the Monet catalogue raisonné; see Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné/Werkverzeichnis, vols. 1–4 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996).
See Alfred Jakstas, treatment record, Jan. 22, 1962, on file in the Conservation Department, Art Institute of Chicago.
Kirk Vuillemot, “Monet Frame Descriptions Final,” Dec. 3, 2013, on file in the Conservation Department, Art Institute of Chicago.
Kirk Vuillemot, “Monet Frame Descriptions Final,” Dec. 3, 2013, on file in the Conservation Department, Art Institute of Chicago.
This transcribed label likely corresponds to the exhibition Munich, Haus der Kunst München, Französische Malerei des 19. Jahrhunderts: Von David bis Cézanne, Oct. 7, 1964–Jan. 6, 1965, cat. 191 (ill.).
See Don H. Johnson, C. Richard Johnson, Jr., Andrew G. Klein, William A. Sethares, H. Lee, and Ella Hendriks, “A Thread Counting Algorithm for Art Forensics,” 2009 IEEE Thirteenth Digital Signal Processing and Fifth IEEE Signal Processing Education Workshop (IEEE, 2009), pp. 679–84; doi:10.1109/DSP.2009.4786009.
See Damon M. Conover, John K. Delaney, Paola Ricciardi, and Murray H. Loew, “Towards Automatic Registration of Technical Images of Works of Art,” in Computer Vision and Image.
This is the text for footnote 1 (ref 23)
As Paul Tucker has posited, Monet’s discontent with the area was the result of its growth as an industrial and tourist destination, which ran counter to Monet’s pictorial aims. See Paul Hayes Tucker, The Impressionists at Argenteuil, exh. cat. (National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C./Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art/Yale University Press, 2000), p. 40.
Monet moved into his studio at 17, rue Moncey, nearby the Saint-Lazare train station, by January 17, 1877, thanks to Caillebotte, who paid the annual rent of 700 francs. See Charles F. Stuckey, with the assistance of Sophia Shaw, Claude Monet, 1840–1926, exh. cat. (Art Institute of Chicago/Thames & Hudson, 1995), p. 202, citing Monet to Charpentier, Jan. 17, 1877, in Daniel Wildenstein, Claude Monet: Biographie et catalogue raisonné, vol. 1 (Bibliothèque des Arts, 1974), p. 431, letter 101. Juliet Bareau points out that without a Paris studio, Monet needed a pied-à-terre, a place to store canvases and work on them during inhospitable weather. See Juliet Wilson-Bareau, Manet, Monet, and the Gare Saint-Lazare, exh. cat. (National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C./Yale University Press, 1998), p. 105. Wildenstein further suggests that Monet used the rue Moncey pied-à-terre as a place to conduct business with those who were unable to travel out to Argenteuil. See Daniel Wildenstein, Monet, or The Triumph of Impressionism, cat. rais., vol. 1 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), p. 125.
Paul Hayes Tucker, Claude Monet: Life and Art (Yale University Press, 1995), p. 91. Monet worked on the Hoschedé commission for about six months, July–December 1876, resulting in four decorative panels: Les dindons (Turkeys) (1877; Musée d’Orsay, Paris [W416]); Coin de jardin à Montgeron (The Garden at Montgeron) (1876; State Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg [W418]); L’étang à Montgeron (The Pond at Montgeron) (1876; State Hermitage, Saint Petersburg [W420]); and La chasse (Hunting) (1876; Musée de la Chasse et de la Nature, Hôtel Guénégaud, Paris [W433]). According to Charles Stuckey, Monet was invited to Château de Rottenbourg in September 1876 and stayed through December; see Charles F. Stuckey, with the assistance of Sophia Shaw, Claude Monet, 1840–1926, exh. cat. (Art Institute of Chicago/Thames & Hudson, 1995), p. 201. The number preceded by a W refers to the Monet catalogue raisonné; see Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné/Werkverzeichnis, vols. 1–4 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996).
See Charles F. Stuckey, with the assistance of Sophia Shaw, Claude Monet, 1840–1926, exh. cat. (Art Institute of Chicago/Thames & Hudson, 1995), pp. 201–02. Scholarly opinions differs on the nature of the relationship between Monet and Alice during the Château de Rottembourg commission. Both Stuckey and Wildenstein suggest that an affair between the two began during this extended stay in Montgeron. Daniel Wildenstein further mentions that the last of Alice’s children, Jean-Pierre Hoschedé was born nine months later on August 20, 1877; see Wildenstein, Monet, or The Triumph of Impressionism, cat. rais., vol. 1 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), p. 125. Mary Mathews Gedo rejects this supposition, suggesting that Alice’s strong religious beliefs would have precluded the start of their relationship at this time; see Gedo, Monet and His Muse: Camille Monet in the Artist’s Life (University of Chicago Press, 2010), p. 183.
Mary Mathews Gedo, Monet and His Muse: Camille Monet in the Artist’s Life (University of Chicago Press, 2010), p. 177.
The design and construction of the Pont de l’Europe was the joint venture of the Compagnie de l’Ouest and the Société Fives Lill Cail. See Julia Sagraves, “The Street,” in Anne Distel, Douglas W. Druick, Gloria Groom, and Rodolphe Rapetti, with Julia Sagraves and an essay by Kirk Varnedoe, Gustave Caillebotte: Urban Impressionist, exh. cat. (Réunion des Musées Nationaux/Musée d’Orsay, Paris/Art Institute of Chicago/ Abbeville, 1995), pp. 97; 101, n. 71. For more on the history of the Gare Saint-Lazare and the Pont de l’Europe, see Juliet Wilson-Bareau, Manet, Monet, and the Gare Saint-Lazare, exh. cat. (National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C./Yale University Press, 1998), pp. 65–76.
Julia Sagraves, “The Street,” in Anne Distel, Douglas W. Druick, Gloria Groom, and Rodolphe Rapetti, with Julia Sagraves and an essay by Kirk Varnedoe, Gustave Caillebotte: Urban Impressionist, exh. cat. (Réunion des Musées Nationaux/Musée d’Orsay, Paris/Art Institute of Chicago/Abbeville, 1995), p. 97.
See Jean Renoir, Renoir: My Father, trans. Randolph and Dorothy Weaver (Little, Brown, 1962), pp. 174–75. According to Jean, when asking for permission to paint the station, Monet told the stationmaster, “For a long time I have hesitated between North station and yours, but in the end I think yours has more character.” In a letter dated January 7, 1877, Monet mentions that he has had difficulty obtaining permission to paint the Gare Saint-Lazare station. See Daniel Wildenstein, Claude Monet: Biographie et catalogue raisonné, vol. 1 (Bibliothèque des Arts, 1974), p. 431, letter 100.
James Rubin postulates Monet may have worked in sketchbooks while waiting to hear whether the permission to work in the station had been granted. James H. Rubin, Impressionism and the Modern Landscape: Productivity, Technology, and Urbanization from Manet to Van Gogh (University of California Press, 2008), p. 116. A digital presentation of Monet’s sketchbooks from the Musée Marmottan Monet, presented by the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute, Williamstown, Mass., is available at http://www.clarkart.edu/exhibitions/monet/sketchbooks.
The number preceded by a D refers to Daniel Wildenstein, Claude Monet: Catalogue raisonné, vol. 5, Supplément aux peintures: Dessins; Pastels; Index (Wildenstein Institute, 1991).
Although we cannot know for certain that Monet knew of Caillebotte’s painting, it was discussed in the Impressionist circle while Caillebotte was still working on it in 1876 and 1877, before he showed it in the third Impressionist exhibition along with Monet’s Gare series.
See Jean Renoir, Renoir: My Father, trans. Randolph and Dorothy Weaver (Little, Brown, 1962), pp. 174–75. Jean Renoir relays the (likely apocryphal) story of how Monet worked within the Saint-Lazare train station. According to Jean, after gaining access to the station Monet had trains stopped and platforms cleared, and “the engines were crammed with coal so as to give out all the smoke Monet desired.” While this story is likely to some extent hyperbole, it is often recounted when discussing the Gare Saint-Lazare group of paintings. See Joseph Baillio and Cora Michael, “Highlights of the Exhibition,” in Wildenstein and Co., Claude Monet (1840–1926): A Tribute to Daniel Wildenstein and Katia Granoff, exh. cat. (Wildenstein, 2007), p. 194; and Karin Sagner-Düchting, Claude Monet, 1840–1926: A Feast for the Eyes, trans. Karen Williams (Taschen, 2004), p. 94.
The number preceded by a W refers to the Monet catalogue raisonné; see Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné/Werkverzeichnis, vols. 1–4 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996).
Juliet Wilson-Bareau, Manet, Monet, and the Gare Saint-Lazare, exh. cat. (National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C./Yale University Press, 1998), pp. 106–09. According to John House, Monet likely reused canvases when he was not financially sound, mostly prior to 1880 (see, e.g., The Gare Saint-Lazare, Exterior View; 1877 [W447]), and the “few traced examples of reused canvases after 1880 were all executed on Monet’s travels, when he would have been more reluctant to scrap abortive starts for fear of being unable to obtain fresh materials,” even though he may have been able to afford to discard canvases. See John House, Monet: Nature into Art (Yale University Press, 1986), pp. 183–84. The number preceded by a W refers to the Monet catalogue raisonné; see Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné/Werkverzeichnis, vols. 1–4 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996).
See Catalogue de la 3e exposition de peinture, exh. cat. (E. Capiomont et V. Renault, 1877), p. 9, cat. 97. Reprinted in Theodore Reff, Impressionist Group Exhibitions, Modern Art in Paris 23 (Garland, 1981), n.pag. See Charles S. Moffett, ed., The New Painting: Impressionism, 1874–1886, exh. cat. (Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, 1986), pp. 205; and Juliet Wilson-Bareau, Manet, Monet, and the Gare Saint-Lazare, exh. cat. (National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C./Yale University Press, 1998), p. 188, n. 83, for more on the identification of the Art Institute’s painting as cat. 97 and the other Gare paintings included in the exhibition.
“M. Claude Monet is the most marked personality of the group. This year he is exhibiting some superb station interiors. One can hear the rumble of the trains surging forward, see the torrents of smoke winding through vast engine sheds. This is the painting of today: modern settings beautiful in their scope.” See Sylvie Gache-Patin, “The Urban Landscape,” in A Day in the Country: Impressionism and the French Landscape, ed. Andrea P. A. Belloli, exh. cat. (Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 1984), pp. 116; 117, n. 16, citing Émile Zola, Mon salon; Manet; Écrits sur l’art, ed. A. Ehrard (Paris, 1970), p. 282.
Among the positive reviewers was Émile Zola, who ten years earlier had praised Monet for painting the poetry of la Parisienne (on the occasion of his Camille, shown at the Salon of 1866 and now in the Kunsthaus Bremen [1866 (W65)]), and now admonished modern artists to find “the poetry of railway stations as our fathers [Barbizon painters] found the poetry of forests and rivers.” See Sylvie Gache-Patin, “The Urban Landscape,” in A Day in the Country: Impressionism and the French Landscape, ed. Andrea P. A. Belloli, exh. cat. (Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 1984), pp. 116; 117, n. 16, citing Émile Zola, Mon salon, Manet, écrits sur l’art, ed. A. Ehrard (Paris, 1970), p. 282.
Charles Bigot, “Causerie artistique. L’exposition des ‘Impressionnistes,’” La revue politique et littéraire, Apr. 28, 1877, p. 1047, translated in Charles S. Moffett, ed., The New Painting: Impressionism, 1874–1886, exh. cat. (Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, 1986), p. 223: “These various studies are certainly not uninteresting, and one of them seems excellent. It is the one exhibited closest to the window [of the gallery], at the bottom, that shows an interior of the train station. The number is missing from the frame, but I am told it is no. 97, Arrivée du train de Normandie, and belonging to M. Hoscedé [sic].”
Richard R. Brettell, “The ‘First’ Exhibition of Impressionist Painters,” in The New Painting: Impressionism, 1874–1886, ed. Charles S. Moffett, exh. cat. (Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, 1986), p. 198. On the difference between “esquise” verses “tableau” and Monet’s attitude toward finish, see John House, Monet: Nature into Art (Yale University Press, 1986), pp. 157–166, specifically p. 161 for the Gare paintings.
For a detailed map highlighting the locations of paintings made in and around the Gare Saint-Lazare by Manet, Monet, and Caillebotte, as well as the locations of their Paris homes and studios, see Juliet Wilson-Bareau, Manet, Monet, and the Gare Saint-Lazare, exh. cat. (National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C./Yale University Press, 1998), pp. 6–7. Manet had exhibited his own railway painting (1873; National Gallery, Washington, D.C.) at the Salon of 1874 and continued to live on the rue de Rome overlooking the Gare Saint-Lazare. This was not lost on reviewers who commented on the “‘School of the Place de l’Europe,’ after the neighbor of M. Manet, of whom they [the Impressionists] are both the emulators and the contradictors.” Ernest Fillonneau, “Les impressionnistes,” Moniteur des arts, Apr. 20, 1877), p. 1, reprinted in Ruth Berson, ed., The New Painting: Impressionism, 1874–1886, Documentation, vol. 1, Reviews (Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco/University of Washington Press, 1996), p. 146.
The number preceded by a W refers to the Monet catalogue raisonné; see Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné/Werkverzeichnis, vols. 1–4 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996).
Juliet Wilson-Bareau, Manet, Monet, and the Gare Saint-Lazare, exh. cat. (National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C./Yale University Press, 1998), pp. 111, 114. See also James H. Rubin, Impressionism and the Modern Landscape: Productivity, Technology, and Urbanization from Manet to Van Gogh (University of California Press, 2008),p. 116, who describes the parcels depot as storage sheds.
Juliet Wilson-Bareau, Manet, Monet, and the Gare Saint-Lazare, exh. cat. (National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C./Yale University Press, 1998), pp. 105; 188, n. 83. For more on the third Impressionist exhibition, see Richard R. Brettell, “The ‘First’ Exhibition of Impressionist Painters,” in The New Painting: Impressionism, 1874–1886, ed. Charles S. Moffett, exh. cat. (Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, 1986), pp. 189–240.
Although there is no evidence that de Bellio acquired the Chicago painting directly from the bankruptcy sale of Hoschedé’s art collection, his ownership of the work dates from that same year. On Hoschedé’s bankruptcy, see Hélène Adhémar, “Ernest Hoschedé,” in Aspects of Monet: A Symposium on the Artist’s Life and Times, ed. John Rewald and Frances Weitzenhoffer (Abrams, 1984), pp. 54–71; and on Hoschedé and de Bellio as collectors, see Anne Distel, Impressionism, The First Collectors, 1874–1886, trans. Barbara Perroud-Benson (Abrams, 1990), pp. 95–123.
Arrival of the Normandy Train, Gare Saint-Lazare (W440) corresponds to Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné/Werkverzeichnis, vol. 2, Nos. 1–968 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), pp. 178, cat. 440 (ill.); 179–80. The Art Institute currently uses the title that was given to the painting when it was exhibited at the third Impressionist exhibition. The painting had the following titles during the lifetime of the artist:
Apr. 1877: Arrivée du train de Normandie, gare St-Lazare (Catalogue de la 3e exposition de peinture, exh. cat. [E. Capiomont et V. Renault, 1877], p. 9, cat. 97).
June 21, 1889: Gare Saint-Lazare. 1877 (Galerie Georges Petit, Claude Monet—A. Rodin, exh. cat. [Imp. de l’Art, 1889], p. 31, cat. 33).
May 1, 1900: Le Train de Normandie (Ludovic Baschet, ed., Catalogue officiel illustré de l’Exposition centennale de l’art français de 1800 à 1889, exh. cat. [Lemercier, 1900], p. 211, cat. 484).
Feb. 25, 1904: La Gare Saint-Lazare (Octave Maus, Exposition des peintres impressionnistes, exh. cat. [Libre Esthétique, 1904], p. 39, cat. 98).
Oct. 13, 1911: La gare Saint-Lazare, le train de Normandie (Durand-Ruel, Paris, stock book for 1901 [no. 9749]; Paul-Louis Durand-Ruel and Flavie Durand-Ruel, Durand-Ruel Archives, to the Art Institute of Chicago, Oct. 5, 2010, curatorial object file, Art Institute of Chicago).
Dec. 16, 1911: Paris, la Gare Saint-Lazare, 1877 (Durand-Ruel, New York, stock book for 1904–24 [no. 3502]; see Paul-Louis Durand-Ruel and Flavie Durand-Ruel, Durand-Ruel Archives, to the Art Institute of Chicago, Oct. 5, 2010, curatorial object file, Art Institute of Chicago).
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According to Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné/Werkverzeichnis, vol. 2, Nos. 1–968 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), pp. 178, cat. 440 (ill.); 179–80.
Wildenstein states that several views of the Gare Saint-Lazare appear in a list of sales recorded by Monet in March 1877, and further suggests that the list includes the sale of this picture to Hoschedé (“Dès le mois de mars 1877, plusieurs vues de “La Gare Saint-Lazare” apparaissent dans la liste des ventes enregistrées par Monet: Ernest le magnifique en acquiert trois à lui seul [439, 440, 445]”); see Daniel Wildenstein, Claude Monet: Biographie et catalogue raisonné, vol. 1 (Bibliothèque des Arts, 1974), p. 84.
According to Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné/Werkverzeichnis, vol. 2, Nos. 1–968 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), pp. 178, cat. 440 (ill.); 179–80.
See Remus Niculescu, “Georges de Bellio, l’ami des impressionnistes (II),” Paragone 249 (Nov. 1970), pp. 56–85, which republished an inventory of Georges de Bellio’s collection, in which the painting is catalogued as no. 79, Intérieur de gare.
According to Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné/Werkverzeichnis, vol. 2, Nos. 1–968 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), pp. 178, cat. 440 (ill.); 179–80.
According to Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné/Werkverzeichnis, vol. 2, Nos. 1–968 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), pp. 178, cat. 440 (ill.); 179–80.
The transaction is recorded in the Durand-Ruel, Paris, stock book for 1901 (no. 9749, as La gare Saint-Lazare, le train de Normandie): “Acheté par Durand-Ruel Paris (stock 9749) à P. Rosenberg le 13 octobre 1911 pour 13000 francs, La gare Saint-Lazare, le train de Normandie,” as confirmed by Paul-Louis Durand-Ruel and Flavie Durand-Ruel, Durand-Ruel Archives, to the Art Institute of Chicago, Oct. 5, 2010, curatorial object file, Art Institute of Chicago.
The transaction is recorded in the Durand-Ruel, New York, stock book for 1904–24 (no. 3502, as Paris la gare Saint-Lazare): “Vendu par Durand-Ruel NY (stock 3502) à M. A. Ryerson le 16 décembre 1911 pour $7000, Paris, la Gare Saint-Lazare, 1877,” as confirmed by Paul-Louis Durand-Ruel and Flavie Durand-Ruel, Durand-Ruel Archives, to the Art Institute of Chicago, Oct. 5, 2010, curatorial object file, Art Institute of Chicago. This painting was on loan from Martin A. Ryerson to the Art Institute of Chicago, intermittently, by 1921, according to Museum Registration department artists sheets, on file in Museum Registration, Art Institute of Chicago.
See Paul-Louis Durand-Ruel and Flavie Durand-Ruel, Durand-Ruel Archives, to the Art Institute of Chicago, Oct. 5, 2010, curatorial object file, Art Institute of Chicago.
See Paul-Louis Durand-Ruel and Flavie Durand-Ruel, Durand-Ruel Archives, to the Art Institute of Chicago, Oct. 5, 2010, curatorial object file, Art Institute of Chicago.
This photograph has been dated October 18, 1911, by the Durand-Ruel Archives. See Paul-Louis Durand-Ruel and Flavie Durand-Ruel, Durand-Ruel Archives to the Art Institute of Chicago, Oct. 5, 2010, curatorial object file, Art Institute of Chicago.
The picture was exhibited, but it was not included in the exhibition catalogue. See Remus Niculeseu, “Georges de Bellio, l’ami des impressionnistes,” Revue roumaine d’histoire de l’art 1, 2 (1964), p. 252, n. 2, who suggests that Train de Normandie—mentioned in a letter dated April 29, 1887, in which Monet asks de Bellio to lend the painting to an exposition being organized by Georges Petit—could be the Art Institute’s painting. See also Daniel Wildenstein, Claude Monet: Biographie et catalogue raisonné, vol. 1, Peintures, 1840–1881 (Bibliothèque des Arts, 1974), p. 304, cat. 440, who clarfies that the exhibited picture was the Art Institute’s version.
The dates of this exhibition are unclear. Musée Rodin, Claude Monet—Auguste Rodin: Centenaire de l’exposition de 1889, exh. cat. (Musée Rodin, 1989), p. 19, reports that the exhibition was held from June 21 to August 1889. In Roger Terry Dunn, “The Monet-Rodin Exhibition at the Galerie Georges Petit in 1889” (Ph.D. diss., Northwestern University, 1978), pp. 74–76, Dunn found evidence that the exhibition lasted for three months. The dates used in the present catalogue reflect Dunn’s research; these dates are also used in Charles F. Stuckey, with the assistance of Sophia Shaw, Claude Monet, 1840–1926, exh. cat. (Art Institute of Chicago/Thames & Hudson, 1995), p. 218.
The exhibition catalogue does not include exhibition dates, but newspaper articles confirm that the exhibition opened May 1 and closed November 12. While the Exposition Universelle of 1900 officially opened to the public on April 14—see “Paris Fair to Be Open Today,” Chicago Daily Tribune, Apr. 14, 1900, p. 1—many of the exhibitions had yet to be installed. See “Exposition Nearly Complete,” Chicago Daily Tribune, Apr. 29, 1990, p. 9, which states that the palaces of the Champs-Élysées opened to the public on May 1. See also, “American Exhibits at Paris. Palaces of Fine Arts Inaugurated by President Loubet,” New York Times, May 2, 1900, p. 8. For the closing of the exposition, see “Paris Exposition Closes Its Gates,” New York Times, Nov. 13, 1900, p. 7; and “Big Paris Fair Is Now Closed,” Chicago Daily Tribune, Nov. 13, 1900, p. 3.
According to Daniel Wildenstein, Monet: Catalogue raisonné/Werkverzeichnis, vol. 2, Nos. 1–968 (Taschen/Wildenstein Institute, 1996), pp. 178, cat. 440 (ill.); 179–80.
The exhibition catalogue lists the dates as June 1–November 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–November 1, 1934, but newspaper articles confirm that the exhibition closed on October 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.
The exhibition catalogue lists the exhibition dates as November 4, 1950–February 11, 1951, but the Philadelphia Museum Bulletin states the exhibition opened on November 3. See George D. Widener and Henri Marceau, “The Diamond Jubilee Exhibition,” Philadelphia Museum of Art Bulletin 45, 224 (Winter 1950), p. 79.
The exhibition catalogue does not include exhibition dates, but newspaper articles confirm the exhibition opened on April 20 and closed on July 3. See Aline Saarinen, “U.S.-Lent Works on View in Paris,” New York Times, Apr. 20, 1955, p. C37; and Arthur O. Sulzberger, “Cultural Salute to France Ending,” New York Times, July 3, 1955, p. 34.
The exhibition catalogue is printed in Art Institute of Chicago, “Catalogue,” Art Institute of Chicago Quarterly 51, 2 (Apr. 1, 1957), pp. 33–34. Under “Exhibitions” in the same issue, the exhibition dates were listed as April 1–30; however, 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 reference to the extension of the length of the show. The April 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 Monet paintings were shown together in the museum.
No catalogue was produced for the exhibition, but there is a flyer that accompanied the exhibition; see curatorial object file, Art Institute of Chicago. The flyer includes a typewritten checklist of the European paintings that were included in the exhibition, which includes this painting. See also “Exhibitions,” Bulletin of the Art Institute of Chicago 70, 4 (Jul.–Aug. 1976), p. 20.
The painting was exhibited but was not included in the exhibition catalogue; see Medieval to Modern European Painting and Sculpture cataloguing card in curatorial object file, Art Institute of Chicago. For the associated catalogue, see Neil Harris, Chicago’s Dream, a World’s Treasure: The Art Institute of Chicago, 1893–1993, ed. Teri J. Edelstein, afterword by James N. Wood, exh. cat. (Art Institute of Chicago, 1993).
The dates of the exhibition are according to Wildenstein and Co., Claude Monet (1840–1926): A Tribute to Daniel Wildenstein and Katia Granoff, exh. cat. (Wildenstein, 2007), pp. 238, cat. 21 (ill.); 300–301; 303.
This catalogue was reprinted in Theodore Reff, ed., Impressionist Group Exhibitions, Modern Art in Paris 23 (Garland, 1981), n.pag.
The painting is not titled in the article, but it is described as “l’Arrivée du train de Normandie,” and is identified by Berson as the Art Institute picture. See Ruth Berson, ed., The New Painting: Impressionism, 1874–1886, Documentation, vol. 1, Reviews (Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco/University of Washington Press, 1996), p. 173.
The painting is not titled in this article but rather is referred to when Fillonneau mentions “dont l’un représente l’arrivée du train de Normandie à la gare Saint-Lazare,” and is identified by Berson as the Art Institute picture. See Ruth Berson, ed., The New Painting: Impressionism, 1874–1886, Documentation, vol.1, Reviews (Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco/University of Washington Press, 1996), p. 146.
The painting is not titled in the article, but it is described as “une locomotive en gare. Des ombres se silhouettent et passent dans la fume, des lumières courent en lignes fines sur le mouillé des rails,” and it is identified as the Art Institute painting by Daniel Wildenstein, Claude Monet: Biographie et catalogue raisonné, vol. 1, Peintures, 1840–1881 (Bibliothèque des Arts, 1974), p. 304, cat. 440.
This catalogue was reprinted in Theodore Reff, ed., Miscellaneous Group Exhibitions, Modern Art in Paris 34 (Garland, 1981), n.pag.
The painting is not titled, but it is described as “une locomotive en gare. Des ombres se silhouettent et passent dans la fume, des lumières courent en lignes fines sur le mouillé des rails,” and is identified by Wildenstein as the Art Institute painting. See Daniel Wildenstein, Claude Monet: Biographie et catalogue raisonné, vol. 1, Peintures, 1840–1881 (Bibliothèque des Arts, 1974), p. 304, cat. 440.
This catalogue was reprinted in Theodore Reff, ed., World’s Fair of 1900: Retrospective Exhibition of French Art, 1800–1889, Modern Art in Paris 7 (Garland, 1981), n. pag.
The painting is not titled, but it is described as “ une locomotive en gare. Des ombres se silhouettent et passent dans la fume, des lumières courent en lignes fines sur le mouillé des rails”(p. 272) and is identified by Daniel Wildenstein as the Art Institute painting. See Wildenstein, Claude Monet: Biographie et catalogue raisonné, vol. 1, Peintures, 1840–1881 (Bibliothèque des Arts, 1974), p. 304, cat. 440.
Republished in Camille Mauclair, Claude Monet, 2nd ed. (Rieder, 1927), pp. 61; pl. 20.
Reprinted in Art Institute of Chicago, A Guide to the Paintings in the Permanent Collection (Art Institute of Chicago, 1932), p. 186, cat. 589.13.
This publication reprints (although no catalogue numbers are included) the exhibition catalogue checklist from the 1904 Exposition des peintres impressionnistes in Brussels.
Republished in Art Institute of Chicago, A Brief Illustrated Guide to the Collections (Art Institute of Chicago, 1941), p. 35; Art Institute of Chicago, A Brief Illustrated Guide to the Collections (Art Institute of Chicago, 1945), p. 37; Art Institute of Chicago, An Illustrated Guide to the Collections of the Art Institute of Chicago (Art Institute of Chicago, 1956), pp. 34–35.
The plate image is of the Art Institute’s picture; the caption, however, refers to Gare Saint-Lazare (1877), then at the Musée du Louvre, now at the Musée d’Orsay.
Reprinted in Art Institute of Chicago, Paintings in the Art Institute of Chicago: A Catalogue of the Picture Collection (Art Institute of Chicago, 1968), pp. 279 (ill.), 318–19. See also typescript catalogue supplement, Nov. 15, 1966, p. 41; typescript catalogue supplement, Sept. 15, 1967, p. 41; typescript catalogue supplement, Dec. 18, 1968, p. 61; typescript catalogue supplement, Feb. 10, 1971, p. 77; and typescript catalogue supplement, Sept. 15, 1971, p. 10. Art Institute of Chicago Institutional Archives.
This article is a reprint and expanded version of Remus Niculeseu, “Georges de Bellio, l’ami des impressionnistes,” Revue roumaine d’histoire de l’art 1, 2 (1964), pp. 209–78.
This article is a reprint and expanded version of Remus Niculeseu, “Georges de Bellio, l’ami des impressionnistes,” Revue roumaine d’histoire de l’art 1, 2 (1964), pp. 209–78.
Republished in John Maxon, The Art Institute of Chicago (Abrams, 1977), p. 82 (ill.); and Maxon, The Art Institute of Chicago (Thames & Hudson, 1987), p. 82 (ill.).
Republished in Diane Kelder, The Great Book of French Impressionism (Artabras, 1997), pp. 161; 185, pl. 179; 389.
Republished in The Art Institute of Chicago: The Essential Guide, selected by James N. Wood, rev. ed. (Art Institute of Chicago, 2003), p. 155 (ill.).
The latter was republished as 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, rev. and expanded ed. (Art Institute of Chicago/Yale University Press, 2010; repr. 2013), pp. 19 (ill.); 55; 58 (detail); 59, cat. 22 (ill.); 63; 183.
For an overview of the materials and methods of Claude Monet’s paintings in the Art Institute of Chicago, see Kimberley Muir, Inge Fiedler, Don H. Johnson, and Robert G. Erdmann, “An In-depth Study of the Materials and Technique of Paintings by Claude Monet from the Art Institute of Chicago,” ICOM-CC 17th Triennial Meeting Preprints, Melbourne, Sept. 15–19, 2014 (forthcoming).