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Portrait of Claude Monet
A life of privation … Claude Monet
A life of privation … Claude Monet

I, Claude Monet review – portrait of the artist as a passionate man

This article is more than 7 years old

A documentary that humanises the great impressionist whose stock has been devalued by blockbuster shows

Another elegantly made and thoroughly informative art-history documentary from Phil Grabsky, the latest in the Exhibition on Screen series. Although Grabsky is a past master in the mini-genre of gallery films, this one doesn’t seem linked to a particular show or collection, but rather juxtaposes excerpts from Monet’s letters with the paintings he was working on at the time. What emerges is a portrait of an artist who withstood his fair share of privation and discouragement – the passages around the birth of his children and death of his first wife are particularly tough – but who displayed an unswerving commitment to his work. It humanises a figure who has become somewhat devalued by the haze of modern-day blockbuster art shows. A graceful film that suggests there’s passion beneath the beautiful surface.

I, Claude Monet official film trailer

More on this story

More on this story

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  • Monet's obsession with London fog

  • Monet glimpsed through his own words, demons and all

  • Top spot in world museums chart shared by London and Washington

  • Ignore the snobs – Monet is a contender for the greatest artist ever

  • Chris Ofili: Weaving Magic review – a totally tropical tapestry

  • Wynford Dewhurst: art of ‘Manchester's Monet’ goes on show

  • Michelangelo and Sebastiano review – of gods and men

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