Mount Kolsaas (Monet series)

Summary

The Mount Kolsaas series of oil paintings was created by the French Impressionist painter Claude Monet in 1895.

Sandviken village beneath Mount Kolsaas (Claude Monet, 1895)

In the winter of early 1895 Monet decided to undertake a painting trip to Norway, where his eldest stepson, Jacques Hoschedé, was living at the time. The journey, by train and ferry, was long and exhausting and on arrival in Christiana (now Oslo) he spent several days looking for suitable subject matter, eventually ending up in a farmhouse occupied by other artists in the area of Sandvika (or Sandviken), some 15 km (9.3 miles) west of Oslo. There, after painting scenes of the local fjord and a nearby village, he created a series of paintings of Mount Kolsaas. In Monet's typical style, each painting was done out of doors at different times of the day and in different weather conditions. He completed the undertaking by mid-March.[1]

List of paintings edit

  • All the works listed are described as Painting - oil on canvas .
  • The Catalog Nos are as defined by Daniel Wildenstein in the Monet: Catalogue Raisonné.
Painting Year Catalog No Museum Picture
Mount Kolsaas, Norway 1895 (W.1406) Musée Marmottan Monet  
Mount Kolsaas 1895 (W.1407) Musée Marmottan Monet  
Mount Kolsaas 1895 (W.1408) Private collection  
Mount Kolsaas, Sun Effect 1895 (W.1409) Private collection  
Mount Kolsaas in Misty Weather 1895 (W.1411) Private collection  
Mount Kolsaas, Rose Reflection 1895 (W.1415) Musée d'Orsay  
Mount Kolsaas, Snowstorm 1895 (W.1417) Private collection  
Mount Kolsaas, Norway 1895 (W.1418) Private collection  

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Wildenstein, Daniel. Monet. p. 306.