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When Claude Monet Planted Water Lilies, Inspiration Struck. An Upcoming Auction Will Test How Much Collectors Prize the Floral Masterpieces
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When Claude Monet Planted Water Lilies, Inspiration Struck. An Upcoming Auction Will Test How Much Collectors Prize the Floral Masterpieces

Smithsonian · Jun 12, 2026, 8:48 PM

Key takeaways

  • Christian Thorsberg | Daily Correspondent
  • Fascinated by the way light bounced off reflective surfaces, Monet was drawn to a small tributary of the nearby River Epte.
  • For Monet, this new garden feature was a blank canvas.

Christian Thorsberg | Daily Correspondent

Add as preferred source Nymph as, Claude Monet, 1907 Sotheby's In 1893, three years after buying property in Giverny, France, inspiration struck painter Claude Monet in his flower garden.

Fascinated by the way light bounced off reflective surfaces, Monet was drawn to a small tributary of the nearby River Epte. He diverted this waterway onto his property, creating a standing pond.

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