Japanese Bridge - Claude Monet E n chapter Cultural Exchange , belonging to the first season of the show, Bart takes a trip to France as part of an exchange student. Arriving in France Bart is collected at the airport by Huguolin, and both mounted on a motorcycle targeted to the Chateau Maison , where Bart will stay while.
E n the road pass through several paintings representing the French landscape painting depicts the first the " Japanese Bridge " impressionist painter i sta Claude-Oscar Monet .
When Monet was 43, in April 1883 purchase a house and garden in Giverny - a French town and commune located in the Upper Normandy region, today a tourist and pilgrimage site for young artists.
Both the vegetation of the margins of water floating plants " were carefully chosen by Monet in cool shades and nuanced ."
Monet was a great lover of culture and Japanese art. and was built in 1893 a Japanese Bridge , on lily pond, and that soon a dense tangled wisteria plant.
The Japanese Bridge , became one of his favorite inspirations, being translating into different versions - for forty years, during which Monet was going blind, either of these variables traders have been given names like " Water Lily Pond " (the water lily is an aquatic plant) and " Pond Nymphs" a clear mistake in interpreting the word "lily." Or call "Pond Lily Lake."
Guillermo Solana, artistic director of Thyssen recalled that when the master died in in December 1926 , "His painting had gone out of fashion." Monet became qualified in the interwar period as "an artist and even soft kitsch ( tasteless bone ).
The rediscovery of Monet does not occur until mid-twentieth century, when young artists began triumphant American abstract expressionism to look at his works with a new look. The materiality of his paintings, his art "all-over", his loose brushstrokes and blurred shapes were a revelation both for the younger generation of American abstract to the followers of the Informal European.
Bart clip across the Japanese Bridge:
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