The Prague Post - Monet's odes to London's 'beautiful' smog appear in city

EUR -
AED 4.243791
AFN 81.465727
ALL 98.56612
AMD 443.453564
ANG 2.067995
AOA 1059.637125
ARS 1366.152552
AUD 1.769897
AWG 2.082875
AZN 1.960017
BAM 1.951516
BBD 2.33206
BDT 141.264748
BGN 1.954326
BHD 0.435731
BIF 3399.622304
BMD 1.155548
BND 1.478766
BOB 7.998509
BRL 6.34523
BSD 1.154954
BTN 99.328786
BWP 15.421277
BYN 3.779869
BYR 22648.741388
BZD 2.320027
CAD 1.569136
CDF 3324.51161
CHF 0.940102
CLF 0.028194
CLP 1081.950957
CNY 8.296546
CNH 8.298493
COP 4738.324697
CRC 582.216723
CUC 1.155548
CUP 30.622023
CVE 110.499326
CZK 24.801493
DJF 205.364123
DKK 7.458554
DOP 68.46596
DZD 150.454693
EGP 58.028383
ERN 17.33322
ETB 155.186484
FJD 2.589294
FKP 0.84981
GBP 0.85194
GEL 3.148856
GGP 0.84981
GHS 11.873314
GIP 0.84981
GMD 82.625007
GNF 10002.424007
GTQ 8.876435
GYD 241.641575
HKD 9.070648
HNL 30.217552
HRK 7.533598
HTG 151.146854
HUF 402.133075
IDR 18801.690886
ILS 4.04719
IMP 0.84981
INR 99.485694
IQD 1513.767919
IRR 48660.127749
ISK 143.600161
JEP 0.84981
JMD 184.350051
JOD 0.819244
JPY 167.310588
KES 149.290238
KGS 101.052748
KHR 4645.302775
KMF 491.685917
KPW 1039.999163
KRW 1574.769806
KWD 0.353632
KYD 0.962495
KZT 592.29451
LAK 25049.397163
LBP 103537.103101
LKR 347.763486
LRD 230.704971
LSL 20.591911
LTL 3.412033
LVL 0.69898
LYD 6.268847
MAD 10.541486
MDL 19.750809
MGA 5124.855846
MKD 61.539422
MMK 2425.440818
MNT 4139.713252
MOP 9.338878
MRU 45.840804
MUR 52.469699
MVR 17.801189
MWK 2006.031054
MXN 21.885386
MYR 4.901801
MZN 73.897846
NAD 20.591519
NGN 1783.195282
NIO 41.942797
NOK 11.454482
NPR 158.926457
NZD 1.906354
OMR 0.444302
PAB 1.154974
PEN 4.162859
PGK 4.763049
PHP 65.479121
PKR 327.132781
PLN 4.273731
PYG 9213.69189
QAR 4.20677
RON 5.022239
RSD 117.199293
RUB 90.710938
RWF 1646.655943
SAR 4.335392
SBD 9.645811
SCR 16.956072
SDG 693.903807
SEK 10.964972
SGD 1.480633
SHP 0.908079
SLE 25.682086
SLL 24231.268649
SOS 660.400547
SRD 44.767129
STD 23917.511179
SVC 10.106162
SYP 15024.316209
SZL 20.592215
THB 37.557578
TJS 11.700465
TMT 4.044418
TND 3.377088
TOP 2.70641
TRY 45.504336
TTD 7.840854
TWD 34.037816
TZS 2991.924172
UAH 48.021533
UGX 4163.858378
USD 1.155548
UYU 47.227947
UZS 14710.126393
VES 118.058882
VND 30113.581662
VUV 138.566722
WST 3.179813
XAF 654.525673
XAG 0.031713
XAU 0.000341
XCD 3.122927
XDR 0.817273
XOF 652.884324
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.740559
ZAR 20.599666
ZMK 10401.315856
ZMW 28.00875
ZWL 372.085994
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Monet's odes to London's 'beautiful' smog appear in city
Monet's odes to London's 'beautiful' smog appear in city / Photo: BENJAMIN CREMEL - AFP

Monet's odes to London's 'beautiful' smog appear in city

Claude Monet was enchanted by the mysterious light generated by London's famous "smog", and the city he loved is now hosting a new exhibition recognising his strange fascination with the industrial pollution.

Text size:

"Monet and London. Views of the Thames" opening Friday will be the first time his paintings of the Houses of Parliament and the River Thames go on show in the city, as he had wished 120 years ago.

The French Impressionist painter made three visits to London, for several months at a time, between 1899 and 1901.

The city was then the most populated city in the world and a major industrial centre, its air often thick with pollution.

He stayed in the Savoy Hotel, from where he had a breathtaking view of the Waterloo and Charing Cross bridges.

To paint the Palace of Westminster -- the UK parliament -- he crossed the river and set up his easel on a terrace of St Thomas' Hospital, which is still in use today.

"Every day, I find London more beautiful to paint," the artist wrote to his stepdaughter in 1900.

In a letter to his wife, he wrote of the ever-changing weather and its transformative effects on the Thames.

"You wouldn't believe the amazing effects I have seen in the nearly two months that I have been constantly looking at the River Thames," he wrote.

He told a US journalist in 1901 that "London is the more interesting that it is harder to paint.

"The fog assumes all sorts of colours; there are black, brown, yellow, green, purple fogs," he added.

In one painting, the outline of Charing Cross Bridge can just be seen against a yellow haze, probably caused by sulphur emissions.

The painting was given to Winston Churchill in 1949 by his literary agent, accompanied by a note wishing that "the fog that shrouds Westminster", then ruled by the Labour party, would lift.

- 'Pure gold' -

Monet's favourite season in London was winter, when "the fog mixed with all the pollution, the smoke from the factories, all the particles in the air," said Karen Serres, curator of the exhibition at the Courtauld Gallery.

"One thing that Monet also really loved was the moment when the clouds opened just a little bit, and a ray of sunlight kind of punctured through and illuminated the Thames," she added.

Monet, who died of lung cancer in 1926 aged 86, described one such moment to his wife. "The sun came up, so blinding that one could not look at it," he wrote.

"The Thames was pure gold. God it was so beautiful."

Monet would return to Giverny, north of Paris, after his London trips with dozens of paintings to finish in his studio.

Around 40 of these London paintings were shown in Paris in 1904.

He wanted to show the works in London too, but by then he had become a victim of his own success and the paintings were sold before he could organise the show.

The owner of a painting of Charing Cross Bridge wrote to Monet after seeing the exhibition in Paris that "you have enabled us to understand better" the "wonderful landscape".

Monet made London look "like an enchanted place", said the curator, while adding: "I'm sure was not the case at all for the inhabitants."

Despite this, the critic from the Times, clearly impressed by the new show, issued a call to "bring back smog!" -- but only if it brought back the "enchanting, unearthly hues" captured by Monet.

The exhibition, which runs until January 19, brings together 21 paintings from private collections and museums in countries including France, the United States and Ireland.

M.Soucek--TPP