Claude Monet - The Doges' Palace Seen from San Giorgio Maggiore, Venice 1908

Claude Monet - The Doges, Palace Seen from San Giorgio Maggiore 1908 Claude Monet - The Doges' Palace Seen from San Giorgio Maggiore, Venice 1908 Claude Monet - The Doges' Palace Seen from San Giorgio Maggiore 1908 Claude Monet - The Doges' Palace Seen from San Giorgio Maggiore, Venice 1908 Claude Monet - The Doges' Palace Seen from San Giorgio Maggiore 1908 Claude Monet - The Doges' Palace 1908 Claude Monet - The Grand Canal 1908
Claude Monet - The Doges' Palace Seen from San Giorgio Maggiore, Venice 1908

The Doges' Palace Seen from San Giorgio Maggiore, Venice 1908
65x92cm oil/canvas
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA
The image is only being used for informational and educational purposes

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From Metropolitan Museum of Art:
Monet visited Venice for the first time in autumn 1908. Captivated by the "unique light," he embarked on a painting campaign featuring four different areas of the cityscape. He began each day with views such as this one, showing the airy façade of the Doge’s Palace from across the water on the islet of San Giorgio Maggiore. Monet departed Venice reluctantly, writing "It's so beautiful … I console myself with the thought of returning next year, for I was only able to make attempts, beginnings." Although he never returned, Monet continued working on his canvases. The present picture and twenty-eight others were exhibited to acclaim in Paris in the spring of 1912.