by Alex Porter
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My photos of the lily pond and lilies at Giverny |
While on holiday in Northern France, I was
lucky to be able to visit Monet’s gardens and house in Giverny, Normandy.
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Detail from 'Water Lilies' by Claude Monet |
The Giverny garden is probably the most famous
garden in France and around 500,000 people visit it every year to see where
Monet, the famous French Impressionist painter, lived and worked. Many of his
paintings were painted in the gardens, including his famous ‘Water Lilies’ ‘Japanese footbridge’ paintings, which are some of my favourites. Monet lived in Giverny from 1883
until his death in 1926; during this time, he created 2,500 paintings, most
of them based on his beautiful and unique gardens.
The
garden is split into two parts, with a flower garden at the front of the house
and the more famous water gardens, which were created ten years after Monet's
arrival in Giverny on the other part, constructed on land across the road
from his house.
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My photos of the lily pond and lilies at
Giverny
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The
flower gardens cover about a hectare and are laid out in borders with coloured
themes. Flowers like tulips, irises, oriental poppies and peonies were ones
that the painter particularly enjoyed bringing to life in his painting. The
plants' wonderful colours provided lots of inspiration for Monet and he was well
known as an Impressionist painter for creating vibrant, strokes of colour.
As
well as visiting the gardens, you can visit Monet’s immaculately painted house
where lots of his original paintings hang on the walls and where it is
interesting seeing paintings coming alive on the walls of his own home.
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Detail from 'Water Lilies' by Claude Monet |
While
I was visiting the gardens and house, it was great to see how the gardens could
change with the seasons and to also see how Monet captured these changes in his
paintings. I hopefully managed to capture how the lily pond looked in ‘Autumn’
in my photos.
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