Manet transformed the art world by audaciously staging subjects from
European old master painting in contemporary terms, using bold brushwork
and color. This masterful still life exemplifies the artist's
achievements in the genre that he once reportedly called "the touchstone
of the painter." Still lifes were central to his creative practice,
both as an independent subject and as a key element in the scenes of
modern life that earned him fame.
Some French families top a brioche with a flower on Easter morning as a
symbol of resurrection, but the presence of plums, peaches, and grapes
in this canvas suggests that Manet painted it after Easter, during the
summer of 1870. The composition and the soft color harmonies of the
blossom and fruit pay homage to Jean Siméon Chardin's painting The Brioche
(1763), which the Louvre acquired the previous year. Manet made the
motif his own with dramatic tonal contrasts and self-assured, palpable
brushwork, particularly evident in his handling of the white fringed
napkin and the rose petals, set off against a dark backdrop.
Wednesday, August 30, 2017
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment