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Claude & Camille

Page 31

by Stephanie Cowell

One day if he became ill and his eyesight deteriorated further, he would cease to paint and be unable to see the letters and the other things in the box. Perhaps he would die before Alice. She might find them and be hurt by them; she had been mostly a calm and loving wife these many years, understanding his moods, raising their children, and he did not wish to hurt her. He never told her he thought often of Camille.

  Autumn was coming in. He could sense it at every moment; the flowers sensed it. It would soon be time for the last water lily blossom, and then the gardeners would take the tubs in which they were planted from the water to keep the roots from freezing over the winter. The leaves would fall from the trees and the pond would freeze on cold mornings. For months most of the garden would be still.

  One late afternoon he placed the letters in the Japanese box and wrapped the box well in oilcloth. Everyone was in the parlor after dinner when he slipped from the house down the stairs and along the path, walking down to the water lily garden.

  He looked about, choosing carefully until he decided on the foot of one of the willow trees. He knelt and began to dig a hole with his small shovel. He had to try a few places, for he struck roots. He touched the oilcloth over the box and lowered it into the earth, covering it quickly. He sat on his knees for a while afterward, his hand on the place where he had buried it.

  He rose stiffly. Ah, he thought, old age. Still, perhaps I will ride into Paris this winter to see her sister. We can talk further then of things we do not want to forget or things we never understood. I do not need the things in the box; I have memorized them.

  He stood on the bridge. I am not done painting my lilies, he thought. There is always, as there is with love, more to say, but now I am tired and pleased. Yes, I am pleased.

  He left his shovel leaning against the tree and walked back through the upper flower garden toward his supper and his waiting family.

  HISTORICAL NOTES

  THE IDEA FOR THIS NOVEL came to me while attending an exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum in 1995 called “The Origins of Impressionism.” In it, the curators had gathered many paintings from the young artists who would eventually be famous. The artists were mostly poor then; they slept on one another’s floors or painted the same vase of flowers side by side and stood “shoulder to shoulder” against the world, as Renoir would later say. Of all the paintings in that exhibition, two haunted me more than the others. One was Claude Monet’s The Point of the Hève at Low Tide and the other the fast, rough painting by Frédéric Bazille of his friends in his studio. A small painting, it is a microcosm of a whole world. I was startled to read on a placard that Frédéric had died in the war just before he turned twenty-nine. Why had a young artist gone to war?

  The novel is based on history; some events have been slightly altered or fictionalized for dramatic strength and continuity.

  All the world knows Monet as an old man in his gardens at Giverny, but the genesis of that revered painter was a very determined and handsome young man: proud, sometimes haughty, and sometimes humble, in need of love and understanding and someone to buy his work. If he had not stood his ground through all his hardships with the help of those who loved him, there would be no water lily paintings today. I wanted readers to know him as he was to better understand what he became: where the determination came to paint his gardens year after year, still seeking deeper expressions of their beauty. I wanted to write about his great love for the girl whom he painted in a green promenade dress.

  At the time I began to write the novel, I could find very little about Camille Doncieux. Late in my writing, I discovered parts of a recently discovered diary kept by a nineteenth-century art collector that revealed a little more about her charm, her amateur theatricals, and the good family from whom she ran away to throw her lot in with Claude Monet. As with many models for the great artists, little of her personal information remains. No single letter to or from her has been found. Claude adored her; he painted her more than he ever painted anyone else. She died young before he could give her the things he promised her. What complexity or trouble in their relationship caused him perhaps to turn to Alice Hoschedé? The ménage of the two women and eight children in his house toward the end of Camille’s short life caused considerable gossip in Paris at the time. Claude was wild with grief when Camille died. And he did marry Alice in the end.

  Of the three major characters, Monet’s best friend, Frédéric Bazille, was perhaps the most complex. A few of his paintings suggest a possible sexuality that he himself did not understand. He was immensely fond of Camille, choosing to buy the picture of her as four women in a garden above all other paintings, but the conjecture of his intimate relationship with her and any other person grew from my imagination alone. The last twenty years have brought a retrospect of the work of this young painter and good friend.

  The gardens of Giverny have a wonderful true history.

  Four years after the death of Camille, Monet and Alice Hoschedé rented the Giverny house and moved there with their children. When Alice’s husband died, Monet married her. It was some time before he had enough money to actually buy the property and begin his gardens. These expanded over the years to include the great water gardens and famous water lilies. Alice’s daughter Blanche eventually married Monet’s son Jean.

  At the age of sixty-nine, Monet gave his first exhibition of his water lily paintings. Still he continued to paint them. In his eighties, just before his death, he completed the great paintings of his gardens for the Paris Orangerie at the urging of the prime minister of France.

  The grown children of both families had scattered but Blanche, now a widow and an accomplished painter herself, lived on in Giverny as the keeper of her stepfather’s memory. When Michel Monet also died in 1966, it was found that his father’s personal collection of his own work and that of his friends had been kept in the son’s country house, stuffed under beds, piled in the cellar, and in cupboards. The property at Giverny was in terrible condition. Rats overran the gardens. The greenhouse panes and the windows in the house were reduced to shards after the bombings of World War II. Floors and ceiling beams had rotted away; a staircase had collapsed. Three trees were even growing in the big studio.

  The paintings went to the Musée Marmottan in Paris. It took almost ten years to restore the gardens at Giverny to their former magnificence. Fortunately, Michel had made the Académie des Beaux-Arts heir to the property, and in 1977 Gérald van der Kemp was appointed curator. The gardener André Devillers helped him reconstruct the gardens as Monet had created them.

  The new custodians expected only a modest number of visitors, but to their surprise, the numbers grew steadily until they now exceed a half million each year. They come seeking the peace of the place that inspired the art—peace hard-won by the artist, who left the gardens as his last gift to the world. One of the Giverny guides writes a poetic journal in French of the daily world there; she has now also added selections in English. It can be found at http://givernews.com.

  Frédéric is buried in Montpellier. Camille’s grave can be found in Vétheuil in the église Notre-Dame. Claude Monet is buried on the grounds of the église Sainte-Radegonde a little way down the path from his house in Giverny.

  SOME PAINTINGS MENTIONED IN OR OF INTEREST TO THIS NOVEL

  MONET, CLAUDE OSCAR

  The Seashore at Sainte-Adresse. 1864. The Minneapolis Institute of Arts, Minneapolis.

  The Point of the Hève at Low Tide. 1865. The Kimbell Art Museum, Forth Worth, Texas.

  Luncheon on the Grass. 1865–1866. Smaller version. The Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts, Moscow. Two surviving panels of full version: Musée d’Orsay, Paris.

  Camille, or The Woman in a Green Dress. 1866. Kunsthalle Bremen, Bremen, Germany.

  Women in the Garden. 1866–67. Musée d’Orsay, Paris.

  The Magpie. 1868–1869. Musée d’Orsay, Paris.

  Jean Monet on His Hobby Horse. 1872. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.

  Garden at Argenteuil. 18
73. Private Collection.

  Impression: Sunrise. 1873. Musée Marmottan, Paris.

  The Gare St-Lazare. 1877. National Gallery, London.

  Church at Vétheuil with Snow. 1879. Musée d’Orsay, Paris.

  Camille on Her Deathbed. 1879. Musée d’Orsay, Paris.

  In the Woods at Giverny: Blanche Hoschedé at Her Easel with Suzanne

  Hoschedé Reading. 1887. Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles.

  Paintings of the Giverny gardens and water lily pond can be found in most major museums in the world.

  BAZILLE, JEAN-FRÉDÉRIC

  Studio in the Rue de Furstenberg. 1865. Musée Fabre, Montpellier, France.

  The Improvised Field Hospital (Monet with an injured leg). 1865. Musée d’Orsay, Paris.

  Portrait of Renoir. 1867. Musée d’Orsay, Paris.

  Family Gathering. 1867–1868. Musée d’Orsay, Paris.

  View of the Village. 1868. Musée Fabre, Montpellier, France.

  Portrait of Edmond Maître. 1869. National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.

  La Toilette. 1870. Musée Fabre, Montpellier, France.

  Studio in the Rue de la Condamine. 1870. The Louvre, Paris.

  RENOIR, PIERRE-AUGUSTE

  All of Renoir’s approximately twenty café wall paintings have disappeared.

  Lise Sewing. 1866. Dallas Museum of Art, Dallas, Texas.

  Frédéric Bazille at His Easel. 1867. Musée d’Orsay, Paris.

  Lise and Sisley (sometimes called Alfred Sisley and His Wife). 1868. Wallraf-Richartz-Museum, Cologne, Germany.

  Camille Monet Reading. 1872. Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute, Williamstown, Massachusetts.

  Portrait of Claude Monet. 1872. National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.

  PISSARRO, CAMILLE

  Entrance to the Village of Voisins. 1872. Musée d’Orsay, Paris.

  CAROLUS-DURAN, CHARLES AUGUSTE ÉMILE

  Portrait of Claude Monet. 1867. Musée Marmottan, Paris.

  Portrait of Madame Alice Hoschedé. 1878. Benno and Nancy Schmidt Collection, Wildenstein Galleries, New York.

  MANET, ÉDOUARD

  The Monet Family in Their Garden at Argenteuil. 1874. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  I read far too many books about Monet and his circle during the writing of this novel to list them all. I would particularly like to name Monet and Bazille: A Collaboration (Champa, Pittman, and Brenneman); The Impressionists at First Hand (Denvir); The Unknown Monet: Pastels and Drawings (Ganz and Kendall); Claude Monet: Life and Art (Tucker); Monet und Camille (Hansen and Herzogenrath); Hidden in the Shadow of the Master: The Model-Wives of Cézanne, Monet, and Rodin (Butler); Frédéric Bazille: Prophet of Impressionism (Musée Fabre Montpellier/Brooklyn Museum); Frédéric Bazille and Early Impressionism (Marandel and Daulte); Monet (Gordon and Forge); Monet, Narcissus, and Self-Reflection: The Modernist Myth of the Self (Levine); and all the work of Daniel Wildenstein. Any divergence from their excellent research was in the service of fiction.

  Many kind friends read early drafts of this novel, sometimes more than once. I am grateful to Judith Ackerman, Robert Blumenfeld, Russell Clay, Ann Darby, Michael DiSchiavi, Susanne Dunlap, Laura Friedman, Philancy Holder, Katherine Kirkpatrick, Barbara Quick, Amy Rosenberg, Alice Tufel, Bina Valenzano of Brooklyn’s Bookmark Shop, and Bob Weber, as well as my late father, the painter James Mathieu, and my stepmother, Viraja. Special thanks for the amazing support of novelist Susan Dormady Eisenberg and actress/writer Christine Emmert, who not only read many drafts but sent me daily encouraging e-mails.

  Much gratitude to my family for their constant support: my son Jesse Cowell and his friend Erica Langworthy; my son James Nordstrom, his wife, Jessica, and daughters, Emma and Hanna. Love to my two sisters, Jennie and Gabrielle, and their spouses and to my nephew and my late mother, the artist Dora. Also to my husband’s large, supportive family: his mother, Genia, his brothers and sister, Glenda, sons, spouses, grandchildren, and our cousin Lynnda.

  Rachel Benzaquen and Monique-Marie Bray helped with my struggling French. My lifelong friend Renée Cafiero visited Giverny with me and was patient when I cried over paintings at the Musée Marmottan. Thanks to Robert Blumenfeld for French and his book Tools and Techniques for Character Interpretation.

  I cannot possibly list all the friends who cheered me on, but I thank all of you. I also must mention the clergy and parishioners of St. Ignatius of Antioch, St. Thomas Fifth Avenue, and the congenial Sisters of the Community of the Holy Spirit, all of whom sustain me spiritually, as well as my friends and colleagues at MDRC.

  I am deeply grateful to my agent, Emma Sweeney, who advised me patiently through several drafts of the novel; and to Eva Talmadge and Justine Wenger of her staff; to my gifted editor, Suzanne O’Neill, Heather Proulx, Emily Timberlake, Tina Constable, Patty Berg, Annsley Rosner, Emily Lavelle, and to all the staff of Crown.

  And, as always, thanks to my husband, Russell, who listened to all my hopes and fears and cooked for me. The characters in my novel lived with both of us so closely that he always expected to find Monet painting away in our living room and would, of course, have asked him to dinner.

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  STEPHANIE COWELL is the critically acclaimed author of Marrying Mozart, Nicholas Cooke, The Players: A Novel of the Young Shakespeare, and The Physician of London (winner of a 1996 American Book Award).

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.

  Copyright © 2010 by Stephanie Cowell

  All rights reserved.

  Published in the United States by Crown Publishers, an imprint of the Crown Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York.

  www.crownpublishing.com

  CROWN is a trademark and the Crown colophon is a registered trademark of Random House, Inc.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Cowell, Stephanie.

  Claude & Camille : a novel of Monet / Stephanie Cowell.—1st ed.

  p. cm.

  1. Monet, Claude, 1840–1926—Fiction. 2. Monet, Camille, 1847–1879—Fiction.

  3. Painters—France—Fiction. 4. Painters’ spouses—France—Biography.

  5. Impressionist artists—France—Fiction. 6. Giverny (France)—Fiction.

  I. Title. II. Title: Claude and Camille.

  PS3553.O898C63 2010

  813′.54—dc22 2009023383

  eISBN: 978-0-307-46323-4

  v3.0

  Table of Contents

  Cover

  Other Books by this Author

  Title Page

  Dedication

  Prelude: Giverny 1908

  Part One

  Chapter 1 - 1857–1861

  Chapter 2 - 1861–1862

  Chapter 3 - 1862–1864

  Interlude: Giverny July 1908

  Part Two

  Chapter 4 - 1864–1866

  Chapter 5 - 1866–1867

  Interlude: Giverny August 1908

  Part Three

  Chapter 6 - 1867

  Chapter 7 - 1867–1868

  Chapter 8 - 1868

  Chapter 9 - 1868–1869

  Chapter 10 - 1869

  Interlude: Giverny December 1908

  Part Four

  Chapter 11 - 1869

  Chapter 12 - 1870

  Chapter 13 - 1870

  Interlude: Giverny January 1909

  Part Five

  Chapter 14 - 1870—1871

  Chapter 15 - 1871

  Chapter 16 - 1871—1873

  Chapter 17 - 1874

  Interlude: Giverny April 1909

  Part Six

  Chapter 18 - 1875

  Chapter 19 - 1876

  Interlude: Giverny May 1909

  Part Seven

  Chapter 20 - 1877

  Chapter 21 - 1877–1878

  Chapter 22 - 1878�
�1879

  Epilogue: Giverny 1909

  Historical Notes

  Some Paintings Mentioned in or of Interest to This Novel

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Copyright

 

 

 


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