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The Rocks at Pourville, Low Tide (1882)
ArtistClaude Monet
YearFrench, 1840-1926
MediumOil on canvas
OwnerMemory Art Gallery Permated Collection, Gift of Emily Sibley Watson, 39.22

Impressionism is famous for its capture of the light at the moment, as the fragmented strokes and variety of colors used on the canvas, aim to create the blur effect and dream feeling. Monet's paintings show a preoccupation with capturing the fleeting effects of light, often creating works where colors are juxtaposed to produce a sense of vibrancy and motion, much like his treatment of light reflecting off water.[1] In this painting, The Rocks at Pourville, Low Tide, 1882 , drawn by Claude Monet, this image presents a seascape that captures the beauty of nature, showing the interaction and intersection of land and sea in tranquility and dynamics, centered on the interaction between jagged coastal rocks and the turbulent sea, with the angular irregularity of the rocks in the foreground emphasizing the cragginess of the shoreline, contrasting with the dark colors and white foam of the broken waves.[2]

This work was nowdays collected at the Memorial Art Gallery in Rochester,NY, as the gift of Emily Sibley Watson.


Monet's Impressionism

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Artistic style

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  • Space

Monet's works during the 1880s and 1890s show a deepening engagement with the unification of elements like sky, sea, and land, creating a seamless sense of time and space [3].

  • Brushstoke

"Verbal definition of the characteristics of an artist's style is always difficult, but in Monet's paintings each stroke of the brush always seems to belong securely within the painting's pictorial space, and, in the treatment of trees and bushes, the foliage and branches always seem to unite into a single organic growing form."[4]

  • Color

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Timelines

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The rich variety of brushstrokes, the use of various colors, the superposition of perspectival effects, and the presentation of natural scenes all reflect Impressionism's pursuit of the role of light and the characteristics of instantaneous scene recording. The natural scene is vague but expresses the strong emotion to viewers. We can see the magnificent sea and feel the cold atmosphere of the coast. But the distant sky, the people communicating on the shore, inject a warm life into the painting.

  1. ^ "Login Required". login.ezp.lib.rochester.edu. Retrieved 2024-10-17.
  2. ^ "Memorial Art Gallery, ARTiculate Fall 2023 (Rochester: Memorial Art Gallery of the University of Rochester, 2023), 2-10".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  3. ^ Schreck-Gaskin, Regina (1999). "Claude Monet's Normandy Coast paintings: A link to the past and a bridge to the future, Michigan State University ProQuest Dissertations & Theses,  . 1398650". Proquest. Retrieved 2024-10-17.
  4. ^ House, John (1978). "The New Monet Catalogue". The Burlington Magazine. 120 (907): 678–639. ISSN 0007-6287.