London · 1899–1904 · series painting

Monet's Waterloo Bridge: London dissolved in light

An almost motionless bridge, an ever-shifting Thames: Monet transforms fog, steam and smoke into a colour laboratory.

Three stays, forty-one versions, dozens of canvases worked in parallel, and painstaking studio work at Giverny: how to read the series without reducing London to a pretty mist.

Waterloo Bridge de Claude Monet, pont et Tamise dans une brume colorée
Waterloo Bridge, one of the many variations painted by Claude Monet between his London stays and his Giverny studio.
3 staysfrom autumn 1899 to spring 1901
41 viewsof Waterloo Bridge, approximately
5th floorviewpoint from the Savoy Hotel
1904exhibition of 37 London views

London after the haystacks and the cathedrals

Monet does not come to paint a monument: he comes to measure an atmosphere

When Claude Monet returned to London at the end of the 19th century, serial painting was already at the heart of his method. The haystacks, the poplars, the cathedrals of Rouen and the mornings on the Seine had taught him that a stable motif could become the instrument of an almost infinite experience: what changes is not only the sky, but the relationship between the hour, the season, the humidity, the colour and perception.

Between autumn 1899 and spring 1901, he carried out three London campaigns. The Art Institute of Chicago counts nearly a hundred canvases and more than twenty-five pastels linked to this vast project. Three motifs dominate: Waterloo Bridge and Charing Cross Bridge, observed from the Savoy Hotel, then the Parliament, painted from a terrace of St Thomas' Hospital, on the opposite bank.

Waterloo Bridge is the morning's motif. Its horizontal deck crosses the field of vision while the chimneys, masts, plumes and reflections provide a vertical measure. The bridge remains recognizable, but it is never treated as documentary architecture. Its silhouette serves as a marker within a space where every variation of light redistributes the planes.

The right reflex:do not look for “the” real colour of the bridge. In the series, the truth lies in the coherent variation of an effect, not in a local hue fixed once and for all.
01

A fixed motif

The bridge, the embankment and the chimneys keep a structure stable enough to make the changes visible.

02

Very short effects

The light shifts so quickly that Monet moves from one canvas to the next rather than force a state that has already become outdated.

03

A constructed ensemble

The studies begun in London are taken up again at Giverny to obtain a common harmony without erasing their differences.

The room as observation post

From the fifth floor of the Savoy, the river becomes a framed scene

Waterloo Bridge, soleil voilé de Claude Monet, vue depuis le Savoy Hotel
The height of the viewpoint folds the river down toward the surface of the painting and allows one to follow the trails of smoke, the boats and their reflections.

A panoramic view, but never neutral

The Savoy stands on the north bank of the Thames. From his window, Monet sees Waterloo Bridge to the left and Charing Cross Bridge to the right. In the morning he devotes himself to the first; later in the day he shifts his attention to the railway bridge. This discipline pairs each motif with a time of day, without guaranteeing that two days will produce the same effect.

The height almost eliminates the foreground. The gaze plunges toward the water, but the mist draws the banks visually closer. The industrial volumes of the south bank appear as bands, chimneys, and shadows. The boats supply the scale; their plumes connect the surface of the river to the sky.

The framing is therefore already an interpretation. Monet does not go down to the water's edge to describe the piers of the bridge. He chooses a distance that transforms the architecture, the traffic, and the industry into relations of tone. London remains modern and active, but its activity is rendered through vibrations rather than through a detailed narrative.

Savoy Hotelfifth floorbird's-eye viewmorning bridge

From London to Durand-Ruel

A chronology in four movements, far less simple than the dates inscribed

A canvas dated 1903 may have been begun in front of the motif in 1900. The visible dates often mark the moment when Monet considered the work finished. The technical and documentary research of the Art Institute insists on this gap between the London campaign and the final work.

1899

First campaign

In the autumn, Monet works from the Savoy, at first mainly on Charing Cross Bridge, and likely begins the first views of Waterloo Bridge.

1900

Amplified method

From 9 February to 5 April, he returns to London, multiplies the canvases and also gains a view of Parliament from St Thomas.

1901–1903

Studies, then revisions

After a third stay at the beginning of 1901, Monet works on the series at Giverny, adjusting values and harmonies until he deems them coherent.

1904

Exhibition in Paris

At Durand-Ruel, thirty-seven views of the Thames are shown together. The viewer discovers the logic of the series rather than an isolated painting.

Motif Viewpoint Privileged moment Role in the project
Waterloo Bridge Savoy window, to the left Morning Long horizontal, industry, steam and raking light.
Charing Cross Bridge Window of the Savoy, to the right Midday and afternoon Train, smoke, river bend and distant silhouettes.
Parliament St Thomas' Terrace End of day Backlighting, gothic mass and sunsets.
Pastels Quick studies on paper Fleeting effects More immediate notations that accompany the oil campaign.

One bridge, three bands, accidents

The composition holds because the fog never erases the entire structure

The sky, the bridge, and the water form three horizontal zones. The deck is the hinge: dark enough to separate, permeable enough to belong to the atmosphere. The arches create a steady rhythm, but Monet avoids perfect symmetry by distributing boats, smokestacks, plumes of smoke, and luminous intensities.

01

The deck of the bridge

Its continuous line stabilises the image and allows the slightest shift in contrast to be perceived.

02

The chimneys

They cut across the riverbank without becoming factory portraits. Their verticals keep the landscape from dissolving entirely.

03

The boats

Small dark masses, they provide a human scale and guide the eye along the river.

04

The Plumes

Smoke and steam link the water to the sky. They make visible an industrial city in motion.

05

The Reflections

They do not copy the objects: their vertical brushstrokes stretch the colors and lend an unstable depth.

06

The sun

Sometimes almost invisible, sometimes an orange disk, it reorganizes every tonal value without displacing the motif.

The mist is not a veil drawn over London: it is the very matter that makes the bridge, the water, the light, and the smoke comparable.

A Formal Reading of the Waterloo Bridge Series

Grey, Yet Never Neutral

Violet, turquoise, pink, yellow: each fog carries its own temperature

The titles distinguish grey weather, an effect of sun, a veiled sun, or a sun lost in the fog. They do more than describe the weather; they direct attention toward a colour system. A blue-violet bridge may recede into a pink vapour, while an orange disk warms the water in small brushstrokes. In another version, the green-yellows and milky blues produce an almost acidic clarity.

Paint fast, finish slow

Monet changes canvases in a matter of minutes, then works for years on their unity

Fifteen canvases in circulation

According to documents cited by the Art Institute, Monet could work on fifteen paintings simultaneously, moving from one to the next as the effect changed. This organization is not mechanical production: it avoids chasing from memory a luminous state that no longer exists before him.

The speed of the on-site sketch does not prevent the reworking in the studio. At Giverny, Monet keeps his views gathered together. In 1903, he writes to Durand-Ruel that he cannot send any canvas until he has them all in front of him and none is definitively finished. He "develops them together".

This sentence corrects two opposing myths. The paintings are neither impressions thrown down in a single session, nor inventions entirely fabricated far from London. They are born of repeated observation, then of a work of comparison meant to preserve the singularity of each effect while lending the series its coherence.

Dimensions vary slightly, but many Waterloo Bridge works adopt a horizontal format close to 65 × 100 cm. This proportion gives the bridge deck its length, lets the sheets of mist breathe, and naturally suits a placement above a sofa or a low piece of furniture.

To choose a reproduction:respect the horizontal ratio, compare the legibility of the arches, and ask yourself whether the smoke trails remain distinct without appearing line-drawn.

Ten precise answers

Frequently asked questions about Monet's Waterloo Bridge

How many versions of Waterloo Bridge did Monet paint?

The Art Institute of Chicago holds forty-one versions within a much larger London project comprising approximately eighty views of the Thames.

When did Monet work in London?

He undertook three campaigns between the autumn of 1899 and the spring of 1901, then resumed and completed numerous canvases at Giverny through 1903–1904.

From where did Monet paint Waterloo Bridge?

From a fifth-floor window of the Savoy Hotel, on the north bank of the Thames. Waterloo Bridge lay to the left of his viewpoint.

Why are some canvases dated 1903?

The date may correspond to completion in the studio. Several works dated 1903 had probably been started en plein air in 1900 or 1901.

Was Monet really painting fifteen canvases at the same time?

He worked on many canvases in parallel and mentions about fifteen supports, moving from one to the next as the light effect changed.

Was the fog the only subject?

No. The fog makes the variations possible, but the series also brings together bridge, water, industry, smoke, steam, sun, and river traffic.

What is the difference from Charing Cross Bridge?

Waterloo Bridge is the morning motif, visible to the left from the Savoy. Charing Cross, the railway bridge visible to the right, was worked later in the day.

How many views of London were exhibited in 1904?

Thirty-seven paintings were shown at the Durand-Ruel gallery in Paris, allowing the project to be seen as a whole.

What format to choose for a reproduction?

Respect the horizontal ratio close to 65 × 100 cm. Sufficient width will preserve the line of the bridge, the arches and the transitions of mist.

How to recognize a faithful reproduction?

The greys must remain coloured, the smoke distinct without hard contours, the bridge readable but never black, and the reflections varied enough to give depth to the water.

A stable bridge, forty-one atmospheres

Waterloo Bridge is not a repetition: it is an experiment in visible time

By keeping the same motif, Monet gives full room to the differences. The industrial city, the smoke, the river, and the sun do not cancel each other out in the fog; they become the instruments of a painting in which a few minutes are enough to make another canvas necessary.

See Waterloo Bridge

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