The Doge's Palace Seen from San Giorgio Maggiore (Claude Monet)

The Doge's Palace Seen from San Giorgio Maggiore (in French: Le Palais Ducal vu de Saint-Georges Majeur) is a 1908 painting by Claude Monet that resides in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

His series paintings originated in his early career when he and other impressionists became interested in en plein air and were inspired by the effects of changing light.

The Doge's Palace was done later in his career after he had already established his artistic style, however this work is considered less successful because of the scant time he spent in Venice and because he had to finish the series by memory later in Paris.

Monet chose a viewpoint on the edge of the piazza in front of Palladio's famous abbey church (Abbazia di San Giorgio Maggiore).

After this painting was exhibited in Paris in 1912 it went on to travel the world, and has found its permanent home at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, N.Y.