Monet and His Muse
Camille Monet in the Artist’s Life
Monet and His Muse
Camille Monet in the Artist’s Life
“The mourning never stops, it just changes.” (Edward Albee)
For Claude Monet (1840–1926), the founder of French Impressionist painting, these words are a fitting testament to his lifelong relationship with the female muse, most notably—and most hauntingly—with his first wife, the model Camille Doncieux.
For the esteemed clinical psychologist and art historian Mary Mathews Gedo, Monet and His Muse represents a project twenty years in the making. Artfully interweaving biographical insight with psychoanalytic criticism, Gedo takes us on an exploration of Claude Monet’s conflicted relationships with women, complete with exquisitely researched material never before understood about one of our most popular—and inimitable—artists. Beginning with Monet’s childhood, Gedo delves into his relationships with a distant, unreliable father and his beloved, doting mother—whose death when Monet was just sixteen, the author establishes, inspired a lifetime preoccupation with the sea, its lushly imagined flora, and the figurative landscapes Monet painted to such acclaim.
And then—Camille. Entering Monet’s life when he was still a young man, becoming first his model and then mistress and then—finally—his wife, Camille Doncieux always fulfilled the function of muse, even after her life had ended, as Monet not only painted her one last time on her deathbed, but preserved her memory through the gardens he planted at his home in Giverny. Demonstrating how Monet’s connections with women were exceedingly complex, fraught with abusive impulses and infantile longing, Gedo sensitively uses Monet and Camille as exemplars in order to explore links between artists and muses in our modern age.
272 pages | 50 color plates, 73 halftones, 1 line drawing | 8 1/2 x 11 | © 2010
Art: Art--Biography, European Art
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
Preface and Acknowledgments
Prologue: Monet’s Character
Part One The Youth of the Artist, the Art of his Youth
1 The Perils of Young Love, Monet’s Magnificent Failure
2 Success and Scandal
3 Camille as Flora
4 Painted Metaphors for the Absent Woman
5 Ariadne on the Grande Île
With William Conger
6 The Myth of the Bourgeois Family
7 Honeymoon and Exile: Camille’s Status Legitimized
Part Two The Argenteuil Years
8 Argenteuil, 1872–1873: Classic Impressionist Landscapes, Mythic and Enigmatic Images
9 Camille as Collective Muse
10 Camille Ascendant; Camille Redux
11 Camille’s Captive Samurai
12 The Muse of the Past, the Muse of the Future
Part Three Camille and Argenteuil in Decline
13 The Course of Camille’s Final Illness and Its Repercussions in Monet’s Art
14 Death and Transfiguration
Epilogue: The Memorial Garden of Claude Monet
Notes
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