Комментарии:
What an inspiration.....he was really in love with his wife.....what an introspection....❤❤❤
ОтветитьSo beautiful. ❤️ so sad...
ОтветитьAI could never and will never create anything like this...
ОтветитьFamous after death...and today AI steals his style. What a nasty world of greedy thieves.
ОтветитьI will never understand turning away your own child because of who they fall in love with. If you do that, you failed as a parent
ОтветитьI hate that it looks like she’s being swept away, in wind or in water, but taken :(
ОтветитьWow ❤❤ To be loved like that ❤❤
ОтветитьI wonder if we have artists alive today who are better than Monet but we do not know of, coz the auction houses have an incentive to play them down and play up the ones already dead.
ОтветитьGENTILLE poverty
ОтветитьOhhh haunting!!! Did Casper the ghost show up? Or are you running out of intelligent vocabulary ?
ОтветитьNow I'm crying 😭💕
ОтветитьMannn he loved her sooo muchhh😭❤️
ОтветитьTo be fair he also took his father's money(father had running business which Monet was to inherit) to enroll into arts instead of finance. And then he got himself expelled from said academy...
ОтветитьThat's beautiful
ОтветитьPeace brother
Ответить"When she got pregnant with his child."
No. After he impr*gnated her.* Using the passive voice exonerates men from all responsibility, and places 100% of the burden on women.
In class, my professor said that the story says he was sitting beside her when she passed. He didn't know what to do, and he got an easel and began to paint her. The painting is messy for many obvious reasons such as grief and such, but I don't think he finished it. As he kept painting, he eventually stopped, looked at the painting, at his wife, and then at himself and had a moment of "what am I doing?" So he took the canvas, put it at the back of his storage, and it stayed there.
ОтветитьNow that I've found my person, the only thing that I fear is something happening to them or to me 😢
ОтветитьHe cheated on her, left her alone with the kids while she was sick and only returned at the final stage of her life. Being an artist's muse sounds great but the truth remains that you will be seen as an idealized form of beauty that cant change, cant age or have autonomy besides being an embodiment of the artist's vision. Yes, he was sad but it is also true that he began courting her when she was a minor and that he neglected her pain in favour of his dedication to painting, ultimately leading to her chronic sickness and death.
ОтветитьJust goes to show that no one in the past had a real job, just painting aspirations and predictions for the future… No respect for them
ОтветитьAnd now the world will know her beauty forever.
ОтветитьA story of love and art!🩷🩵💜💚🤍😄
ОтветитьI love Claude Monet. A truly great artist. Thank you for creating this touching video.
ОтветитьI’ve always been a big fan of his paintings and this makes me love his paintings even more knowing that he painted his wife over and over and over again it’s absolutely beautiful. I’m very sorry to find out that the last couple paintings that he did was because he was warning her completely devastating to read this
ОтветитьThis is the true meaning of art. AI will never be able to create this.
ОтветитьHe couldn't waste his final moments with his muse
Ответить😭 i didn’t ask for these feels!
Ответить😭😭😭😭😭💔💔💔💔💔💔💔
ОтветитьThe greatest painter of all time🎉
ОтветитьAh yes true love
ОтветитьSometimes im ok with being too cynical for love. I couldn't deal with having lost someone i built a life with and struggled through it all with. Its unimaginable to me. Sometimes, im fine. Alone. But fine.
ОтветитьNothing wrong with it. She continued to inspire him even in death and there is great beauty in that. I hope he painted her from memory later. Love does not die, we do.
ОтветитьLet’s not glamourise Monet’s (lack of) love for his wife and private life in general. He cheated A LOT and was in general known as a VERY selfish person. He wasn’t a good person.
ОтветитьHis love for her leaps off the canvase.
ОтветитьOh to be loved
ОтветитьHe is my favorite French impressionists. His paintings have a lot of meaning and they seem to Flow
ОтветитьOne of my favorite artists ❤🎉🎭🎨❤Claude Monet 😢🎉❤😂
ОтветитьHe is my favorite.
ОтветитьI taught both Art 🖼️ & Art History to my own Art Students pre-k through Central Michigan University & loved 🥰 my career…all 39 years worth 🎨🖌️🖼️👩🎨
ОтветитьA beautiful live together
ОтветитьOne of the few artists who was an actual good person and really LOVED his wife.
Most were fucking scumbags to their women and women I general.
I think that they won the lottery that's why they bought the house and the garden
ОтветитьMonet was my 'first love' as an art lover. I have had at least one print of his work in my home for over 30 yrs.
ОтветитьShe brought life into him that no money could buy
Ответитьhe loved to paint and he painted what he loved
ОтветитьHis use of color is the best of all the artists I have seen. What is it with some parents that will not support their children when they fall in love.
ОтветитьIt’s interesting to note that there’s a lack of color to the painting of his wife after death, as if the whole world became dull and grey with her passing.
He managed to show grief in its most vivid form: A loss of color. A loss of joy and innocence and love.
My favorite! A truly gifted artist 🎨 ❤
ОтветитьWhy is such stupid concept allowed on here ?
Ответить"Camille Monet on Her Deathbed," 1879 by Claude Monet
Short background on them 👇
Claude Monet, one of the founders of French Impressionism, shared a deeply emotional and artistic bond with his first wife, Camille Doncieux. Camille was not only his muse but also the subject of many of his early works. The two met when Camille modeled for him around 1865, and they married in 1870. Despite financial hardship, Camille supported Monet's career and bore him two sons. Their life together was marked by beauty and struggle, often captured through Monet’s brush.
Camille's health deteriorated after the birth of their second son, and she died in 1879 at the young age of 32. Grief-stricken, Monet painted Camille Monet on her deathbed, a hauntingly tender portrait that reveals both his love and sorrow. The painting, bathed in soft, almost ethereal light, captures the moment with an impressionist’s sensitivity—less about physical accuracy and more about the emotional atmosphere. Monet later described the experience of painting her as both torturous and therapeutic, marking a turning point in his artistic and personal life.
Thanks for enjoying and learning about this beautiful art piece with me! ❤️