In Claude Monet 's In the Woods at Giverny- Blanche Hoschede at Her Easel with Suzanne Hochede Reading, we are shown, as the name implies, an outdoor woods setting. A woman wearing a dark coat reading a book in the grass while another woman dressed in blue paints her on the easel. The overall setting is very tranquil as the women in the painting are the only differences in the painting with their difference in the value, color, the subtle brushwork and even the point of view. These differences distinguish them from the background, however, still feel as if they belong there and doesn 't disturb the flow of the image. The painting itself only has a few objects where your eyes can go and three that it does have, two of them immediately catches your gaze due to the amount of space their difference in value take . The setting itself has only …show more content…
Their are only a few instances where the clear form of an object is clearly shown in the background that being the trunks. The grass and leaves are naturally unkempt and don 't usually have a definitive shape. So here they are represent by lively or natural stokes with different colors so that it doesn 't seem flat. The grass naturally go up in direction and the leaves group together to give the woods a feeling of being alive and untouched by humans. On the other hand, the focal points have a different brushwork to create a separate figure. The clear form of the coat and dresses are done by the smoother or controlled stokes to create the form of the women and their clothing. The controlled and lively brushwork contrast each other and creates a clear idea that they are their own setting. However, the difference is not too great to the point where they would clash for attention. While it 's true that there are certain portions where the dresses don 't have smooth brushwork, when compared to their surroundings it 's much more