PRODUCT NAME
Pomegranate Claude Monet - Sailboats on the Seine 1000 Piece Jigsaw Puzzle 25 x 20in
PRODUCT CODE: PROD960314810
PRODUCT INFORMATION
Thoughtfully conceived and engagingly intricate, Pomegranate interlocking jigsaw puzzles combine superb color reproduction, stunning and unusual images, and sturdy construction to delight generations of novice and veteran puzzleworkers.
In the latter part of the nineteenth century, Claude Monet (French, 1840-1926) was one of a daring group of French painters who turned away from academic tradition and developed a fresh, spontaneous style devoted to the pursuit of light and its fleeting effects on sky, water, and land.
Painted in 1874, the year of the group''s first exhibition in Paris, Monet''s Sailboats on the Seine at Petit-Gennevilliers reflects the emergence of the artist''s mature style.
Published with the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco
Completed puzzle is 25 x 20 inches.
Technical Details
Product Details
Product Dimensions
Package Dimensions
Width : 9.88 inch
Height : 2.09 inch
Length : 12.99 inch
Item Weight: 0 ounce (View shipping rates and policies)
Shipping Weight: 0 ounce (View shipping rates and policies)
ASIN : B06XC88MCJ
Product Description
In the latter part of the nineteenth century, Claude Monet (French, 1840-1926) was one of a daring group of French painters who turned away from academic tradition and developed a fresh, spontaneous style devoted to the pursuit of light and its fleeting effects on sky, water, and land. Painted in 1874, the year of the group''s first exhibition in Paris, Monet''s Sailboats on the Seine at Petit-Gennevilliers reflects the emergence of the artist''s mature style. His agile brushwork was superbly suited to the evanescent interplay of sunlight and water. The group-whose ''Impressionists'' moniker was inspired by critical attention directed at another of Monet''s paintings, Impressionism: Sunrise-deftly captured scenes of everyday life in flickering brushstrokes, bold colors, and soft atmospheric effects. Water and the reflections of landscapes would become an obsession for Monet, and Edouard Manet, one of his contemporaries, would speak admiringly of him as ''the Raphael of water.''