Monet's Women in the Garden: light and plein air
Monet's Women in the Garden: monumental 1866 canvas, Camille Doncieux, plein air painting, colored shadows, Salon of 1867, and restoration.
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Ville-d'Avray · circa 1866 · Musée d'OrsayMonet's Women in the Garden: four white dresses, a garden, and the ambition of plein air

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FAQBefore the word “impressionism”In 1866, Monet seeks to enter the grand tradition of painting through modern life
Claude Monet is around twenty-five years old when he undertakesWomen in the Garden. He is not yet the settled painter of Giverny, nor the consecrated leader of the series. He seeks his place within an artistic system dominated by the official Salon, where a vast canvas constitutes at once an expense, a risk, and a declaration of ambition.The previous year,The Luncheon on the Grass
had already carried his project to great heights: introducing contemporary figures, life-size, into a landscape shaped with the acuity of plein air. The large painting remained unfinished. With
Key reference:
the work predates the first Impressionist exhibition of 1874 by eight years. It shows the research in the process of taking shape, with its daring moves, its compromises, and its institutional resistance.
A public scale
At 2.55 meters tall, the canvas measures up to the large formats intended for the Salon.
A contemporary subject
The dresses, parasols and poses belong to the social customs of the 1860s.
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A luminous unity

Ville-d'Avray, a garden and a trench
Painting a monumental scale outdoors demands true engineering
The vertical format forces Monet to physically adapt the site to preserve the same viewpoint across the full height.
The canvas descends, the gaze stays steady
| trench | plein air | studio finishing | Element |
|---|---|---|---|
| Typical outdoor study | Women in the Garden | Consequence | Format |
| Transportable | 255 × 205 cm | Heavy setup and a viewpoint that is difficult to sustain. | Duration |
| One or more sittings | Long working period, moves and revisions | The observed light must remain consistent despite time. | Figures |
| Often secondary | Four life-size figures | The model, the fabric and the landscape must share the same light. | Finalization |
Sometimes on location
Completed in the studio
Direct observation is organized into an ambitious composition.
The composition transforms a walk into a balance of masses and directions
The woman on the left enters the scene and seems to hold back her skirt. In the center, a figure seen from behind leans toward the flowers. Further back, a woman seated beneath the parasol anchors the depth. On the right, a last silhouette, cropped by the edge, appears to be conversing with her. These gestures alone suffice to suggest life without imposing any specific story.
The Large Tree
Its vertical trunk structures the left half and provides a measure for the women's height.
The clear path
It guides the eye into the distance, links the figures, and keeps the foliage from closing off the space.
The white dresses
They form four luminous focal points that diminish in size with distance.
The Parasol
Its dark circle marks the seated figure and echoes the round patches of the flower beds.
The Active Edges
The side silhouettes sit close to the frame: the scene seems to continue beyond the canvas.
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The blurred facesBarely individualized, they shift the focus from the portrait to the bearing and the overall effect.
The women are not posed against a backdrop: they belong to the same web of shadows, greens, and reflections as the garden.


White is never white: it registers everything around it
In Monet's gardens, light is built through proximities: greens, flowers, sky and clothing mutually modify one another's colors.
Camille then remains a central figure in Monet's work, often integrated into familiar spaces and gardens.
One model, several roles
Camille Doncieux, Monet's companion and later wife, posed for three of the figures on the left. A common simplification must be resisted: the four women are not all literal portraits of Camille. The Musée d'Orsay speaks of three figures and emphasizes that the faces remain vague. Monet uses the model to construct different attitudes, not to tell the same identity four times over.
The white dresses become a field of experiment. In direct light, they take on creams and yellows. Under the trees, they absorb blues, violet greys and green reflections. The shadows are therefore not black added to white: they are colours altered by the air, the foliage, and neighbouring surfaces.
The sun dapples the ground and the fabrics. Rather than modelling each volume through an academic gradient, Monet juxtaposes bolder zones. This legibility through patches partly explains the contemporary reproach of “lack of finish”; it nevertheless heralds a decisive conception of Impressionist painting.
The refusal of 1867What the jury judged unfinished would soon become a modern languageA large canvas without a “grand subject”
Presented at the Salon of 1867,
Femmes au jardin
was rejected. The format traditionally promised an exemplary story; Monet offered an indeterminate conversation and a stroll. This gap between scale and subject unsettled expectations.According to the Musée d'Orsay's notice, the jury also faulted the absence of narrative and the visible brushwork, perceived as careless or unfinished. The transitions are not all blended; foliage and reflections remain legible as painterly marks. Yet this surface frankness serves a very precise ambition: conveying the overall effect of light before isolated detail.The refusal was not an immediate victory. Monet lacked money and depended on the support of friends. Frédéric Bazille, painter and fellow traveler, bought the work in May 1867 by offering payment in installments. This gesture materially protected the painting and helped Monet through a fragile period.
thus makes it possible to understand not only a stylistic evolution, but also the gradual birth of another space for dissemination.
What the rejection reveals:
From Bazille to the Musée d'Orsay
The painting's journey tells of fifty-five years of friendships, exchanges, and recognition
Bazille supports Monet
Frédéric Bazille acquires the painting in May. After his death in 1870, it remains in his family for several years.
At Édouard Manet's
The painting reaches Manet through an exchange. Monet later retrieves it, also by exchange, and keeps it for a long time.
Purchase by the State
France buys the work directly from Monet, officially consecrating a canvas rejected fifty-four years earlier.
Today
Musée d'Orsay
The work belongs to the national collections. Its exhibition room may change: please check the notice before your visit.
A restoration that reveals the process
The Musée d'Orsay has documented a recent intervention carried out with the Centre de recherche et de restauration des musées de France. The technical examination confirms the material incidents of the canvas and allows Monet's hesitations to be observed. The radiograph notably reveals a modification of the position of Camille's face. Beneath the final image lies therefore an adjusted composition, not a miraculously fixed vision from the first attempt.
The restoration does not seek to make the work 'new'. It stabilizes the material and improves the reading of color relationships while respecting the physical history of the piece. For a contemporary viewer, this history recalls that monumental plein air was also a test of stretcher, transport, sewing, resumed paint, and successive decisions.

Extend Femmes au jardin with Monet's figures and gardens
Each link leads to a current work in the shop. Together, they make it possible to compare the great 1866 manifesto with the more intimate scenes he would later paint.
Around 1866 · Musée d'Orsay
The large format, the white dresses, and the filtered shadows in the painting at the heart of this guide.
View the work →
Camille · Argenteuil
A family scene in which the figure merges with a looser, more intimate greenery.
View the work →
Sainte-Adresse · color
An ideal comparison for observing how Monet builds the flowerbeds, the greens, and the luminous air.
View the work →
Modern life · open air
An ambitious scene with contemporary figures that extends the dialogue between sociability and landscape.
View the work →
Figures in the GardenTwo Women in a Garden
A tighter variation on silhouettes, fabrics, and plant density.
View the work →
Six important collections to continue the visit
Quantities were checked in the catalogue on 14 July 2026.
1,027 worksClaude Monet
Gardens, cliffs, stations, series and figures: the painter's entire career.
572 worksMusée d'Orsay
Masterpieces connected to the collections of the great Parisian museum of the 19th century.
5,060 worksImpressionist
Compare Monet with Renoir, Pissarro, Sisley, Degas, Morisot, and their contemporaries.
363 worksGarden paintings
From structured gardens to flowering meadows, an ideal theme for natural palettes.
72 worksImpressionist portraits
Modern figures, familiar poses, and faces caught in shifting light.
1,679 works
Famous paintings
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Four references to verify dimensions, method, and restoration
The facts in this guide are based on the museum records and their scientific publications.
Musée d'Orsay · artwork recordDimensions, model and Salon
The main reference for the Ville-d'Avray site, Camille, the 1867 rejection and the provenance.
Musée d'Orsay · restorationThe substance beneath the image
Old tear, examination at the C2RMF, radiography, and displacement of Camille's face.
Metropolitan Museum of ArtThe young Monet's career
From the Salon to the independent exhibitions, a perspective on his modern ambitions.
Musée d'Orsay · fashion and Impressionism
Clothing and modern life
The role of contemporary fashion, silhouettes, and fabrics in the new painting.
Ten precise answers
Frequently asked questions about Monet's Women in the Garden
When did Monet paint Women in the Garden?
The work is generally dated around 1866. Monet worked on it in Ville-d'Avray before finishing it in his studio and exhibited it at the 1867 Salon.
What are the dimensions of the painting?
The oil on canvas measures 255 cm high by 205 cm wide, excluding the frame. This scale brings the contemporary scene close to the grand format of history painting.
Did Monet really dig a trench?
Yes. To keep the painted section at eye level, he gradually lowered the large canvas into a trench as the work progressed.
Do the four women represent Camille Monet?
No. Camille Doncieux posed for three figures on the left. The faces are barely individualized, and the work does not function as four distinct portraits.
Why was the painting rejected at the 1867 Salon?
The jury notably rejected its lack of traditional narrative and the visible brushwork, which was deemed insufficiently finished. These features would, however, become central to Impressionist painting.
Was the painting entirely done outdoors?
It was largely worked on in front of the garden at Ville-d'Avray, but finished in the studio. Plein air and reworking do not oppose each other: they belong to the same process.
Who first bought Femmes au jardin?
Frédéric Bazille acquired it in May 1867 to support Monet. The work then passed through the Bazille family and Édouard Manet before returning to Monet.
When did the French State acquire the work?
The State purchased the painting from Claude Monet in 1921, fifty-four years after its rejection at the Salon.
Where to see Women in the Garden today?
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