1851---My Journey to Becoming an Artist

Finally told Dad that I don’t want to follow in his footsteps as a grocery businessman, and that I want to become an artist! I think Mom understands…she is after all a singer. I’m going to a secondary school for art in Normandy!

My charcoal caricatures are becoming wide-known! I’ve been making good business already selling them for 10-20 francs apiece! I’m going to be a millionaire in no time!

1857

My mom died :( I had to quit school and move in with my Auntie Marie-Jeanne. She at least understands my need for art. I'll never forget my mentor Eugene Boudin who introduced and taught me the techniques for using oil paints and to paint outdoors (or as he likes to call "en plein air") I’m going to be traveling to Paris soon. It is the center for the arts! I can’t wait to visit the Louvre and maybe meet other artists like me.

PARIS!!!
I met another artist today named Eduard Manet! He is so talented!

1862

Just got back from the army! Signed up for the 1st regiment of African light cavalry in Algeria for a 7-year period, but came down with typhoid fever. My aunt made a deal with me. She would pay to get me out of active duty if I agreed to complete an art course at an art school. Talk about a good deal!!!! :D

1863---Breaking the Rules


School is great! Made some new friends: Pierre-August Renoir, Alfred Sisley, and a dude that’s in the medical field named Frederic Bazille. It’s fun painting together. We started a new painting style since we’re tired of the Academies’ themes, dark color, and lack of expression. Common characteristics of our radical painting include: visible brush strokes, open-composition, light and its changing qualities, movement, ordinary subjects, and the play of different perspectives. We’re breaking all the rules. The Academy even looks down on painting outdoors. We meet regularly at a CafĂ© afterwards. Manet shows up too! He just showed me the other day his painting that he submitted for the Academy’s Salon artshow. The jury better approve it!




WHHHHHHHHHHHHAAAAAAAAAAAAATTTTTTTTTTT???????????????????!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

The Luncheon at the Grass is a fantastic painting! I can’t believe that the jury denied it!!! What’s so wrong about a naked chick having a picnic with two clothed guys? They enter paintings with naked people ALL of the time at the Salon. Who cares that this isn’t historical or allegorical! The style is exquisite! I’m so sick and tired of all their standards! If I see another historical or religious painting I’m just going to go jump off a bridge.

I guess they’ve been getting a lot of complaints. Emperor Napeleon III decreed that the public be allowed to judge the works. Ha! Take that jury!

1866---Camille


Finally gained some recognition for my paintings! Thank you, my lovely model Camille <3. The Woman in the Green Dress was sold for 800 francs! I am so tired of being poor.

1868---Depression


What I did today....minus the applause.

I did it. I finally did it. Well, I tried to do it. I jumped off the bridge into the Seine River hoping to drown. Didn’t quite work out. Camille is pregnant with my child. How am I to support them when I’m so poor that I can barely support myself? I still can’t get my paintings into the Paris Salon. I can't keep loaning money from Bazille...

Meet Jean!

1870---War




Franco-Prussian War--- I lost my close friend Bazille to this war. I take Camille and Jean and take refuge to England. Camille and I finally wed this year before the 1870 war.



Here is a painting I did of my wife Camille and my dear friend Bazille.

1873---Wallpaper?!


We’ve been living in a small village outside Paris since 1871. Our painting group created the Cooperative and Anonymous Association of Painters, Sculptures, and Engravers with Manet as our leader (he never participates though ???). We showcase our work independently from the Salon. We gained a lot of new artists and we have 30 members total. Our first showing took a rather large hit from the critics. I took the brunt of it. I received this on my Sunrise Impression painting:

“Impression — I was certain of it. I was just telling myself that, since I was impressed, there had to be some impression in it … and what freedom, what ease of workmanship! Wallpaper in its embryonic state is more finished than that seascape”

Wallpaper!!!! I’m so going to use Louis Leroy and his newspaper for toilet paper. I’ll show you… The group decided to change our name to the Impressionists. Funny, guys.

1876--Failing health

Camille is sick. It’s going to be hard paying for medicine and paint supplies. My paintings aren’t selling either. I don’t know what to do. I have to borrow money from my friends again.

The Monet Family