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| Size | Museum Quality Artworks Hand-Painted with oil paint |
|---|---|
| 23.6 x 21 in 60x54 cm |
$ 725.00 Add to Cart |
| 32 x 28 in 80x72 cm |
$ 805.00 Add to Cart
|
| 40 x 35 in 100cm x 90 cm |
$ 1134.00 Add to Cart |
| 4 x 3.5 ft or 47 ¼ x 42 in 120cm x 108 cm |
$ 1453.00 Add to Cart |
| 5 x 4.4 ft or 59 x 53 in 150cm x 135 cm |
$ 1985.00 Add to Cart |
| 6.6 x 5.9 ft or 78 ¾ x 70 in 200cm x 180 cm |
$ 3024.00 Add to Cart |
| 8.16 x 7.4 ft or 98 ½ x 88 in 250cm x 225 cm |
$ 3938.00 Add to Cart |
| 9.8 x 8.9 ft 300cm x 270 cm |
$ 5670.00 Add to Cart |
| 13.12 x 11.8 ft 400cm x 361 cm |
$ 10108.00 Add to Cart |
| 16.4 x 14.8 ft 500cm x 451 cm |
$ 15785.00 - 20% off $ 12628.00 Add to Cart |
Museum-quality replicas by Paolo: Exceptional product, accurate to the tiniest details, textures and values. Requires skills and time to process, but gives astonishing results. A true work of art for the real connoisseurs.
This is one of the most famous and beloved images in the history of art: "Woman with a Parasol - Madame Monet and Her Son" (1875). Unlike the 1886 version you saw earlier, this original masterpiece features Monet's first wife, Camille, and their son, Jean.
Claude Monet’s Woman with a Parasol - Madame Monet and Her Son is a definitive triumph of the Impressionist movement. Painted in Argenteuil, it captures a fleeting, candid moment on a breezy summer day. By placing the figures on a slight rise and painting them from a low perspective, Monet creates a work that feels as much like a study of the sky and wind as it does a family portrait.
The Low Vantage Point: Monet paints from a low angle, causing Camille to tower gracefully against a sky filled with scudding white clouds. This perspective creates a monumental feel while maintaining a light, airy atmosphere.
Capturing the "Snap-Shot": The painting is famous for its sense of immediacy. Camille’s slight turn and the way her veil and dress swirl in the wind suggest a moment caught in real-time, prefiguring the candid nature of modern photography.
Masterful Use of Light: The sun is positioned behind Camille, creating a "halo" effect around her figure. The parasol casts a cool, green-tinted shadow over her face, while the rest of her white dress reflects the brilliant yellow of the sun and the blue of the sky.
Harmonious Color Palette: Monet uses quick, dappled brushstrokes of cerulean blue, pale yellow, and emerald green. The tiny dabs of yellow in the foreground represent wildflowers, tying the earth directly to the golden light of the sky.
The years in Argenteuil (1871–1878) were some of Monet's most productive. This work is a testament to his happiness and artistic growth during this time. It was exhibited at the Second Impressionist Exhibition in 1876, where it was praised for its luminosity and "unfettered" brushwork.