In 1895, two married, successful artists,
Frederick and
Mary Fairchild MacMonnies, bought an old priory in the town of Giverny, where Claude Monet was the reigning artistic deity. High walls enclosed their house, studios, and a terraced garden, which became a center of activity for the American art colony drawn to Giverny.
A frequent visitor was
Will Hicok Low. During my research, I read his amusing and generous-hearted book
A Chronicle of Friendships (1908) with pleasure. To see one of his paintings of the MacMonnies’ garden, click
here. For one of her garden paintings, click
here.
A nursery for the MacMonnies children with Mary’s copies of murals by Puvis de Chavannes on the back wall exemplifies the MacMonnies’ way of making their home as ideal a world as possible. Unfortunately, Frederick had affairs with
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