University of Birmingham researchers have pinpointed the dates and times of
depicted scenes by analysing the position of the Sun in the sky. The research also revealed the French painters vantage point: a second
floor terrace at St Thomas’s Hospital.
The paintings give an accurate record of Victorian Londons urban
atmosphere, they write in a Royal Society journal. Dr John Thornes, from the School of Geography, Earth and Environmental
Sciences, said they had demonstrated that Monets paintings contain accurate
quantitative information.
"We are confident that these paintings show an accurate visual record of the
urban atmosphere of Victorian London," he said.
Great fogs
Monet is known for his series of impressionist paintings showing the London
skyline obscured by smog. Londons "great fogs" reached a peak in the late 1880s, then gradually
declined, but very little is known about the nature and causes of air
pollution at the time.
We can now go on to assess the information that Monets paintings may
provide on the atmospheric state and pollution of Victorian London
The great French painter made three trips to London in the autumn of 1899
and the early months of 1900 and 1901 to paint his London series.
They were finished at his studio in Giverny, France, after his final trip,
but it is not known whether the canvasses brought back from London were
almost or partially complete and whether they were based on real-life
observations.
The scientists studied the position of the Sun in Monets series of
paintings of the Houses of Parliament begun on his second visit in 1900.
The towers and spires of the Parliament skyline provided markers for working
out the position of the Sun in the paintings, giving accurate dates and
times.
These were then compared to historical records of the dates Monet was in
London.
Atmospheric clues
"Monets letters state that he observed the Sun on at least four separate
occasions and these coincide with the main dates we have attributed to the
paintings," said Dr Jacob Baker.
"We know that it would have been quite difficult to see the Sun due to cloud
and pollution so Monet had to be very patient for the sun to appear.
"Using the information we have gleaned in this study, we can now go on to
assess the information that Monets paintings may provide on the atmospheric
state and pollution of Victorian London."
They hope further detective work on Monets famous paintings might yield
clues to the scattering of light in the atmosphere and the particles that
made up the fogs.
The research by the University of Birmingham pair is published in the
Proceedings of the Royal Society A.
The Thames Below Westminster 1871 can be seen in the National Gallerys
"Manet to Picasso" free exhibition, on display 22 Sept 2006 - 20 May 2007.
(
BBC , 09/08/2006)