Crédit photo : Spedona (Spedona) - Sous licence Creative Commons
Announcements
Please log in to post a review
Timeline
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1883
Installation of Monet
Installation of Monet 1883 (≈ 1883)
The painter settled as a tenant in Giverny.
1890
Purchase of property
Purchase of property 1890 (≈ 1890)
Monet becomes owner of the estate.
1895
Construction of Japanese bridge
Construction of Japanese bridge 1895 (≈ 1895)
Iconic layout of the Garden.
5 décembre 1926
Death of Claude Monet
Death of Claude Monet 5 décembre 1926 (≈ 1926)
End of 43 years in Giverny.
1966
Légs at the Academy of Fine Arts
Légs at the Academy of Fine Arts 1966 (≈ 1966)
Michel Monet left the property.
1976
Historical Monument
Historical Monument 1976 (≈ 1976)
Official site protection.
1980
Open to the public
Open to the public 1980 (≈ 1980)
Creation of the Claude Monet Foundation.
2012
Label Maison des Illustres
Label Maison des Illustres 2012 (≈ 2012)
National Heritage Recognition.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Property (Cases C 847 to 850; D 218): registration by order of 26 April 1976
Key figures
Claude Monet - Painter and owner
Lived and worked in Giverny from 1883 to 1926.
Alice Hoschedé - Monet's companion
Lived with him in Giverny in 1883.
Blanche Monet-Hoschedé - Daughter of Alice, stepdaughter of Monet
The property remained until 1947.
Michel Monet - Son of Claude Monet
Heir, bequeathed the estate in 1966.
Gérald Van der Kemp - Conservator and restorer
Directed restoration (1977-1980).
Gilbert Vahé - Chief gardener
Reconstituted the gardens in the 1980s.
Hugues Gall - Director of the Foundation
Directed the site from 2008 to 2024.
Origin and history
The house and gardens of Claude Monet in Giverny, located in the department of Eure in Normandy, constitute one of the most emblematic cultural sites in France. Acquired by the painter in 1890 after living there as a tenant since 1883, this property became his creative refuge until his death in 1926. Monet radically transformed the exterior spaces, creating the famous nymphéa pond and the Japanese bridge in 1895, while renovating the house according to its artistic tastes: pink facades, green shutters, and colourful interiors inspired by its palette.
The estate experienced a period of abandonment after Monet's death, especially between 1947 and the 1970s, when nature regained its rights. Saved by the Academy of Fine Arts, the site was restored between 1977 and 1980 under the direction of Gérald Van der Kemp, thanks to American patrons. The Claude Monet Foundation, created in 1980, allowed the opening to the public of a preserved place, where we discover today the house-workshop, the reconstituted gardens (Clos Normand and Jardin d'eau), as well as an exceptional collection of 243 Japanese prints of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
Ranked a Historical Monument in 1976 and labeled "Maison des Illustres" in 2012, the property now attracts more than 750,000 visitors annually, positioning itself as the second most frequented site in Normandy after Mont-Saint-Michel. The gardens, meticulously maintained, reproduce the floral compositions dear to Monet, while the house exhibits major prints like The Great Wave of Hokusai. The site remains a living testimony of the painter's work, having even served as a setting for films like Minuit in Paris (2010) by Woody Allen.
The history of the estate is marked by key figures: Alice Hoschedé, Monet's companion, their daughter Blanche, who served until 1947, and Michel Monet, the painter's son, who bequeathed the estate to the Academy of Fine Arts in 1966. The restorations of the 1980s, carried out with Gilbert Vahé for the gardens, allowed the site to restore its original brilliance, relying on photographic archives and testimonies. Today, the Foundation perpetuates this legacy, while hosting film shoots and temporary exhibitions.
The Water Garden, the symbolic heart of the property, illustrates Monet's obsession with light and reflections, a central theme of his Nympheas. Powered by an arm diverted from the Ept, this basin was built despite administrative difficulties, becoming an open-air laboratory for its last monumental works. Inside, the yellow dining room and the tiled kitchen of Rouen's earthenware reflect his love of bright colours and Japanese designs, a visible influence throughout the decoration.
Since 2024, the Foundation has been headed by a successor of Hugues Gall (2008-2024), pursuing a conservation and international outreach mission. The site, still owned by the Académie des Beaux-Arts, combines heritage preservation and innovation, as evidenced by Cédric Klapisch's recent film La Venue de l'avenir (2024). Between artistic memory and tourist attraction, Giverny embodies the alliance between pictorial creation and garden art.
Announcements
Please log in to post a review