Edouard Manet (1832 - 1883)
Manet was born in Paris on January 23, 1832, the son of a high government official. To avoid studying
law, as his father wished, he went to sea. He then studied in Paris under the academic French painter
Thomas Couture and visited Germany, Italy, and the Netherlands to study the paintings of the old
masters. The Dutch painter Frans Hals and the Spanish artists Diego Velázquez, and Francisco Jose de
Goya were the principal influences on his art.
Manet began to paint genre (everyday) subjects, such as old beggars, street urchins, café characters, and
Spanish bullfight scenes. He adopted a direct, bold brush technique in his treatment of realistic subject
matter. In 1863 his famous Le déjeuner sur l'herbe was shown at the Salon des
Refusés, a new exhibition place opened by Napoleon III following the protests of artists rejected at the
official Salon. Manet's canvas, portraying a woodland picnic that included a seated female nude attended
by two fully dressed young men, attracted immediate and wide attention, but was bitterly attacked by the
critics. Hailed by young painters as their leader, Manet became the central figure in the dispute between
the academic and rebellious art factions of his time. In 1864 the official Salon accepted two of his
paintings, and in 1865 he exhibited his Olympia, a nude based on a Venus by
Titian, which aroused storms of protest in academic circles because of its unorthodox realism.
In 1866 the French novelist Emile Zola, who championed the art of Manet in the newspaper Figaro,
became a close friend of the painter. He was soon joined by the young group of French impressionist
painters, Edgar Degas, Claude Monet, Auguste Renoir, Alfred Sisley, Camille Pissarro, and Paul
Cezanne, who were influenced by Manet's art and who, in turn, influenced him, particularly in the use of
lighter colors and an emphasis on the effects of light. Manet served as an officer in the French army from
1870 to 1871, during the Franco-Prussian War. He did not gain recognition until late in life, when his
portraits became much sought after. In 1882 one of his finest pictures, The Bar at the Folies-Bergère, was
exhibited at the Salon, and an old friend, who was then minister of fine arts, obtained the Legion of Honor for
the artist. Manet died in Paris on April 30, 1883. He left, besides many watercolors and pastels, 420 oil paintings.