Where to put flowers
It must be said that these flowers do not stay alive for long. Once picked, they wither within 1-2 days. But even in these few days they are able to have a beneficial effect on the interior space of the house. You can place the bouquet in the area whose energy needs to be strengthened. The bouquet looks beautiful in the kitchen, but if we consider it from the point of view of the teachings of Feng Shui, then the red poppy, as a symbol of fire, will best fit into the southern zone, which is responsible for fame and reputation. Such a symbol is also appropriate in the southeastern sector, which is responsible for the family.
Wherever the lady of the house places a bouquet of flowers, you can expect that it will lift the spirits and vitality of everyone who contemplates it.
Author
Oscar Claude Monet was born near Paris in 1840. His father ran a grocery store. The artist spent most of his childhood in the Norman town of Le Havre, where the family left in 1845. It was here that Claude Monet began his creative journey as a painter - his first serious artistic experience was caricature portraits.
The turning point for the artist was his acquaintance with Eugene Boudin, his first teacher, thanks to whom Claude Monet switched to landscapes. After a short service on the Algerian front in 1861-1862. The young artist’s career began to develop rapidly:
- In the second half of the 1860s, Claude Monet underwent a short training in painting, first at the university, then at Gleyre's studio.
- Meets other founders of impressionism - Renoir, Basil, Sisley.
- In 1865, the young painter’s painting was exhibited for the first time at the Paris Salon.
- In the first half of the 1870s, Claude Monet visited London, then Amsterdam.
- He spends the summer of 1873 on the estate near Argenteuil, where the painting “Field of Poppies” was painted.
In the second half of the 1870s - the first half of the 1880s, Claude Monet actively collaborated with the Impressionist circle and exhibited in their gallery, but increasingly preferred the Salon. In 1883, the artist bought the Giverny estate and by the end of the decade finally settled there with his family. Claude Monet died in 1926, on his estate, and was buried in the local cemetery at the church.