Black models: from Géricault to Matisse

Black models: from Géricault to Matisse

March 25, 2019 July 14, 2019 Exhibition has ended
Taking a multi-disciplinary approach that combines the history of art and the history of ideas, this exhibition explores aesthetic, political, social and racial issues as well as the imagery unveiled by the representation of black figures in visual arts, from the abolition of slavery in France (1794) to the modern day.
Magnet Édouard Manet - Olympia (Black cat), 1863
Magnets

Magnet Édouard Manet - Olympia (Black cat), 1863

IS220095
  • € 4.90
Édouard Manet (1832 - 1883)
Olympia (detail) in 1863
Oil on canvas - H. 130,5 ; L. 191,0 cm.
1890

With Olympia, Manet reworked the traditional theme of the female nude, using a strong, uncompromising technique. Both the subject matter and its depiction explain the scandal caused by this painting at the 1865 Salon. Even though Manet quoted numerous formal and iconographic references, such as Titian's Venus of Urbino, Goya's Maja desnuda, and the theme of the odalisque with her black slave, already handled by Ingres among others, the picture portrays the cold and prosaic reality of a truly contemporary subject.
Venus has become a prostitute, challenging the viewer with her calculating look. This profanation of the idealized nude, the very foundation of academic tradition, provoked a violent reaction. Critics attacked the "yellow-bellied odalisque" whose modernity was nevertheless defended by a small group of Manet's contemporaries with Zola at their head.
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