Below you can find two videos. You can imagine you're Monet is you like (if you ignore the noise from cars and other visitors!) and take
- A walk around Giverny - #1 The Water Garden - a non-stop walk around the perimeter of the water garden at Giverny. It was 12 minutes but I've snipped and shaved it down to 2 seconds under 10 minutes
- A walk around Giverny - #2 The Clos Normand (the flower garden) - the walk back up to the house through the Clos Normand (flower garden) to the door into 'la maison'
Below you can also see a drawing I'm still working on of the water garden at Giverny - based on a sketch of the same scene.
(Work in Progress) The Water Garden at Giverny 9" x 12", coloured pencils on Arches HP copyright Katherine Tyrrell |
For people who have not read about Monet and his gardens before, here's a note of my previous posts on this blog about Monet and gardens:
Giverny
- Gardens in Art continues - with Monet
- Gardens in Art: Monet and the flower garden at Giverny
- Gardens in Art: Monet and the water garden at Giverny
- Gardens in Art: Monet's final Nympheas
- World record bid for Le Bassin aux Nymphéa by Monet
- Why and how Monet developed his series paintings
- Monet's Nympheas in the Musée de l'Orangerie
- Gardens in Art: Monet and Argenteuil
- Gardens in Art - Monet and Vétheuil
- Gardens in Art: Monet and the Mediterranean
I really enjoyed seeing your video and photos taken at Monet's Gardens. I took a ton of photos, but didn't think of doing a video. Thanks for sharing all your information and your memories of your trip.
ReplyDeleteMonet's Garden is quite beautiful and almost too inspiring. I was lucky enough to visit it in 2001 and came away with many photographs and several journal entries. The flowers have show up in many of my works since then but never labelled with their home.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your views and documentations on Giverny on this blog and on Squidoo. It "relaxes" the sometimes almost overloaded aura of that place. For same reason I appreciate your great pencil painting as it is much different in many aspects from the standard views that have been re-produced over and over.
ReplyDeleteIs it the Close Normande or the Clos Normande?
ReplyDelete"Clos" - it means "Closed"
ReplyDelete