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  1. Gare Saint-Lazare is a series of oil paintings by the French artist Claude Monet. The paintings depict the smoky interior of this railway station in varied atmospheric conditions and from various points of view. The series contains twelve paintings, all created in 1877 in Paris.

  2. 6 de dic. de 2023 · Claude Monet, The Gare Saint-Lazare. Hazy with smoke, the architecture of the train station and technology of the iron engine dissolve before our eyes. Claude Monet, The Gare Saint-Lazare (or Interior View of the Gare Saint-Lazare, the Auteuil Line), 1877, oil on canvas, 75 x 104 cm (Musée d’Orsay, Paris).

  3. In 1877, settling in the Nouvelle Athènes area, Claude Monet asked for permission to work in the Gare Saint-Lazare that marked its boundary on one side. Indeed, this was an ideal setting for someone who sought the changing effects of light, movement, clouds of steam and a radically modern motif.

  4. The Saint-Lazare Station, 1877 by Claude Monet. Railways were an incredibly important motif for the Impressionist movement. Here, Monet depicts a piece dominated by smoke, steam, iron, and glass. This particular scene would have been familiar to all the passengers traveling toward the Pont de L'Europe, which can be seen in the background.

  5. The Gare Saint-Lazare (also known as Interior View of the Gare Saint-Lazare, the Auteuil Line ), depicts one of the passenger platforms of the Gare Saint-Lazare, one of Paris’s largest and busiest train terminals.

  6. La estación Saint-Lazare (en francés La Gare Saint-Lazare) es una serie de doce telas de la estación parisina de Saint-Lazare, realizadas por Claude Monet en 1877, cuando se interesó por vida moderna de su tiempo tras haberse dedicado a los paisajes rurales. [1]

  7. This work is one of a dozen views of the Gare Saint-Lazare that Monet painted in early 1877, after he was granted permission in January to paint the station and its approaches. He had known the station since childhood as it was the Paris terminal for trains to Normandy, where he grew up.