Giverny · Rouen · London · 1890–1926

Monet's series: painting the same motif to show that nothing stays the same

Haystacks, Poplars, Rouen Cathedral, Thames and Water Lilies: five bodies of work to understand how Monet makes time the true subject

A series is not a sequence of copies. Monet keeps a recognizable motif, switches canvases with the light, and reworks the whole in the studio. Each painting becomes a precise state of an experience that exists fully only through comparison.

Deux meules au déclin du jour peintes par Claude Monet
The haystack remains still; the season, the hour, the humidity, and the color of the air transform everything we see around it.
≈ 25Haystacks from the series proper
24Poplars, approximately 30, painted in 1891
30versions of Rouen Cathedral
≈ 300works in the Water Lilies cycle

The motif as instrument

Monet does not repeat an object: he compares states of light, season, and atmosphere

Long before 1890, Claude Monet painted the same places several times. The Saint-Lazare stations in 1877, the cliffs of Étretat in the 1880s, and the mornings along the Creuse had already laid the groundwork for the serial logic. The turning point of the Haystacks lies in a more systematic method and a new way of presenting the works: the public is invited to look at several variations together.

The motif must be stable, immediately legible, and simple enough not to absorb all attention. A haystack, a row of poplars, a Gothic facade, or a bridge play the role of a scale. Their permanence reveals the differences: warm or cold light, fog, snow, wind, raking sun, reflection, morning, twilight. The object is not denied; it becomes the witness of a changing environment.

On site, Monet prepares several canvases. When the observed effect shifts, he abandons the canvas in progress and chooses another one matching the new state. The Art Institute of Chicago reports this race between several easels for the Haystacks. For other campaigns, the canvases are stored in a device adapted to his boat. The session can be very short if a ray of light leaves the area he wants to capture.

The studio nevertheless remains essential. The paintings are taken up again, harmonized, and kept together so that Monet can judge their relationships. In London, in 1903, he explains that he must have all the canvases before him and that he develops them together. The series is thus born of a double work: urgency in front of the motif, slow comparison afterwards.

What distinguishes a series:It is not only the number of paintings. The framing, the scale of the motif, and the format create a common basis that makes every variation of atmosphere measurable.
01

Setting the frame

The motif and the viewpoint must remain constant enough for the transformations to become visible.

02

Switching Canvas

A canvas corresponds to a precise effect. When the light shifts, Monet moves to the next state.

03

Reviewing the Whole

In the studio, he refines the relationships between canvases and conceives of the exhibition as an exercise in comparison.

Period Series Stable motif Main variable
1890–1891 Haystacks Sheaves stacked near Giverny Hour, season, snow, frost, mist and sun.
1891 Poplars Trees on the Banks of the Epte Wind, reflection, vertical rhythm and depth.
1892–1894 Rouen Cathedral West façade Light on the stone and density of the air.
1899–1904 London Parliament and Thames Bridges Fog, smoke, sunlight and urban reflection.
Late 1890s–1926 Water Lilies Giverny Pond Reflections, surface, seasons, scale and immersion.

Giverny · 1890–1891

The Haystacks transform an agricultural reserve into a sundial, meteorological and seasonal.

Deux meules au déclin du jour et en automne de Claude Monet
Their dense silhouettes give constant support to the moving colors of the sky, the field and the shadows.

A daily motif, seen from Monet's property

In 1890, Monet bought the Giverny house he had been renting since 1883. In an adjacent field stood large stacks of wheat piled up, several meters high. They were not small decorative hay bales, but reserves built to protect the harvest. Their simple, conical or rounded volume stood out clearly from the terrain and remained in place through the seasons.

The series itself numbers some twenty-five canvases made from late summer 1890 to February 1891. Monet varies the distance, the number of stacks, and sometimes the format, but keeps a sufficiently regular structure. At dawn, in the fog, under snow, or in the setting sun, the mass becomes pink, violet, orange, blue or green without losing its weight.

The color of the shadow is crucial. It does not reduce to a darker brown: it gathers the cold of the snow, the violet of dusk, or the blue of the air. Conversely, the lit edge can load with yellow, orange, and pink. The brushstrokes accumulate, some fine and letting the light preparation show through, others thicker for the final accents.

1890–1891≈ 25 canvasesGiverny15 exhibited in 1891

The exhibition of fifteen Haystacks at Durand-Ruel in May 1891 proved decisive. It invited viewers to consider the paintings as a set, not as isolated landscapes. Both critical and commercial success established the series as a form in its own right. Repetition becomes a visual argument: the scope of a single canvas can only be grasped by imagining the different effect that precedes or follows it.

L'Epte · spring–autumn 1891

After the horizontal mass of the Haystacks, the Poplars introduce a vertical and almost musical rhythm

In the Poplars, the air does not merely envelop the forms: it threads through the spaces between the trunks and sets the whole rhythm of the canvas vibrating.

Reading the Epte Series

Rouen · 1892–1894

The Gothic façade becomes a surface where stone seems to be born and disappear with the light

Cathédrale de Rouen, portail et tour d’Albane, temps gris de Claude Monet
On grey days, stone retains its depth through violets, blues, muted pinks, and touches of shadow.

Thirty versions, several windows, a single portal

Between 1892 and 1894, Monet produced thirty versions of Rouen Cathedral. He worked from rented rooms facing the western façade, changing his point of observation with each campaign. The framing is very tight: the portal, the Tour d'Albane, and the stone lacework fill the canvas, while the sky and the square are reduced or excluded.

This proximity does not aim at archaeological precision. The sculptures and moldings provide a complex surface capable of catching the light. In sunlight, stone appears yellow, pink, or white; in shadow or mist, it turns blue, violet, and grey. The contours dissolve into a thick matter, yet the architecture remains perceptible thanks to the large shadow areas and the axes of the portal.

The shift is more conceptual than in the natural series. The cathedral is assumed to be stable, historical, and monumental. Yet Monet shows that its visibility depends on the air just as much as that of a poplar or a haystack. The human lifespan of the monument is set against the brevity of each effect. Twenty Cathedrals are shown at Durand-Ruel in 1895, consolidating the recognition of serial work.

Worth noting:the Gothic drawing is not suppressed; it is rebuilt through differences of temperature, thickness, and value rather than through a sharp outline.

The Thames · 1899–1904

In London, fog, smoke, and sunlight transform the city into a landscape of water and color.

Giverny · end of the 1890s–1926

With the Water Lilies, the serial motif widens until it envelops the viewer and suppresses the horizon

Ten precise answers

Frequently asked questions about Monet and the series

What is a series by Monet?

A set of paintings linked by a comparable motif, framing or scale, but painted under different lights, seasons or atmospheres.

What is the first great series by Monet?

Les Meules (1890–1891) mark the major turning point through their method, number and collective presentation, even if earlier sets prepared the way for this practice.

How many Haystacks did Monet paint?

The series proper comprises some twenty-five canvases executed between the late summer of 1890 and February 1891.

Did Monet use several easels?

Yes. For the Haystacks, he worked simultaneously on several canvases and switched whenever the light effect no longer matched. On the Epte, his boat could also hold several paintings.

Why did Monet pay to save the Poplars?

The trees were to be sold and felled. He struck an agreement with a timber merchant to keep them standing until the series was complete.

How many Cathedrals of Rouen are there?

Monet produced thirty versions of the cathedral between 1892 and 1894, mainly focused on the western portal and the Albane tower.

How many views of London did Monet paint?

Nearly a hundred between 1899 and 1901, around Waterloo Bridge, Charing Cross Bridge and the Houses of Parliament, then resumed until 1903–1904.

Were the series completed on site?

No. Monet worked in front of the motif, then reworked the canvases extensively in the studio, often keeping them together to develop their interplay.

How many paintings does the Water Lilies cycle comprise?

Nearly three hundred works, including more than forty large-format panels. Eight monumental compositions are installed at the Orangerie.

How to choose several reproductions from the same series?

Maintain a consistent format and framing, then choose effects that differ enough — morning and evening, clear weather and mist — to create a rhythm without duplication.

Seeing time instead of telling it

From the Haystacks to the Water Lilies, Monet turns repetition into a way of making the world more unstable

Each series begins with a simple motif and arrives at an immense question: what remains of a thing when the light, the air, and the gaze shift? The answer is never in a single canvas, but in the living space between several states.

Explore Monet's works

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