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Monet’s 1908 work ‘Le Palais Ducal’ is at risk of being lost abroad unless a UK buyer can be found

  • Valued at more than £28 million the work is one of a small number of the artist’s works depicting Venice
  • Arts Minister Rebecca Pow leads call to save the treasure for the nation

Arts Minister Rebecca Pow has placed a temporary export bar on Claude Monet’s ‘Le Palais Ducal’ in the hope that a UK buyer can be found to keep the work in the country.

Valued at £27,534,000 plus VAT of £706,800, the painting was completed following Monet’s 1908 visit to Italy with his second wife Alice. The work shows a sun-lit Doge’s Palace in Venice and its reflection in the water.

Monet visited Venice as a respite from working on his famous water lily series and during the holiday he began to paint. The artist had anticipated a return to the city, however Alice’s failing health hindered the couple from returning to Venice in 1909.

This meant that the Venetian series has a smaller number of completed canvasses and the images have a wider range of motifs compared to Monet’s other series of works. The artist worked on this particular canvas in situ during the 1908 visit but it is thought that the work was completed at his home in Giverny during 1911-1912.

Monet’s inability to return to Venice and paint a complete series, combined with the phenomenal success of the water lily paintings, has led to the Venetian paintings remaining relatively overlooked.

Arts Minister Rebecca Pow said:

Monet is one of the world’s most famous and celebrated artists and his works still resonate more than 100 years on. With his trademark ingenuity he managed to capture the changing ways people viewed nature and the world around them at the turn of the century.

This is a rare and beautiful example of Monet’s Venetian studies and I hope that the funds can be raised to keep this treasure in the UK.”

Born in Paris in 1840, Oscar-Claude Monet (1840 – 1926) was a prolific French painter and a key founder of the Impressionist movement. Monet was introduced to painting from nature by Eugène Boudin and went on to become one of the foremost artists of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century.

The term ‘Impressionism’ comes from the title of Monet’s work ‘Impression, soleil levant’ which was first exhibited in 1874. Monet’s style of painting focused on capturing the same scene many times over with changing levels of light and the seasons.

The Minister’s decision follows the advice of the Reviewing Committee on the Export of Works of Art and Objects of Cultural Interest (RCEWA). The committee noted that the work was a beautiful painting from an important period in the career of one of the foremost artists of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. They also noted that examples of the artist’s post 1900 travelling works are rare in UK public collections.

The RCEWA made its recommendation on the grounds of the painting’s outstanding aesthetic importance and its interest for the study of Monet’s Venetian series.