CLAUDE MONET (1840-1926)
Provenance
With Galerie Bernheim-Jeune, Paris, no. 12161 (label verso)Collection of Oscar Schmitz, Dresden, 1904
Kunsthaus Zürich, on loan from 1931 from the collection of Oscar Schmitz
Kunstmuseum Basel, on loan from 1934 from the collection of Oscar Schmitz
Wildenstein & Co., London, from 1936
Mr. E.W. Fattorini, Great Britain, 1940
Sotheby's, London, April 16, 1975, lot 25
Private Collection, England
Sotheby's, London, December 3, 1991, lot 22
Private Collection, London, acquired at the above aucti...More...on
Private Collection, Europe
Koller Auktionen AG, Zurich, November 29, 2024, lot 03214
Private Collection, London, acquired at the above auction
Exhibition
Zürich, Kunsthaus Zürich, Sammlung Oscar Schmitz, January 14-February 14, 1932, no. 35/47Balingen, Stadthalle, Claude Monet, June 18-August 31, 1992, no. 6
Washington, D.C., Phillips Collection, Impressionists on the Seine: A Celebration of Renoir's “Luncheon of the Boating Party," September 21, 1996-February 2, 1997, no. 39
Literature
Daniel Wildenstein, Monet. Catalogue raisonné. Werkverzeichnis, Bonn, 1996, vol. II, p. 153, no. 371 (illustrated)Paul Fechter, “Die Sammlung Schmitz,” Kunst und Künstler: Illustrierte Monatsschrift für bildende Kunst und Kunstgewerbe, Berlin, October 1909, p. 21
Karl Scheffler, “Die Sammlung Oskar Schmitz in Dresden,” Kunst und Künstler: Illustrierte Monatsschrift für bildende Kunst und Kunstgewerbe, Berlin, 1920/21, p. 186
Marie Dormoy, “La collection Schmitz à Dresde,” L’Amour de l’art, Paris, October 1926, p. 342
Daniel Wildenstein, Monet, vie et œuvre, Lausanne/Paris, 1974, vol. I, p. 237, 272 (illustrated)
Joel Isaacson, Observation and Reflection. Claude Monet, Oxford, 1978, p. 95, 207 (illustrated)
Paul Hayes Tucker, Monet at Argenteuil, New Haven/London, 1982, p. 120 (illustrated no. XXI)
Daniel Wildenstein, Monet, vie et œuvre, Lausanne/Paris, 1991, vol. V, p. 30 (illustrated)
...LESS...
Argenteuil was central to the crystallization of Impressionism, marking a time when its ideas, subject matter, and collaborative spirit fully coalesced. Between 1871 and 1878, Monet’s presence there drew fellow artists including Renoir, Manet, Sisley, and Caillebotte, fostering an environment of shared experimentation and innovation.
The painting’s early provenance further enhances its significance. It was owned by Oscar A. H. Schmitz, the German writer and intellectual known for his writings on Jungian psychology and his discerning collection of 19th-century art. Following Schmitz’s unexpected death in 1933, the collection was sent to the Kunstmuseum Basel. In 1936, the art dealer Wildenstein & Co. took over 62 works from the collection and organized a major exhibition and sale in Paris and New York. Le bassin d’Argenteuil is included in the Daniel Wildenstein catalogue raisonné (1996), vol. II, p. 153, as no. 371, and is published in eight books.

