Édouard Manet’s A Bar at the Folies-Bergère (1882)

Édouard Manet is thought of as a lead­ing light of the Impres­sion­ists, but actu­al­ly, although he was asso­ci­at­ed with them and was admired by Mon­et and Renoir, he nev­er actu­al­ly exhib­it­ed at any of the Impres­sion­ist Exhi­bi­tions in Paris. He was more of a pre­cur­sor to the new era of artis­tic impres­sion­ism, and still had a foot plant­ed firm­ly in real­ism. His ear­ly work was, how­ev­er, con­tro­ver­sial, and he scan­dalised crit­ics and pub­lic alike, most notably with Le Déje­uner sur l’herbe and Olympia (both 1863), but even these were mod­elled on old clas­si­cal mas­ter­pieces: Giorgione’s Pas­toral Con­cert (1509) and Titian’s Venus of Urbino (1538) respec­tive­ly. Let’s have a quick look and see if you can spot, in the mind of a nine­teenth cen­tu­ry purist, the ele­ments of Manet’s work that trans­formed ele­gant clas­si­cism into lewd mod­ernism:

How­ev­er, the sub­ject of this blog is actu­al­ly the Manet that is arguably the most recognisable…the cel­e­brat­ed A Bar at the Folies-Bergère. The Folies Bergère was the most famous of Paris’s café-con­cert halls and was not­ed at this time for its new-fan­gled elec­tric lights. We see the frontal image of a bar­maid look­ing out at us from behind her counter, and behind her a huge mir­ror in which we see reflect­ed the back of the bar­maid along with the scene that she her­self is observ­ing. There are the mem­bers of the audi­ence, watch­ing the show, and indeed an ele­ment of the show itself: the legs of the trapeze artist which appear in the very top-left cor­ner of the pic­ture.

The woman behind the bar was actu­al­ly a real per­son, known as Suzon, who worked at the Folies Bergère dur­ing the ear­ly 1880s, and whom Manet paint­ed in his stu­dio. The gen­tle­man at the bar was Manet’s neigh­bour. The bot­tles, fruit and vase of flow­ers arranged on the counter are repli­cat­ed with all the pre­ci­sion of a still life paint­ing, and inter­est­ing to note – for such a French-feel­ing paint­ing — the bot­tles of British beer: yes, Bass Pale Ale of all things! The loose British con­nec­tion is main­tained: this famous paint­ing is held not in Paris but at the Cour­tauld Gallery, Lon­don.

Édouard Manet

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