Two Monet Paintings, Unseen for a Century, Resurface at Auction
![]() In the spring of 1883, Claude Monet moved to Giverny, the bucolic village where he would spend the final four decades of his life. There, he continued his love affair with the Seine, paddling out in a customized studio boat and lending bob and flow to the meaning of plein air painting. Previously known only through a black and white photograph from the 1950s, Les Îles de Port-Villez (1883) depicts the natural world untouched by man. One glance and you can feel the speed at which Monet worked in his boat. The focus is the billowing island and its reflection, which Monet builds with energetic, generous strokes of greens and blues. The hazy sky, by contrast, is almost an afterthought. Estimated at €3 million to €5 million ($3.5 million to $5.8 million), the painting was last seen on the walls of Paul Durand-Ruel’s enterprising Fifth Avenue gallery in the early 20th century—Durand-Ruel was an early Monet supporter and even lent the painter 20,000 francs (roughly $130,000 today) to buy his two-story Giverny dream house in 1890. That work is Vétheuil, Effet du Matin (1901), a pointillistic depiction of a valley Monet knew intimately. The painting of the village of Vétheuil as seen from across a broad sweep of the Seine has been given an estimate of €6 million to €8 million ($6.9 million to $9.2 million). Together, Bompard said, they are the most valuable Monet paintings to appear at auction in France since 2001. ![]() ![]() |

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