● On view now — Gallery 240
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
Forced indoors by inclement fall weather, Claude Monet painted Boats on the Beach at Étretat and The Departure of the Boats, Étretat while looking out the window of his room at the Hôtel Blanquet. The two form a pair that share a palette, subject, and vantage point. In one of his daily letters to his companion and future wife, Alice Hoschedé, dated November 24, 1885, Monet he described first Boats on the Beach and then Departure of the Boats : “In the afternoon, I worked in my room on my caloges [retired fishing boats covered with tarred planks and used for storage] in the rain, then I attempted to do, always through the window, a picture of the boats departing.” Monet centered each composition on the boats, combining pastel blues, pinks, purples, and greens to render wet surfaces. The brightly colored hulls of beached crafts lend relative scale to the structures in Boats on the Beach , and the groups of figures at the water’s edge, composed of quick, gestural strokes, register human activity in Departure of the Boats .
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Georges Seurat — Four Boats at Grandcamp (Quatre bateaux à G
Jan Toorop — De schelpenvisser
Hendrik Willem Mesdag — Fishing Pinks in Breaking Waves
Maxime Maufra — Douarnenez in Sunshine
William Glackens — Seascape with Six Bathers, Bellport
Luigi Settanni — Landscape in Brittany (Pont l'Abbé Figure)
John Henry Twachtman (American, 1853–1902) — Deserted Wharf
Eugène Boudin (French, 1824–1898) — The Coast at Trouville
Maurice Prendergast (American, born Newfoundland [now Canada
Henri Matisse — The Black Boat (Le Bateau noir)
Maurice Prendergast — Beach and Village
Charles Fromuth — An Evening Glow with a Rose Trail in the S