Skip to main content
Collections Menu
Waterloo Bridge, overcast weather
Waterloo Bridge, overcast weather

Waterloo Bridge, overcast weather

Artist (1840 - 1926)
Date1900
MediumOil on canvas
Dimensions65 × 100 cm
ClassificationsPaintings
Credit LineCollection & image © Hugh Lane Gallery. Donated by Ella Fry, 1905.
Object number304
DescriptionAs early as December 1880, Monet had thought about creating a group of paintings of the river Thames in London although he did not start the series until 1899. He spent three periods in London between September 1899 and March 1901. Over the next five years he was to produce ninety-five views of the river Thames in three major subject groups - Waterloo Bridge, Charing Cross Bridge and Houses of Parliament. He stayed at the Savoy Hotel and from the window in his room he could see Waterloo Bridge to his left and Charing Cross Bridge to his right.

Monet painted forty-one versions of Waterloo Bridge, which linked the west end of the city to the more industrial south bank. In this painting, the early morning traffic, both vehicular and pedestrian, is indicated by light touches of vibrant reds and pinks. The vertical smoking chimneys in the distance counterbalance the horizontality of the bridge. Monet's intention was to capture the essence of London with its extraordinary light effects and atmosphere created by the combination of mist and smoke, both industrial and domestic. To achieve this, he worked at great speed and had a vast number of canvases on the go at one time. Some of these were completed back in his studio at Giverny in France.
On View
Not on view
Lavacourt under Snow
Claude Monet
c. 1878-1881
Sutton Courtenay
Sir John Lavery
1917
The Thames at Mapledurham
George Price Boyce
1860
Old Battersea Bridge
Walter Greaves
Avignon from the West
Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot
c. 1836
Old Bridge, Hankow
Sir Frank William Brangwyn
1924
Sunset, Toledo Bridge
William Crampton Gore
Homage to Sir Hugh Lane
Seán Keating
1920