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Women in the Garden

Women in the Garden is an oil painting begun in 1866 by French artist Claude Monet when he was 26. It is a large work painted en plein air; the size of the canvas necessitated Monet painting its upper half with the canvas lowered into a trench he had dug, so that he could maintain a single point of view for the entire work. The setting is the garden of a property he was renting. His companion and future wife Camille Doncieux posed for the figures. Monet finished the work indoors, and used magazine illustrations to render fashionable clothing.

Braun-Vega's appropriations
In 1984, Herman Braun-Vega incorporated Women in the Garden with The Balcony by Manet into an enlarged composition in the foreground of which two poor Peruvian women are seated waiting to sell some vegetable plants piled in front of them. In this painting, titled En attendant (Monet et Manet), Braun-Vega highlights the contrast between the affluence of the North, represented by the Sunday-best figures of Manet and Monet, and the poverty of the South, represented by the Peruvian vegetable sellers. Braun-Vega also appropriated Women in the Garden in ''L'attente (1983), La espera en el campo (1986) and Le temps des cerises'' (1987). ==See also==
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