Claude Monet • 1840–1926

How did Claude Monet die?

Monet died at Giverny on 5 December 1926, at the age of 86. His cataract profoundly shaped his final years and his perception of colour, but it was not the cause of his death.

The answer in one sentenceBiographies generally attribute his death to lung cancer; he passed away at his home in Giverny, surrounded by his loved ones, after having pursued the great cycle of the Water Lilies to the very end.
Vue de Giverny par Claude Monet, lieu de ses dernières années
5 December 1926Giverny • 86 years

Separating fact from fiction

Death, eye disease and late works: three connected but different stories

Monet's cataract explains his visual difficulties, not his death. To understand his final years, one must separate the ophthalmological diagnosis, the artistic project of the Water Lilies, and the illness that took him in 1926.

86 yearsMonet died a few weeks after his birthday on 14 November.
GivernyHe passed away in the house where he had lived and worked since 1883.
1923He underwent cataract surgery on his right eye.
1927The large Nymphéas decorations open at the Orangerie after his death.

The question “How did Claude Monet die?” calls for a simple answer, then a clarification. The painter died on 5 December 1926 in Giverny. Biographies generally cite lung cancer. He was 86 years old. His eyesight, severely diminished by bilateral cataract, had made work difficult for over a decade, but he did not die blind and the cataract was not the cause of his death.

The confusion stems from the power of the visual story. In a painter who devoted his life to changes in light, an eye disease almost seems to become the whole narrative. It did indeed matter greatly: Monet complained of a loss of color intensity, of a veil, of reds growing duller and of unstable perception. However, reducing the end of his life to a “distorted vision” would be just as simplistic as ignoring the disease.

Key point:the cataract can be linked to certain changes in palette or facture, but one cannot mechanically explain every late canvas by a medical symptom. Monet remains an artist who chooses, takes up again, destroys, corrects and organises vast compositions.

An active end of life, not a long silence

Despite bereavements, pain, and vision problems, Monet continues the great decorations project. He works in new studios built to accommodate immense panels, returns to works for years, and negotiates their destination with the State. The final years are therefore not only those of decline: they are also those of an unprecedented pictorial ambition.

His friend Georges Clemenceau plays a decisive role. A trained physician, politician, and confidant, he encourages him to accept the operation, supports him during periods of doubt, and defends the installation of the Nymphéas. Their correspondence reveals a Monet who is anxious, demanding, and often irritated by medical constraints, but still deeply attached to painting.

Key dates 1911–1927

The chronology of Claude Monet's final years

The dates show a succession of bereavements, visual difficulties, medical interventions, and artistic decisions. They avoid lumping everything together into a single narrative.

Death of Alice Monet

The death of his second wife deeply affects Monet. The painter goes through a period of grief as his eyesight also begins to deteriorate.

Cataract Diagnosis

Cataracts are diagnosed in both eyes. Monet delays the operation for a long time, worried about the risks and the unfortunate experiences known in other artists.

Death of his son Jean and Resumption of a Major Project

A new bereavement strikes the family. At the same time, Monet takes up again the idea of large panels inspired by the water lily pond and has a suitable studio built.

Donation of the Water Lilies to the State

After the armistice, Monet offered France a decorative ensemble as a symbol of peace. The dimensions, the number of panels, and the installation site were the subject of lengthy discussions.

Right eye operations

Dr. Charles Coutela performed several procedures. Recovery was difficult; Monet complained about colors, distortions, and glasses he could not tolerate.

Resumption, tinted lenses, and corrections

New lenses improved his comfort. Monet began working again, revisited certain canvases, and also destroyed works he considered unsatisfactory.

Death at Giverny

Claude Monet died at the age of 86 in his home. He was buried on December 8 in the cemetery of the Sainte-Radegonde church in Giverny.

Opening of the Water Lilies rooms

A few months after his death, the monumental ensemble was presented in the elliptical rooms of the Orangerie, in a display closely aligned with his wishes.

Seeing through a veil

What the cataract truly changed in Monet's vision

A cataract corresponds to a clouding of the lens. In Monet's case, medical sources describe a progressive bilateral impairment. The decline in visual acuity, glare, and altered color perception complicate outdoor painting, the selection of pigments, and the assessment of finished canvases.

As the lens yellows and becomes opaque, shorter wavelengths are increasingly filtered out. Blues may appear less distinct, while reds, browns, and yellows take on greater prominence in his perception. Monet explained that the colors no longer had the same intensity and that reds looked "muddy" to him. He then organized his paint tubes and labeled them in order to limit mistakes.

Art historians and physicians remain cautious: a painting is not a clinical examination. The color shifts observed in certain late works may be consistent with his condition, but they also reflect choices of format, material, and light, as well as a deliberate evolution toward freer surfaces.

Monet was not completely blind

His vision became extremely weak before the surgery, especially in the right eye, but the word "blind" is often used too absolutely. After the 1923 operation and his gradual adjustment to tinted glasses, he regained some capacity to work. Perception remained imperfect and differed from one eye to the other, which explains part of his discomfort.

L’Entrée de Giverny en hiver de Claude Monet
Giverny remained the center of his daily life, his memory, and his work until 1926.

1923

The cataract operation: visual improvement and new imbalances

The procedure does not restore 'normal' vision overnight. It opens a complex period of adjustment, frustration, specialised spectacles and a gradual return to work.

Les Meules à Giverny au soleil couchant de Claude Monet
Before the operation

A more yellow, dimmer world

The cataract filters the light and disturbs contrast. Warm tones can become dominant, especially in the more severely affected eye.

Saules au soleil couchant de Claude Monet
After the procedure

A disorienting blue cast

Without a natural lens in the operated eye, Monet complained of a bluish perception and distorted shapes with his first glasses.

L’Allée de rosiers à Giverny de Claude Monet
Adaptation

Tinted Lenses and a Return to Work

Suitable lenses help him progressively. He reworks, compares, and revises colours with undiminished rigour.

Dr Charles Coutela operates on the right eye in early 1923, in several stages. The techniques of the time are far removed from modern surgery: the removal of the crystalline lens requires heavy optical correction, and the recovery is gruelling. Monet endures the enforced stillness, the postoperative instructions, and the visual effects of the aphakic spectacles poorly.

The artist voices his regret forcefully after the operation. Objects appear distorted to him, and the colours too blue. This cyanopsia is consistent with the removal of a yellowed crystalline lens, which had previously filtered out part of the blue. Other physicians intervene afterwards, notably Jacques Mawas, and tinted lenses gradually improve the situation.

The most interesting point is not to decide whether the operation was an unqualified success or an outright failure. It restores his capacity to work, but at the cost of a long adaptation. It also alters his perception of his recent works: seeing certain colours differently, he corrects or destroys canvases. His late painting thus becomes the outcome of a continual back-and-forth between perception, memory, choice, and control.

The Last Great Undertaking

The Water Lilies: Painting an Environment Rather than a Mere Landscape

The cycle occupies Monet for nearly three decades and culminates in monumental panels designed to envelop the viewer.

The panels designed for the Orangerie are not simple enlargements. Monet conceived a continuous experience in which water, plants, clouds, and reflections envelop the visitor. The absence of a stable horizon removes the traditional points of reference. The surface can be read as a pond, an inverted sky, or almost an abstraction.

The Musée de l'Orangerie recalls that Monet offered the ensemble to France on the day after the armistice of 11 November 1918, as a symbol of peace. The elliptical rooms, lit by natural daylight, were arranged according to a design in which he took an active part. They opened in 1927, a few months after his death.

It would be tempting to attribute the entire freedom of these panels to his cataract. Yet their scale, their arrangement, and their ambition reveal a deliberate thinking of space. Illness entered the process, but it replaced neither the project nor the painter's decisions.

After 1926

What the last years change in our view of Monet

The end of his life reveals an artist negotiating with his body, his memory, and an outsized project — without relinquishing control of the result.

Le Jardin de l’artiste à Giverny par Claude Monet

Giverny as legacy

How the garden continues to shape our memory of Monet

He creates his motif as much as he paints it: plantations, pond, bridge and paths become a living work, then the subject of hundreds of paintings. Understanding his final years means seeing this garden not as a pleasant backdrop, but as an open-air studio.

Reproductions of the late landscapes now make it possible to observe the changes in brushwork, density and colour, provided the original proportions and material are respected.

Explore Monet's garden

The legend of the "no black for Monet"

A frequently told anecdote reports that Clemenceau, seeing a black cloth laid on the coffin, replaced it with a flowered fabric, declaring that there should be no black for Monet. The Musée de l'Orangerie's records attribute it to the recollections of Sacha Guitry. This distinction matters: the episode belongs to a transmitted memory, powerful and consistent with the image of the painter of colour, but it must be presented as a testimony.

A legacy between Impressionism and abstraction

The large, decentered surfaces of the Water Lilies deeply interested the artists of the twentieth century. They show that Monet's Impressionism cannot be reduced to a light touch or pleasant scenes. In his final years, he removed the horizon, enlarged the formats, slowed the reading and transformed the landscape into a mental space.

This evolution does not follow a simple line running from a healthy vision to a distorted painting. Monet compares, destroys, resumes and delays the delivery of his panels. The late works are therefore the result of a long process of selection. They carry the difficulties of his sight, but also deliberate choices of format, rhythm and composition.

The illness takes nothing away from this radicalism. On the contrary, it makes his obstinacy all the more visible: he seeks practical solutions, changes his glasses, draws on the organization of his palette, and returns to the works. His final gaze is therefore both fragile and deliberate.

Works linked to Giverny

Four reproductions to extend the final years of Monet

These works, currently available in the shop, connect the village, the garden, the water lily pond and the willows that occupied the artist until the end.

Reproduction Vue de Giverny de Claude Monet
The place

View of Giverny

A landscape connected to the village where Monet lived, worked, and died in 1926.

View the reproduction →
Reproduction Bassin aux Nymphéas harmonie verte de Claude Monet
The Pond

Green Harmony

The bridge and reflections recall the origin of the monumental Water Lilies cycle.

View the reproduction →
Reproduction Passerelle sur le bassin aux nymphéas de Claude Monet
The Water Garden

The Footbridge over the Pond

An iconic motif from Giverny, structured and luminous.

View the reproduction →

Verified documentation

Sources for understanding Monet's death and cataract

Museum sources establish the artistic chronology; medical publications analyze the possible effects of the cataract and the operation.

Musée de l'Orangerie — Monet / Clemenceau

Chronology of the cataract, the 1923 operation, the death at Giverny and the installation of the Water Lilies.

Musée de l'Orangerie — Les Nymphéas

History of the monumental cycle offered to France, conceived as an immersive environment.

British Journal of General Practice — Cataract and Surgery

Medical overview of vision loss, surgery, and the adjustment to new glasses.

Eye — Vision, eye disease, and art

Analysis based on medical records and correspondence regarding Monet's eyesight.

Frequently Asked Questions

FAQ on the death and final years of Claude Monet

What did Claude Monet die of?

Biographies generally attribute his death to lung cancer. He died at Giverny on 5 December 1926, at the age of 86.

Did Claude Monet die from his cataract?

No. The cataract severely impaired his vision and complicated his work, but it was not the cause of his death.

Was Claude Monet blind at the end of his life?

His vision was very poor before the operation, especially in his right eye, but it is inaccurate to say that he died completely blind. After the 1923 operation and the adjustment to new glasses, he resumed his work.

When was Monet operated on for cataract?

He underwent several procedures on his right eye in 1923 under the direction of Dr. Charles Coutela. The recovery and optical adjustment were difficult.

Did the cataract change the colours of his paintings?

It probably altered his perception of contrasts and colors, but every stylistic shift cannot be explained by illness alone. His artistic choices remain decisive.

Where is Claude Monet buried?

He is buried in the cemetery of the Sainte-Radegonde church in Giverny, following his funeral on December 8, 1926.

Did he see the Water Lilies installed at the Orangerie?

No. The Water Lilies rooms opened in May 1927, a few months after his death. Monet had, however, taken part in the decisions concerning the ensemble and its installation.

What role did Georges Clemenceau play in his final years?

A close friend and trained physician, Clemenceau encouraged him to undergo surgery, offered him moral support, and championed the project to install the great decorative panels.

A final, immense gaze

Monet does not fade with his light: he entrusts it to the Water Lilies.

His final years tell less of a simple triumph over illness than of a stubborn negotiation with sight, matter, and time. Cataract weakens his gaze; yet the Orangerie project expands its scope as never before.

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