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| | Monet - MSN Encarta |
 | | Another future leader of the impressionists, Camille Pissarro, was a fellow student there, and the two soon became close friends. |
 | | For two other large paintings from that time, Monet’s future wife Camille Doncieux posed in elegant attire: The Green Dress (1866, Kunsthalle, Bremen, Germany), which was shown in the Salon of 1866, and Women in the Garden (1867, Musée d'Orsay, Paris). |
 | | Monet’s first wife, Camille, died in 1879, and soon afterward Monet set up home with Alice Hoschedé, the wife of one of his most important patrons, and their respective children. |
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