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TOUR DESCRIPTION
Entering
Normandy, you will visit Claude Monet's home, the "Father of
Impressionism". Discover the famous gardens created by the impressionist
painter, and the well known Japanese bridge in the midst of its flowered
paths and wather-lily ponds. This tour ends with the visit of the "Musée
d'art Américain Giverny": Franco-American contributions to the history of
art.
"Claude Monet's
property at Giverny, left by his son to the Académie des Beaux-arts in 1966,
has, after completion of large scale restoration work, become the Claude Monet
Foundation, inaugurated in 1980. The house, with its pink crushed brick façade,
where the leader of the Impressionist School lived from 1883 to 1926, once again
has its colourful décor and intimate charin of former times. The precious
collection of Japanese engravings is displayed in several rooms, hung in
the marmer chosen by the master of Giverny himself.
The
huge Nymphéas studio, a stone's throw from the house, has also been restored.
It contains the Foundation's Shop. The gardens have been replanted as they once
were and offer for the admiration of visitors the "painting from nature" which
Claude Monet's contemporaries considered one of his masterpieces. The rectangular
Clos Normand, with archways of climbing plants entwined around brilliantly
coloured shrubs, lies before the house and studios, offering from Spring to
Autumn the palette of varying colours to the painter-gardner who was "ecstatic
about flowers". Lastly, the Water Garden, formed by a tributary of the
Epte, lies further away, shaded by weeping willows. With its famous Japanese
Bridge, its wistarias, azaleas and its pond, it has once more become that
casket of sky and water which inspired the pictorial universe of the water lilies."
Content: extract
from a brochure of Fondation Claude Monet. Painting: "View of the church
at Vernon", Claude Monet, 1883.
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