The first and most correct answer for the question above is Monet's choice of subjects. In the book Nature into Art, author John House explains that impressionists often chose to depict the "real" world or whatever they saw around them (15). He further explains that during the 1880's, Monet became completely occupied with raw nature (15). He had come to love those everyday scenes of nature such as foliage, flowers, waves, and rocks. The pictorial possibilities of these scenes, and also the effect of light and atmosphere on them fascinated him tremendously (15). Monet dedicated this period of time to paint primarily the areas where he lived (15). In "Artist's Garden at Vetheuil", the depiction of three
The first and most correct answer for the question above is Monet's choice of subjects. In the book Nature into Art, author John House explains that impressionists often chose to depict the "real" world or whatever they saw around them (15). He further explains that during the 1880's, Monet became completely occupied with raw nature (15). He had come to love those everyday scenes of nature such as foliage, flowers, waves, and rocks. The pictorial possibilities of these scenes, and also the effect of light and atmosphere on them fascinated him tremendously (15). Monet dedicated this period of time to paint primarily the areas where he lived (15). In "Artist's Garden at Vetheuil", the depiction of three