James H. Rubin is Professor Emeritus of Art History at Stony Brook University. He is the author of thirteen books, including Impressionism; Impressionist Cats and Dogs: Pets in the Painting of Modern Life; and Impressionism and the Modern Landscape: Productivity, Technology, and Urbanization from Manet to Van Gogh, as well as more than seventy articles and exhibition catalog essays on nineteenth-century French art.
This impressive book is a valuable contribution to the scholarship on Monet and later nineteenth- and early twentieth-century French art and culture more broadly. By the end of it, readers will have a far richer understanding of the manifold ways that Monet's late work intersects with major artistic, political, and philosophical currents of the period. -Michelle Foa, author of Georges Seurat: The Art of Vision