Monet and the snow: The Magpie and the winters of light
Discover Monet and the snow: The Magpie, Argenteuil, Vétheuil, Lavacourt, and the Haystacks, with analyses, museums, and tips for choosing a reproduction.
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Collections
Decoration
FAQ
Matter matters
Thicker impasto can suggest the physical weight of the snow in the foreground.
Honfleur
The cart and the road give the winter landscape a depth that remains narrative.1868–69
La Pie
makes light and shadow the true subject of the painting.
Argenteuil
Eighteen canvases record a snowy winter in a still modern suburb.
Vétheuil
River, village, and Lavacourt are observed in snow, frost, and ice breakup.
1890–95
Giverny and NorwayHaystacks, paths, and mountains extend the inquiry into the mature series.Pivotal work
Why
The Magpie
does it appear so luminous?
Monet painted this large canvas at Étretat during the winter of 1868–1869. The Musée d'Orsay notes that it measures 89 × 130 cm: its scale transforms a corner of countryside into an enveloping experience.
The composition is very simple. A barrier divides the space, a few trees rise into the sky, and buildings can be glimpsed on the left. The magpie, tiny, tells us almost nothing. It acts like a dark note placed on the line of the gate.

Rejected by the jury of the 1869 Salon, the painting predates the first Impressionist exhibition by five years. The Musée d'Orsay sees in it a landscape founded on sensation and "effect," rather than on meticulous description.
The magpie is not the main subject: it gives a measure to the silence, just as a brief note makes the entire score audible.
Sun and shadow construct space. No white is truly neutral.

Six clues to read a snowy landscape by Monet
Looking at winter in Monet comes down to tracking very fine differences: a colder shadow, a thicker brushstroke, a mark that quickens the depth.
At Argenteuil, the wheel tracks and silhouettes draw the eye toward the horizon.
Colored shadows
Blues, violets and pinks replace the uniform grey.
Guiding traces
Ruts and paths give the gaze a sense of speed.
Rare contrasts
A magpie, a coat, or a branch is enough to structure the scene.
Sky and ground bound together
The same cool palette flows between the clouds and the snow.
Variable impasto
| The thickened paint may suggest deep or packed snow. | Dissolved details | In the distance, houses and figures become harmonies of color. | Condition |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dominant palette | Construction | Sensation | Cold sun |
| Cream, blue, mauve | Sharp and long shadows | Vivid clarity, divided space | Overcast sky |
| Greyish white, muted pink, brown | Close contrasts | Silence and envelopment | Sunset |
| Orange, lilac, deep blue | Luminous horizon, cold foreground | Tension between warmth and frost | Thaw or break-up |
Water blue, grey, white shards
Moving fragments on the river
Instability and transformation
À Honfleur et Étretat, routes, fermes et barrières gardent une présence rurale. La neige clarifie le dessin et révèle déjà l’attention aux effets fugitifs.
Argenteuil
Les paysages enneigés côtoient routes, maisons et gare. La National Gallery compte dix-huit toiles pour le seul hiver 1874–1875.
Vétheuil et Lavacourt
La Seine ajoute reflets, glace et débâcle. Le village opposé devient un motif repris sous des conditions successives.
Snowy landscapes sit alongside roads, houses, and the railway station. The National Gallery holds eighteen canvases for the winter of 1874–1875 alone.
Vétheuil and Lavacourt
The Seine adds reflections, ice, and ice break-up. The village opposite becomes a motif revisited under successive conditions.Institutional references
What museum records make it possible to affirm
La Pie
Painted at Étretat during the winter of 1868–1869, the work contrasts sun and shadow to render a material that is at once solid and liquid. Its rejection by the 1869 Salon highlights the novelty of his bright painting.View the record
Snow Scene at Argenteuil
, 1875, belongs to a group of eighteen views. The almost monochrome palette is warmed with pinks and punctuated by stronger accents.View the painting
Lavacourt under Snow
Shows the hamlet opposite Vétheuil. The record links this rural work to Monet's financial difficulties and his repeated return to the same motifs.
View the record
From effect to series
Winter views do not all form a series in the strict sense. They nonetheless establish a method: revisiting a place when the hour, the season and the atmosphere change.
This discipline will culminate in the Haystacks of 1890–1891, where snow becomes one of the states of a single motif.

Six works following Monet's winter
The selection spans more than twenty years of research, from the Norman road to the Haystacks of Giverny.
1868–1869 · Musée d'Orsay
A broad composition in which the blue shadow reveals the colour of white.
View the reproduction
c. 1867 · Normandie
The path and the vehicle animate a landscape still constructed by narrative.
View the reproduction
1875 · National Gallery
The brown ruts cross the whites, the blues, and the pinks of the evening.
View the reproduction
1878–1879 · Musée d'Orsay
The village and its church draw together in a cold, diffuse light.
View the reproduction
Lavacourt · National Gallery
The warm tones of the sky meet the blues of the snow-covered ground.
See the reproduction
1890–1891 · GivernyHaystacks, Snow Effect
The stable motif allows the season and time of day to be precisely measured.
See the reproduction

Explore winter through works and museums
All these collections are active in the shop and illustrated.
30 works
A tour devoted entirely to the subject.
Explore
333 works
Compare Monet with other snow painters.
Explore572 works
Musée d'Orsay
and the impressionist landscapes.
Explore
90 works
Argenteuil and Lavacourt in the snow.
Explore
84 works
Frost, Limetz, and Monet's Haystacks.
Explore
19 works
Including the winter landscapes of Vétheuil.
Explore
1,027 works
Place winter within the entire career.
Explore
5,060 worksImpressionists
The changing light beyond Monet.
Explore
Choose a reproduction
Preserving the colored whites in a real room
A successful snow painting should not turn into a large white rectangle. The frame, the lighting and the surrounding colors must keep the nuances visible.
For a bright interior
Prefer a greige or linen wall to an optical white. It will bring out the blue, pink and violet shadows of the painting.
For a cozy atmosphereSunsets on snow harmonize with walnut, smoky brown and dusty rose textiles without losing their freshness.
| For a minimal space | La Pie | or a road from Argenteuil brings a sense of openness. Leave a margin around the artwork and avoid direct reflections. | Type of artwork |
|---|---|---|---|
| Recommended room | Wall and materials | Effective format | The Magpie |
| Living room, bedroom, office | Greige, oak, linen | Large horizontal | Snowy road |
| Entryway, wide hallway | Off-white, warm grey | Medium horizontal | Snowy twilight |
| Dining room, living room | Walnut, powder pink, smoky blue | Medium or panoramic | Snowy Haystacks |
Contemporary living room
Stone, sand, soft brown
Square or horizontal
Frequently asked questions
Understanding Monet and snow
When did Monet paint La Pie?
He painted the work at Étretat during the winter of 1868–1869.
Where is La Pie kept?
It is part of the collections of the Musée d'Orsay in Paris.
Why are the shadows blue?
Monet observed that snow reflects the sky and the ambient light. Shadows therefore carry blues, purples and pinks.
Was The Magpie rejected from the Salon?
Yes, the jury of the 1869 Salon rejected this painting, whose clarity and perceptual inquiry were then strikingly new.
How many snow scenes did Monet paint at Argenteuil?
The National Gallery lists eighteen paintings for the winter of 1874–1875.
Does Monet paint snow only in France?
No. He also paints snow-covered landscapes in Norway in 1895, notably around Kolsås.
Do the snow landscapes form a series?
Not all of them. Some groups, such as Argenteuil or the Haystacks, are nonetheless based on returning to similar motifs under different effects.
What light suits a reproduction of The Magpie?
Diffuse, neutral light reveals blues and creams better than direct yellow lighting.
Which frame should you choose for a snowy Monet?
Natural wood, a warm brown, or a subtle gilt works well. Pure white risks washing out the snow's subtle tones.
- Why did snow fascinate Monet?It simplifies forms while multiplying variations of light, colour, and texture.Main sources
- Musée d’Orsay, page onLa Pie, 1868–1869.National Gallery, pages on.
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