Great Art Explained — Season 1, Episode 9: Monet's Water Lilies
Documentary • 15 min • 5 seasons, 39 episodes
Episode synopsis
Claude Monet is often criticised for being overexposed, too easy, too obvious, or worse, a chocolate box artist. His last works, the enormous water lily canvasses are among the most popular art works in the world. Yet there is nothing tame, traditionalist, or cosy about these last paintings. These are his most radical works of all. They turn the world upside down with their strange, disorientating and immersive vision. Monet’s water lilies have come to be viewed as simply an aesthetic interpretation of the garden that obsessed him. But they are so much more. These works were created as a direct response to the most savage and apocalyptic period of modern history. They were in fact conceived as a war memorial to the millions of lives tragically lost in the First World War.
About Great Art Explained
Great Art Explained is a video series that focuses on one piece of art per episode, breaking it down, using clear and concise language free of 'art-speak'.
More episodes from Season 1
- E1Mona Lisa by Leonardo da Vinci (short version)
- E2Picasso’s Guernica
- E3Michelangelo's David
- E4The Raft of the Medusa by Théodore Géricault
- E5Frida Kahlo's 'The Two Fridas"
- E6The Arnolfini Portrait by Jan Van Eyck
- E7Artemisia Gentileschi
- E8Andy Warhol's Marilyn Diptych
- E10Mark Rothko's Seagram Murals
- E11The Thinker by Rodin