On the Bank of the Seine, Bennecourt

Description

Here Claude Monet’s future wife, Camille Doncieux, sits on an island in the Seine River, looking toward the hamlet of Gloton, next to the town of Bennecourt, from which she and Monet have presumably rowed. This is the only painting to survive from the brief period that the couple spent in Gloton, which the novelist Émile Zola recommended to Monet as a cheap rural retreat that was easily accessible from Paris. Pentimenti (visible traces of earlier painting beneath a layer or layers of paint) suggest that in an early stage of the painting, Camille held a bonneted child, presumably the couple’s baby, Jean.

Provenance

Louis Aimé Léon Clapisson, Neuilly-sur-Seine, by June 21, 1889, for 500 francs [per Galerie Georges Petit exhibition catalogue and Distel, Appendix II in Bailey, 1997]; sold to Durand-Ruel, Paris, April 21, 1892, for 1,500 francs [this and the following per Durand-Ruel, Paris, stock book for 1891 (no. 2127, as Argenteuil), as confirmed by Paul-Louis Durand-Ruel and Flavie Durand-Ruel, Durand-Ruel Archives, to the Art Institute of Chicago, Oct. 5, 2010, curatorial object file]; sold to Potter Palmer (d. 1902), Chicago, May 18, 1892, for 7,500 francs; by descent to the Potter Family, Chicago; given to the Art Institute of Chicago, 1922.

On the Bank of the Seine, Bennecourt

Claude Monet

1868

Accession Number

81539

Medium

Oil on canvas

Dimensions

81.5 × 100.7 cm (32 1/16 × 39 5/8 in.); Framed: 98.5 × 117.8 × 8 cm (38 3/4 × 46 3/8 × 3 1/8 in.)

Classification

Painting

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Potter Palmer Collection

Background & Context

Background Story

Claude Monet's "On the Bank of the Seine, Bennecourt" (1868) is a pivotal work in the development of Impressionism, painted during the summer that Monet spent at Bennecourt, a village on the Seine downstream from Paris. The painting depicts a sunlit riverbank scene with a seated figure — likely his companion Camille Doncieux — looking across the Seine toward the village of Bennecourt on the opposite bank. The composition is remarkable for its treatment of water as a mirror of light and color, an approach that would become central to Monet's entire career. The year 1868 was one of the most difficult and most consequential in Monet's life. He was deeply in debt, unable to pay his rent, and surviving on the charity of friends. His companion Camille was pregnant with their first child, and Monet's family had disapproved of the relationship, cutting off his financial support. In these circumstances of extreme hardship, Monet produced some of his most innovative and beautiful paintings, including "On the Bank of the Seine, Bennecourt" — a testament to his determination to pursue his artistic vision regardless of personal crisis. The painting's treatment of the river surface was revolutionary for its time. Rather than painting water as a transparent medium through which the riverbed can be seen, Monet renders it as a flat field of reflected color — a surface that records the light, sky, and architecture of the opposite bank in flickering, broken brushstrokes. The river becomes a second canvas: a mirror of the landscape that is transformed by the movement of the water into something more fluid, more abstract, and more beautiful than the original. This insight — that water is primarily a vehicle of reflected light, not a transparent substance — would become the foundation of Monet's river paintings and ultimately of his Water Lilies. The seated figure in the foreground serves a dual function. As a narrative element, she anchors the painting in the realm of observed reality — this is a landscape experienced by a specific person at a specific moment. As a compositional element, she provides a vertical accent against the horizontal expanse of river and bank, and her dark form creates a contrast with the brightly lit water that makes the reflections more intense by comparison. The painting's loose, broken brushwork — still restrained compared to the fully developed Impressionist technique of the 1870s — points the way toward the chromatic daring of Monet's mature style. Bennecourt marks a crucial moment in Monet's relationship with the Seine. The river would be his most constant subject, from his earliest paintings at Argenteuil to his final works at Giverny, and "On the Bank of the Seine, Bennecourt" shows him discovering the approach to water that would make that career possible.

Cultural Impact

Monet's river paintings at Bennecourt established the treatment of water as reflected light that would define his entire career — an insight that led directly to the Water Lilies and the dissolution of the horizon that revolutionized modern painting.

Why It Matters

This painting captures Monet's breakthrough discovery — that water is not transparent but a mirror of light and color — a sunlit riverbank scene that points the way toward Impressionism and beyond.