Dictionary Definition
Manet n : French painter whose work influenced
the impressionists (1832-1883) [syn: Edouard
Manet]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From etyl la manet, manent, inflections of maneo.Phrase
- In stage
directions, to remain on stage (usually, as others exit).
Compare exit, exeunt.
- Exeunt Princess and maidens. Manet Lady Blanche. — W.S. Gilbert, Princess Ida, 1884
Latin
Verb
la-verb-form manetExtensive Definition
Édouard Manet (French ; January 23
1832
– April 30
1883) was a
French
painter. One of the
first nineteenth century artists to approach modern-life subjects,
he was a pivotal figure in the transition from Realism to
Impressionism.
His early masterworks
The Luncheon on the Grass and Olympia
engendered great controversy, and served as rallying points for the
young painters who would create Impressionism—today these are
considered watershed paintings that mark the genesis of modern
art.
Biography
Early life
Édouard Manet was born in Paris on January 23, 1832, to an affluent and well connected family. His mother, Eugénie-Desirée Fournier, was the goddaughter of the Swedish crown prince, Charles Bernadotte, from whom the current Swedish monarchs are descended. His father, Auguste Manet, was a French judge who expected Édouard to pursue a career in law. His uncle, Charles Fournier, encouraged him to pursue painting and often took young Manet to the Louvre. In 1845, following the advice of his uncle, Manet enrolled in a special course of drawing where he met Antonin Proust, future Minister of Fine Arts, and a subsequent life-long friend.At his father's suggestion, in 1848 he sailed on
a training vessel to Rio de
Janeiro. After twice failing the examination to join the navy,
the elder Manet relented to his son's wishes to pursue an art
education. From 1850 to 1856, Manet studied under the academic
painter Thomas
Couture, a painter of large historical paintings. In his spare
time he copied the old masters in
the Louvre.
From 1853 to 1856 he visited Germany, Italy, and the
Netherlands, during which time he absorbed the influences of
the Dutch painter Frans Hals,
and the Spanish artists Diego
Velázquez and Francisco José
de Goya.
In 1856, he opened his own studio. His style in
this period was characterized by loose brush strokes,
simplification of details, and the suppression of transitional
tones. Adopting the current style of realism
initiated by Gustave
Courbet, he painted The Absinthe Drinker
(1858-59) and other contemporary subjects such as beggars, singers,
Gypsies, people in cafés, and bullfights. After his early years, he
rarely painted religious, mythological, or historical subjects;
examples include his Christ Mocked, now in the Art
Institute of Chicago, and Christ with Angels, in the
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.
Music in the Tuileries
Music in the Tuileries is an early example of Manet's painterly style, inspired by Hals and Velázquez, and it is a harbinger of his life-long interest in the subject of leisure.While the picture was regarded as unfinished by
some, the suggested atmosphere imparts a sense of what the
Tuileries gardens were like at the time; one may imagine the music
and conversation.
Here Manet has depicted his friends, artists,
authors, and musicians who take part, and he has included a
self-portrait among the subjects.
Luncheon on the Grass (Le déjeuner sur l'herbe)
A major early work is The Luncheon on the Grass (Le déjeuner sur l'herbe). The Paris Salon rejected it for exhibition in 1863, but he exhibited it at the Salon des Refusés (Salon of the rejected) later in the year. Emperor Napoleon III had initiated The Salon des Refusés, after the Paris Salon rejected more than 4,000 paintings in 1863.The painting's juxtaposition of fully-dressed men
and a nude woman was controversial, as was its abbreviated,
sketch-like handling—an innovation that distinguished
Manet from Courbet. At the same time, Manet's composition reveals
his study of the old masters, as the disposition of the main
figures is derived from Marcantonio
Raimondi's engraving of the Judgement
of Paris (c. 1515) based on a drawing by Raphael.
Scholars also cite two works as important
precedents for Manet's painting Le déjeuner sur l'herbe, Pastoral
Concert, 1508, (col. the Louvre) and The
Tempest both of which are famous Renaissance
paintings attributed variously to Italian masters
Giorgione
or Titian
(circa 1508). The
Tempest is housed in the Gallerie
dell'Accademia of Venice, Italy. The mysterious
and enigmatic painting also features a fully dressed man and a
nude female in a rural
setting. The man is standing to the left and gazing to the side,
apparently at the woman, who is sitting in the grass, partially
nude, breastfeeding a baby; darkening clouds and distant lightning
herald an approaching storm. The relationship between the two
figures is unclear. The painting Pastoral
Concert, c.1508 in the collection of the Louvre depicts what
appears to be two seated men, both fully dressed and gazing
intently at each other in a pastoral setting; the figure on the
left plays a lute while the figure on the right gazes attentively
at him. In the foreground two naked women accompany the two seated
male figures, drapery wrapped around bare legs; one nymph has a
flute, the other a pitcher of water. In the background may be seen
a distant house, a copse of trees and a shepherd who appears to be
playing a pipe.
Olympia
As he had in Luncheon on the Grass, Manet again paraphrased a respected work by a Renaissance artist in the painting Olympia (1863), a nude portrayed in a style reminiscent of early studio photographs, but whose pose was based on Titian's Venus of Urbino (1538).Manet embarked on the canvas after being
challenged to give the Salon a nude painting to display. The
painting was controversial partly because the nude is wearing some
small items of clothing such as an orchid in her hair, a bracelet,
a ribbon around her neck, and mule slippers, all of which
accentuated her nakedness, comfortable courtesan lifestyle and
sexuality. The orchid, upswept hair, black cat, and bouquet of
flowers were all recognized symbols of sexuality at the time. This
modern Venus' body is thin, counter to prevailing standards; the
painting's lack of idealism rankled viewers who noticed it despite
its placement, high on the wall of the Salon. A fully-dressed
servant is featured, exploiting the then-current theory that the
Negress was a hyper-sexed tangent of the species. That she is
wearing the clothing of a servant to a courtesan here, furthers the
sexual tension of the piece.
The flatness of Olympia is inspired by Japanese
wood block art. Her flatness serves to make her more human and less
voluptuous. Her body as well as her gaze is unabashedly
confrontational. She defiantly looks out as her servant offers
flowers from one of her male suitors. Although her hand rests on
her leg, hiding her pubic area in a "frog" gesture - also another
sex symbol, the reference to traditional female virtue is ironic; a
notion of modesty is notoriously absent in this work. The alert
black cat at the foot of the bed strikes a sexually rebellious note
in contrast to that of the sleeping dog in Titian's portrayal of
the goddess in his Venus of Urbino. Manet's uniquely frank (and
largely unpopular) depiction of a self-assured prostitute was
accepted by the Paris Salon in 1865. At the same time, his
notoriety translated to popularity in the French avant-garde
community.
"Olympia" immediately launched responses.
Caricatures, sketches, and paintings, all addressed this nude.
Artists such as Pablo
Picasso, Paul
Gauguin, Gustave
Courbet, Paul
Cezanne, and Claude Monet
all appreciated the painting's significance.
As with Luncheon on the Grass, the painting
raised the issue of prostitution within contemporary France and the
roles of women within society.
Life and times
The roughly painted style and photographic lighting in these works was seen as specifically modern, and as a challenge to the Renaissance works Manet copied or used as source material. His work is considered 'early modern', partially because of the black outlining of figures, which draws attention to the surface of the picture plane and the material quality of paint.He became friends with the Impressionists
Edgar
Degas, Claude
Monet, Pierre-Auguste
Renoir, Alfred
Sisley, Paul
Cézanne, and Camille
Pissarro, through another painter, Berthe
Morisot, who was a member of the group and drew him into their
activities. The grand niece of the painter Jean-Honoré
Fragonard, Morisot's paintings first had been accepted in the
Salon de
Paris in 1864 and she continued to show in the salon for ten
years.
Manet became the friend and colleague of Berthe
Morisot in 1868. She is credited with convincing Manet to attempt
plein
air painting, which she had been practicing since she had been
introduced to it by another friend of hers, Camille
Corot. They had a reciprocating relationship and Manet
incorporated some of her techniques into his paintings. In 1874,
she became his sister-in-law when she married his brother,
Eugene.
Unlike the core Impressionist group, Manet
maintained that modern artists should seek to exhibit at the
Paris
Salon rather than abandon it in favor of independent
exhibitions. Nevertheless, when Manet was excluded from the
International exhibition of 1867, he set up his own exhibition. His
mother worried that he would waste all his inheritance on this
project, which was enormously expensive. While the exhibition
earned poor reviews from the major critics, it also provided his
first contacts with several future Impressionist painters,
including Degas.
Although his own work influenced and anticipated
the Impressionist style, he resisted involvement in Impressionist
exhibitions, partly because he did not wish to be seen as the
representative of a group identity, and partly because he preferred
to exhibit at the Salon. Eva
Gonzalès was his only formal student.
He was influenced by the Impressionists,
especially Monet and Morisot. Their influence is seen in Manet's
use of lighter colors, but he retained his distinctive use of
black, uncharacteristic of Impressionist painting. He painted many
outdoor (plein air)
pieces, but always returned to what he considered the serious work
of the studio.
Throughout his life, although resisted by art
critics, Manet could number as his champions Émile
Zola, who supported him publicly in the press, Stéphane
Mallarmé, and Charles
Baudelaire, who challenged him to depict life as it was. Manet,
in turn, drew or painted each of them.
Cafe scenes
Manet's paintings of cafe scenes are observations
of social life in nineteenth century Paris. People are depicted
drinking beer, listening to music, flirting, reading, or waiting.
Many of these paintings were based on sketches executed on the
spot. He often visited the Brasserie Reichshoffen on boulevard de
Rochechourt, upon which he based At the Cafe in 1878. Several
people are at the bar, and one woman confronts the viewer while
others wait to be served. Such depictions represent the painted
journal of a flâneur. These
are painted in a style which is loose, referencing Hals and
Velázquez,
yet they capture the mood and feeling of Parisian night life. They
are painted snapshots of bohemianism, urban working
people, as well as some of the bourgeoisie.
In Corner of a Cafe Concert, a man smokes while
behind him a waitress serves drinks. In The Beer Drinkers a woman
enjoys her beer in the company of a friend. In The Cafe Concert,
shown at right, a sophisticated gentleman sits at a bar while a
waitress stands resolutely in the background, sipping her drink. In
The Waitress, a serving woman pauses for a moment behind a seated
customer smoking a pipe, while a ballet dancer, with arms extended
as she is about to turn, is on stage in the background.
Manet also sat at the restaurant on the Avenue de
Clichy called Pere Lathuille's, which had a garden as well as
the dining area. One of the paintings he produced here was, At Pere
Lathuille's, in which a man displays an unrequited interest in a
woman dining near him.
In Le Bon Bock, a large, cheerful, bearded man
sits with a pipe in one hand and a glass of beer in the other, looking straight
at the viewer.
Paintings of social activities
Manet also painted the upper class enjoying more
formal social activities. In Masked ball at the Opera, Manet shows
a lively crowd of people enjoying a party. Men stand with top hats and
long black suits while talking to women with masks and costumes. He
included portraits of his friends in this picture.
Manet depicted other popular activities in his
work. In Racing at Longchamp, an unusual perspective is employed to
underscore the furious energy of racehorses as they rush toward the
viewer. In Skating Manet shows a well dressed woman in the
foreground, while others skate behind her. Always there is the
sense of active urban life continuing behind the subject, extending
outside the frame of the canvas.
In View of the International Exhibition, soldiers
relax, seated and standing, prosperous couples are talking. There
is a gardener, a boy with a dog, a woman on horseback -— in short,
a sample of the classes and ages of the people of Paris.
War
Manet's response to modern life included works devoted to war, in subjects that may be seen as updated interpretations of the genre of "history painting". The first such work was the Battle of the Kearsarge and Alabama (1864), a sea skirmish from the American Civil War which took place off the French coast, and may have been witnessed by the artist.Of interest next was the French intervention in
Mexico; from 1867 to 1869 Manet painted three versions of the
Execution of Emperor Maximilian, an event which raised concerns
regarding French foreign and domestic policy. The several versions
of the Execution are among Manet's largest paintings, which
suggests that the theme was one which the painter regarded as most
important. Its subject is the execution by Mexican firing squad of
a Hapsburg emperor, who had been installed by Napoleon III. Neither
the paintings nor a lithograph of the subject were permitted to be
shown in France. As an indictment of formalized slaughter the
paintings look back to Goya, and anticipate
Picasso's
Guernica.
In January 1871 Manet traveled to Oloron-Sainte-Marie
in the Pyrenees. In his
absence his friends added his name to the "Féderation des artistes"
(see:Courbet) of the
Paris
Commune. Manet stayed away from Paris, perhaps, until after the
semaine
sanglante. In a letter to Berthe
Morisot at Cherbourg (June
10,1871) he writes :" We came back to Paris a few days ago...".(the
semaine sanglante ended on 28 May).
The Prints and Drawings Collection of the
Museum of Fine Arts (Budapest) has a watercolour/gouache (The Barricade) by Manet
depicting a summary execution of Communards by
Versailles troops based on a lithograph of the execution
of Maximilian.
A similar piece (The Barricade), oil on plywood, is held by a
private collector.
On 18 March
1871 he wrote
to his (confederate) friend Félix
Bracquemond in Paris about his visit to Bordeaux, the
provisory seat of the French National Assembly of the Third
French Republic where Emile Zola
introduced him to the sites: " I never imagined that France could
be represented by such doddering old fools, not excepting that
little twit Thiers..."
(There followed some colorful language unsuitable at social events.
See "Manet by himself" 1991/2004.) If this could be interpreted as
support of the Commune a following letter to Bracquemond (March 21
1871)
expressed his idea more clearly: "Only party hacks and the
ambitious, the Henrys of this world following on the heels of the
Milliéres, the grotesque imitators of the Commune of 1793..." He
knew the communard Lucien Henry to have been a former painters
model and Millière, an insurance agent. "What an encouragement all
these bloodthirsty caperings are for the arts! But there is at
least one consolation in our misfortunes: that we're not
politicians and have no desire to be elected as deputies". (The
letters are published in Julliet Wilson-Bareau, ed., "Manet by
himself" UK: Times Warner, 2004.)
Paris
Manet depicted many scenes of the streets of Paris in his works. The Rue Mosnier Decked with Flags depicts red, white, and blue pennants covering buildings on either side of the street--another painting of the same title features a one-legged man walking with crutches. Again depicting the same street, but this time in a different context, is Rue Monsnier with Pavers, in which men repair the roadway while people and horses move past.Late works
He completed painting his last major work, A Bar at the Folies-Bergère (Le Bar aux Folies-Bergère), in 1882 and it hung in the Salon that year.In 1875, a French edition of Edgar Allan
Poe's The Raven
included lithographs by Manet and translation by Mallarmé.
In 1881, with pressure from his friend Antonin
Proust, the French government awarded Manet the Légion
d'honneur.
Private life
In 1863 Manet married Suzanne
Leenhoff, a Dutch-born piano teacher of his own age with whom
he had been romantically involved for approximately ten years.
Leenhoff initially had been employed by Manet's father, Auguste, to
teach Manet and his younger brother piano. She also may have been
Auguste's mistress. In 1852, Leenhoff gave birth, out of wedlock,
to a son, Leon Koella Leenhoff.
After the death of his father in 1862, Manet
married Suzanne. Eleven-year-old Leon Leenhoff, whose father may
have been either of the Manets, posed often for Manet. Most
famously, he is the subject of the Boy Carrying a Sword of 1861
(Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York). He also appears as the boy
carrying a tray in the background of The Balcony.
Gallery
References
Further reading
- Edouard Manet: Rebel in a Frock Coat by Beth Archer Brombert (1996), ISBN 0316109479 and ISBN 0226075443 (1997 paperback)
- Manet by Françoise Cachin (1990 in French; English translation 1991), ISBN 0805017933
- The Drawings of Edouard Manet by Alain de Leiris (1969), ISBN 0520015479
- The Painting of Modern Life: Paris in the Art of Manet and His Followers by TJ Clark (1985), ISBN 0500281793 (2000 paperback edition)
- Manet: Painter of Modern Life by Françoise Cachin (1995), ISBN 050030050X
- Manet by Gilles Neret (2003; Taschen), ISBN 3822819492
- Manet by John Richardson (1992; Phaidon Colour Library), ISBN 071482755X
- Ross King. The Judgment of Paris: The Revolutionary Decade that Gave the World Impressionism. New York: Waller & Company, 2006 ISBN 0802714668.
External links
- Paintings by Edouard Manet
- Hecht Museum
- The Impressionsts: Manet at biography.com
- Édouard Manet at Olga's Gallery
- Édouard Manet at Hill-Stead Museum, Farmington, Connecticut
- The Walters
- smARThistory: Olympia
- smARThistory: Boating
- Manet Gallery at MuseumSyndicate
- Manet works at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts
- Édouard Manet at allpaintings.org
manet in Bengali: এদুয়ার মানে
manet in Bosnian: Édouard Manet
manet in Breton: Édouard Manet
manet in Bulgarian: Едуар Мане
manet in Catalan: Édouard Manet
manet in Czech: Édouard Manet
manet in Danish: Édouard Manet
manet in German: Édouard Manet
manet in Modern Greek (1453-): Εντουάρ
Μανέ
manet in Vietnamese: Édouard Manet
manet in Spanish: Édouard Manet
manet in Esperanto: Édouard Manet
manet in Basque: Edouard Manet
manet in French: Édouard Manet
manet in Western Frisian: Edouard Manet
manet in Galician: Édouard Manet
manet in Korean: 에두아르 마네
manet in Croatian: Édouard Manet
manet in Ido: Édouard Manet
manet in Bishnupriya: এডৱার মানে
manet in Icelandic: Édouard Manet
manet in Italian: Édouard Manet
manet in Hebrew: אדואר מאנה
manet in Georgian: ედუარ მანე
manet in Lithuanian: Édouard Manet
manet in Hungarian: Édouard Manet
manet in Dutch: Édouard Manet
manet in Japanese: エドゥアール・マネ
manet in Norwegian: Édouard Manet
manet in Occitan (post 1500): Édouard
Manet
manet in Polish: Édouard Manet
manet in Portuguese: Édouard Manet
manet in Romanian: Édouard Manet
manet in Quechua: Édouard Manet
manet in Russian: Мане, Эдуар
manet in Sicilian: Édouard Manet
manet in Slovak: Édouard Manet
manet in Serbian: Едуар Мане
manet in Serbo-Croatian: Édouard Manet
manet in Finnish: Édouard Manet
manet in Swedish: Édouard Manet
manet in Thai: เอดวด มาเนท์
manet in Turkish: Édouard Manet
manet in Ukrainian: Мане Едуар
manet in Chinese: 愛杜爾·馬奈