

Claude Monet (1840–1926).
L.A.S., Hôtel d’Angleterre, Rouen, 10 April 1892, to Mr HAMMAN; 2 pages, in-8 format, postmark indicating date of receipt (paper yellowed and fragile, restored).
Fees include commission and taxes.
L.A.S., Hôtel d’Angleterre, Rouen, 10 April 1892, to Mr HAMMAN; 2 pages, in-8 format, postmark indicating date of receipt (paper yellowed and fragile, restored).
[Hamann was a partner of the gallery owner Georges Petit.] “I am still in Rouen, working like a slave, and do not yet know when I shall return to Giverny.” He cannot promise him “to be the first to see my paintings. For a long time now, Mr Durand-Ruel, Boussod, Montaignac and others have been singing the same old tune […] besides, I have decided not to sell what I bring back straight away, nor even to let them hold me back. Once I have looked at them for a while and retouched and refined them, I shall see which ones I shall keep and which ones I might sell.” But Hamann may come and see them “like everyone else, without keeping anything for the moment”…
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