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Alice Hoschedé

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Died
  
19 May 1911, Giverny, France

Spouse
  
Claude Monet (m. 1892–1911)

Children
  
Germaine Hoschedé, Jacques Hoschedé, Marthe Hoschedé, Jean-Pierre Hoschedé

Similar
  

Alice Raingo Hoschedé Monet (February 19, 1844 – May 19, 1911) was the wife of department store magnate and art collector Ernest Hoschedé and later of the Impressionist painter Claude Monet.

Contents

Alice Hoschedé Alice Hosched Monet 18441911 was the second wife of Monet

Early life

Alice Hoschedé Claude Monet and Alice Hosched Monet in Piazza San Marco Venice

According to unsourced genealogical data reported by Michael Legrand, she was born Angélique Émilie Alice Raingo on February 19, 1844 in Paris to Denis Lucien Alphonse Raingo and his wife Jeanne Coralie Boulade.

Marriage to Ernest Hoschedé

After meeting her future daughter-in-law in 1863, Ernest Hoschedé's mother wrote of Alice:

Alice Hoschedé Pinterest The world39s catalog of ideas

This young woman has wit, intelligence in plenty and, I believe, strength of will. Her conversation is easy, though I find her voice rather loud. She seemed to me more delicate and prettier than in her photograph.

Alice Hoschedé Camille Doncieux and Claude Monet Part 2 my daily art display

Her children (by Ernest Hoschedé) were Blanche (who married Claude's son, Jean Monet), Germaine, Suzanne, Marthe, Jean-Pierre, and Jacques.

Life with the Monet family

Alice Hoschedé Alice Hosched Monet The Ark of Grace

In 1876, Hoschedé commissioned Monet to paint decorative panels for the Château de Rottembourg and several landscape paintings. According to the Nineteenth-century European Art: A Topical Dictionary, it may have been during this visit that Monet began a relationship with Alice Hoschedé and her youngest son, Jean-Pierre, may have been fathered by Monet.

Ernest Hoschedé went bankrupt in 1877. Ernest, Alice, and their children moved into a house in Vétheuil with Monet, Monet's first wife Camille, and the Monets' two sons, Jean and Michel. Ernest spent increasing lengths of time in Paris. He then lived in Paris and worked at le Voltaire.

There are times when Ernest Hoschedé returns to visit his wife and children at the successive Monet households of Vetheuil, Poissy and Giverny. During those times Monet leaves the household. The separation from Alice, though, leaves Monet greatly distressed, experiences nightmares, and generally unable to paint.

Monet's last campaign at Etretat coincides with the presence of Ernest Hoschedé at the birthday celebration of his wife at Giverny. Monet is "annihilated" by this development, and although he acknowledges that it would be better not to send Mme Hoschedé such a bleak account, he cannot resist acquainting her of his pain. Along with obsessive thoughts of her, Monet also claims to have unceasing concern for "our two little ones, so cute and nice". The reference is to Camille Monet's son Michele (b. 1878) and Alice Hoschedé's son Jean-Pierre (b. 1877); the implication here and elsewhere in the correspondence may be that Monet is the father of both.

Before the Monet and Hoschedé families had moved to Poissy, Ernest Hoschedé had refused to pay his share of the upkeep for Alice and the children. In 1886 had showed up and demanded that his wife and children return with him to Paris, but Alice remained with Monet.

Relationship with Claude Monet

After Camille Monet's death in 1879, Monet and Alice (along with the children from the two respective families) continued living together at Poissy and later at Giverny. Still married to Ernest Hoschedé and living with Claude Monet, the Le Gaulois newspaper in Paris declared that she was Monet's "charming wife" in 1880.

Ernest Hoschedé died in 1891 and Alice agreed to marry Monet in 1892.

Madam Hoschedé came from an upper-middle-class family, and despite the irregular character of her relationship with Monet (until their marriage in 1892) she brought their home an element of respectability that the people of the village could accept more easily than they might have the casual, vaguely scandalous air of an "artistic" household... With affectionate authority she supervised the education not only of her own six children but of Monet's two sons.

Alice died in 1911.

Paintings of Alice

Some of the paintings of Alice Hoschedé Monet are:

  • Claude Monet, Breakfast under the Tent, Giverny, 1888
  • John Singer Sargent, Mme Hoschedé and Her Son in Monet's Garden, Giverny
  • John Singer Sargent, Claude Monet Painting

  • References

    Alice Hoschedé Wikipedia