The Impressionism

 



Art Styles in 19th century - Art Map



 




Edouard Manet



 


 
Edouard Manet

(b Paris, 23 Jan 1832; d Paris, 30 April 1883).

French painter and printmaker. Once classified as an Impressionist, he has subsequently been regarded as a Realist who influenced and was influenced by the Impressionist painters of the 1870s, though he never exhibited with them nor adopted fully their ideas and procedures. His painting is notable for its brilliant alla prima painterly technique; in both paintings and prints he introduced a new era of modern, urban subject-matter. In his relatively short career he evolved from an early style marked by dramatic light-dark contrasts and based on Spanish 17th-century painting to high-keyed, freely brushed compositions whose content bordered at times on Symbolism.


 




 

Woman in a Tub
Pastel on canvas
1879
Musée d’Orsay, Paris



 

The Railroad
Oil on canvas
1873
National Gallery of Art, Washington



 

Pertuiset, Lion Hunter
1881
Museum of Art, Sao Paolo



 

Young Man in the Costume of a Majo
Oil on canvas
1862
Metropolitan Museum of Art, Manhattan



 

Two Roses on a Tablecloth
Oil on canvas
1883



 

Le Journal Illustre
1878
The Art Institute of Chicago



 

Flowers in a Crystal Vase
Oil on canvas
1882




 

Bathers on the Seine
Oil on canvas
Museum of Art, Sao Paolo



 

Rue Mosnier with Flags
1878
J. Paul Getty Museum, Malibu



 

The Street Singer
Oil on canvas
1862
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston



 

The Model for the Folies Bergere Bar
1881



 

Masked Ball at the Opera
Oil on canvas
1874
National Gallery of Art, Washington



 

Eva Gonzales
Pastel on paper
1879



 

The Salmon
Oil on canvas
1869
Shelburne Museum