View allAll Photos Tagged Manet
THE EMERGENCY WILL REPLACE THE CONTEMPORARY .
Tent artwork by Thierry Geoffroy /Colonel purchased by the Museum Kunsthalle Mannheim
Kuma Museum / Kunsthalle Mannheim made the acquisition for their collection of one of Thierry Geoffroy / Colonel tent art work
(The tent was part of the removed installation installed in front of The Fridericianum during documenta 13 in Kassel (2012))
In 2019 it was placed and photographed by the museum curator Sebastian Baden placed in dialogue with Édouard Manet famous painting “The Execution of Emperor Maximilian”.
“The Emergency Will Replace The Contemporary”
Spray paint on Tent, 205 × 140 × 100cm /2012
------------------------links ----------------------------------------
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thierry_Geoffroy
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency_Room_(art)
www.emergencyrooms.org/formats.html
www.emergencyrooms.org/biennalist.html
—-----about the The Execution of Emperor Maximilian ( wikipedia )
The Execution of Emperor Maximilian is a series of paintings by Édouard Manet from 1867 to 1869, depicting the execution by firing squad of Emperor Maximilian I of the short-lived Second Mexican Empire. Manet produced three large oil paintings, a smaller oil sketch and a lithograph of the same subject. All five works were brought together for an exhibition in London and Mannheim in 1992–1993 and at the Museum of Modern Art in New York in 2006.
History
Maximilian was born in 1832, the second son of Archduke Franz Karl of Austria of the House of Habsburg and Princess Sophie of Bavaria. After a career in the Austrian Navy, he was encouraged by Napoleon III to become Emperor of Mexico following the French intervention in Mexico. Maximilian arrived in Mexico in May 1864. He faced significant opposition from forces loyal to the deposed president Benito Juárez throughout his reign, and the Empire collapsed after Napoleon withdrew French troops in 1866.
Maximilian was captured on Cerro de las Campanas in May 1867, sentenced to death at a court martial, and executed, together with Generals Miguel Miramón and Tomás Mejía, on 19 June 1867.
Manet supported the Republican cause, particularly as represented by Léon Gambetta,[1] but was inspired to start work on a painting, heavily influenced by Goya's The Third of May 1808. The final work, painted in 1868–1869 is now held by the Kunsthalle Mannheim. The painting is signed by Manet in the lower left corner, bearing the date of Maximilian's execution in 1867, not when the work was completed 1868–1869.
Fragments of an earlier and larger painting from about 1867–1868 are held by the National Gallery in London. Parts of that work were probably cut off by Manet, but it was largely complete on his death. Other parts were sold separately after his death. The surviving pieces were reassembled by Edgar Degas and they were bought by the National Gallery in 1918, then separated again until 1979, and finally combined on one canvas in 1992.[2]
A third, unfinished, oil painting is held by the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, donated from Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gair Macomber in 1930, who bought it from Ambroise Vollard in 1909. A much smaller work in oils, the study for the Mannheim painting is held by the Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek in Copenhagen.
Manet was refused permission to reproduce the lithograph in 1869,[by whom?] but an edition of 50 impressions was produced in 1884, after his death. Examples of the lithograph are held by the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and the Clark Art Institute in Williamstown, Massachusetts.
In the Boston version of the painting, the soldiers wear clothes and sombrero of Mexican Republicans. In the final version in Mannheim, "[t]he soldiers in the painting wear uniforms almost identical to French troops, and the man preparing for the coup de grâce shares the conspicuous features of Napoleon III. The implication was clear: Napoleon III had blood on his hands. Unsurprisingly, the painting was banned from public display in Paris"[3] during the reign of Napoleon III, but the Mannheim version was exhibited in New York and Boston in 1879–1880, brought there by Manet's friend, the opera singer Émilie Ambre.[4] The Mannheim and Boston versions were exhibited together at the Salon d'Automne in 1905. The Mannheim version was acquired by the Kunsthalle Mannheim in 1910 after it had been exhibited at the Berliner Secession earlier that year.
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—----about the Museum collection :-------------------
Sammlung
Neben ca. 2.150 Gemälden und 840 Skulpturen umfasst die Sammlung einen Bestand von ca. 33.000 Blatt Handzeichnungen, Aquarellen und Druckgraphiken sowie eine Werkkunstabteilung. Neben der ständigen Sammlungspräsentation werden jährlich Sonderausstellungen internationaler zeitgenössischer Kunst gezeigt.
Die Kunsthalle Mannheim besitzt Gemälde des 19. und 20. Jahrhunderts. Zu den bedeutendsten Künstlern zählen Friedrich, Dahl, Manet, Sisley, Géricault, Delacroix, Pissarro, Cézanne, von Marées, Schuch, Kokoschka, Rohlfs, Heckel, Schmidt-Rottluff, Munch, Macke, Delaunay, Dix, Beckmann, Grosz, Bacon, Götz, Heinisch und Fuhr.
Die Skulpturensammlung ist besonders in Bezug auf das 20. Jahrhundert von Bedeutung. Sie enthält Werke von Belling, Bosslet, Brâncuși, Christian, Daumier, Rodin, Rosso, Barlach, Degas, Lehmbruck, Archipenko, Harth, Arp, Hepworth, Matisse, Marini, Moore, Giacometti, Hajek, Serra, Zadkine, Chillida, Uhlmann, Lenk, Segal, Seitz, Rückriem, Hauser, Vostell, Heiner Thiel und Mayer. Seit den 1930er-Jahren gibt es die Außenausstellung von Werken der zeitgenössischen Bildhauerei im Skulpturengarten der Kunsthalle Mannheim.[1]
Die graphische Sammlung wurde mit Rücksicht auf die finanziellen Mittel nicht im Hinblick auf Vollständigkeit angelegt, sondern setzt einzelne Schwerpunkte. Diese sind die Zeichnungen der Romantiker und Klassizisten, der Neuen Sachlichkeit und die Sammlung von Bildhauerzeichnungen. Hinzu kommt die europäische Druckgraphik des 15. bis 18. Jahrhunderts, darunter Dürer und Rembrandt.
—---------from the Museum homepage—
The Collection of Kunsthalle Mannheim
After its foundation in 1909, Kunsthalle Mannheim took on a pioneering role on the German museum scene with its modern collection concepts. As early as 1910, Fritz Wichert (1909-1923) acquired its most famous painting: Édouard Manet's "The Execution of Emperor Maximilian of Mexico". Gustav Friedrich Hartlaub (1923-1933) coined the term "New Objectivity" in 1925 and brought the realistic painting of the late 1920s to Mannheim. After the Second World War, the Kunsthalle became one of the leading museums with a focus on sculpture. It developed into a key museum of classical modern and contemporary art. The collection currently comprises around 2,300 paintings, 860 sculptures and installations, 34,000 graphic artworks, and 800 objects of applied art. In addition to masterpieces of painting and graphic art from Max Beckmann to Francis Bacon, the collection highlights include a range of sculptures from Auguste Rodin to Thomas Hirschhorn. It also features installations by Alicja Kwade, Rebecca Horn, William Kentridge, Joseph Kosuth and James Turrell.
Abraham Bloemaert, Abraham Hulk, Abraham Storck, Achille Funi, Adolf Abel, Adolf Dietrich, Adolf Erbslöh, Adolf Hildenbrand, Adolf Hölzel, Adolf Jutz, Adolf Luther, Adolph von Menzel, Adriaen Collaert, Adriaen van der Werff, Aegidius Sadeler II, Agostino Carracci, Aimé Barraud, Alan Baxter, Alan Beeton, Albert Aereboe, Albert Birkle, Albert Glockendon, Albert Haueisen, Albert Ihrig, Albert Lang, Alberto Giacometti, Albrecht Dürer, Albrecht Hohlt, Alessandro Casolani, Alexander Archipenko, Alexander Kanoldt, Alexej von Jawlensky, Alf Lechner, Alfonso Parigi, Alfred Hrdlicka, Alfred Kubin, Alfred Sisley, Alfred Ungewiß, Algernon Newton, Alicja Kwade, Alison Britton, Aloisi-Galanini Baldassare, Ambera Wellmann, André Derain, André Gill, André Masson, André Volten, Andrea Zaumseil, Andreas G. Hofer, Andreas Paul Weber, Andreas Werner, Andrew Walford, Ann Reder, Anna Mahler, Annette Kelm, Anselm Feuerbach, Anselm Kiefer, Antje Brüggemann-Breckwoldt, Antoine Pevsner, Anton Eberwein, Anton Henning, Anton Hiller, Antonio Amoroso, Antonio Baratti, Antonio Capellan, Antonio Corpora, Anys Reimann, Aristide Maillol, Arno Henschel, Arnold Böcklin, Arnold Zahner, Arthur Kaufmann, Arturo Bonfanti, August Gaul, August Macke, August Wilhelm Dressler, Auguste Gaspard Louis Desnoyers, Auguste Herbin, Auguste Johanne Papendieck, Auguste Rodin, Barbara Hepworth, Barthel Gilles, Bartholomäus Spranger, Beate Kuhn, Ben Vautier, Ben Willikens, Benjamin Godron, Bernard Buffet, Bernard Meadows, Bernard Schultze, Bernardino Capitelli, Bernhard Bleeker, Bernhard Heiliger, Bernhard Kretzschmar, Bernhard Sandfort, Betty Blandino, Bo Kristiansen, Bogomir Ecker, Bonaventura Genelli, Brigitte Meier-Denninghoff, Brigitte Schuller, Bruno Asshoff, Bruno Diemer, C. David, Cagnaccio di San Pietro, Camille Pissarro, Carel van Falens, Carel Willink, Carl Blechen, Carl Ernst Christoph Hess, Carl Friedrich Lessing, Carl Kuntz, Carl Rottmann, Carl Schuch, Carl Spitzweg, Carlo Mense, Carlos Cruz-Diez, Carry Hauser, Caspar David Friedrich, Charles André van Loo, Charles Crodel, Charles David, Charles Despiau, Charles H. Hodges, Charles Meryon, Charley Toorop, Cherubino Alberti, Christa von Schnitzler, Christian Friedrich Gille, Christian Rohlfs, Christiane Baetcke, Christiane Maether, Christine Atmer de Reig, Claude Mellan, Claude Monet, Clive Barker, Colin Pearson, Constantin Brâncuşi, Constantin Guys, Cornelis Poelenburgh, Curt Stenvert, D. Maiotto, Daher Zidany, Dan Graham, Daniel Spoerri, David Leach, Dawid Dawidowitsch Burljuk, Diamond Stingily, Dick Ket, Dieter Crumbiegel, Diethelm Koch, Domenico Maria Bonavera, Dominique-Vivant Baron Denon, Eberhard Doser, Eberhard Eckerle, Edgar Degas, Edgar Ende, Edgar Gutbub, Edgar John, Edgar Schmandt, Edmund Kanoldt, Edouard Chapallaz, Édouard Manet, Edouard Vuillard, Eduard Bick, Eduard Gubler, Edvard Munch, Edward von Steinle, Edwin Scharff, El (Eliezer) Lissitzky, Elfriede Balzar-Kopp, Elfriede Lohse-Wächtler, Élisabeth Joulia, Elisabeth Schaffer, Elisabeth Tutti Veith, Emil Bizer, Emil Lugo, Emil Nolde, Emil Schumacher, Emile Bernard, Emma Talbot, Enrico Castellani, Enrique Marty, Eric Astoul, Erich Drechsler, Erich Hauser, Erich Heckel, Erich Ockert, Erich Schilling, Erich Wegner, Erika Streit, Erna Dinklage, Ernest Neuschul, Ernesto De Fiori, Ernst August von Mandelsloh, Ernst Barlach, Ernst Czerper, Ernst Fries, Ernst Fritsch, Ernst Haider, Ernst Hermanns, Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, Ernst Pleuger, Ernst Reinold, Ernst Wilhelm Nay, Erwin Bechtold, Erwin Heerich, Erwin Pfefferle, Etienne Jehandier Desrochers, Eugen Bracht, Eugen Knaus, Eugène Delacroix, Ewald Mataré, Fabio Berardi, Felice Casorati, Felix Nussbaum, Félix Vallotton, Ferdinand Bol, Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller, Ferdinand Hodler, Fernand Léger, Florian Slotawa, Fra Bartolommeo, Francesco Messina, Francis Bacon, Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes, François Barraud, François Lafranca, Frans Masereel, Franz Erhard Walther, Franz (Frantisek) Kupka, Franz Gelb, Franz Gutmann, Franz Horny, Franz Lenk, Franz Marc, Franz Nölken, Franz Radziwill, Franz Sedlacek, Franz von Stuck, Fred Goldberg, Fred Stauffer, Fred Thieler, Fridel Dethleffs-Edelmann, Friedensreich Hundertwasser, Friedrich Kallmorgen, Friedrich Klementz, Fritz Burmann, Fritz Cremer, Fritz Gniesmer, Fritz Klemm, Fritz Koenig, Fritz Paravicini, Fritz Schaefler, Fritz Skade, Fritz Tröger, Fritz Vehring, Fritz von Uhde, Fritz Winter, G. Mellan, Gabriele Dahms, Georg Friedrich Kersting, Georg Kolbe, Georg Scholz, Georg Schrimpf, George Grosz, George Minne, George Rickey, George Segal, Georges Kars, Georges Lallemand, Georges Mathieu, Georges Noël, Georges Rouault, Gerald Weigel, Gérard Deschamps, Gerd Knäpper, Gerd Lind, Gerda Bier-Buck, Gerhard Hoehme, Gerhard Marcks, Germaine Richier, Gerolamo Cairati, Gerold Miller, Gert H. Wollheim, Gertrud Beinling, Giacomo Manzù, Gilles Demarteau, Giorgio de Chirico, Giovanni Battista Piranesi, Giovanni Battista Pittoni, Giovanni Domenico Tiepolo, Giovanni Jacopo Caraglio, Gisela Schliessler, Giulio Antonio Bonasone, Giulio Carpioni, Giulio Romano, Giuseppe Canale, Giuseppe Varotti, Gordon Baldwin, Görge Hohlt, Gotlind Weigel, Gottfried Brockmann, Gottfried Honegger, Guido Joseph Kern, Guido Sengle, Günter Ferdinand Ris, Gunter Frentzel, Günter Oehlbach, Günther Förg, Günther Uecker, Gusso Reuss, Gussy Hippold-Ahnert, Gustav Klimt, Gustav Kraitz, Gustav Schönleber, Gustav Seitz, Gustave Courbet, H. David, Hanna Nagel, Hanns Maria Barchfeld, Hans Adolf Bühler, Hans Arp, Hans Baldung Grien, Hans Cassar, Hans Christiansen, Hans Dochow, Hans Gsell, Hans Heckmann, Hans Lifka, Hans Mertens, Hans Meyboden, Hans Nagel, Hans Otto Schönleber, Hans Scheib, Hans Thoma, Hans Uhlmann, Hans von Marées, Hans Wimmer, Hans-Theo Richter, Harmen Jansz. Muller, Harmensz van Rijn Rembrandt, Harry Kramer, Hedwig Bollhagen, Heidi Kippenberg, Heiner Balzar, Heinrich Aldegrever, Heinrich Bürkel, Heinrich Maria Davringhausen, Heinrich Nauen, Heinrich Zernack, Heinz Mack, Heinz R. Fuchs, Heinz Schifferdecker, Heinz Sommer, Helene von der Leyen, Helga Föhl, Hendrick Goltzius, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, Henri Laurens, Henri Matisse, Henry Luyten, Henry Moore, Herbert Garbe, Herbert Hamak, Herbert Tannenbaum, Herbert Volwahsen, Hermann Blumenthal, Hermann Geibel, Hermann Kupferschmid, Hermann Scherer, Hermann Sprauer, Hermann Tiebert, Hieronymus Cock, Hildegund Schlichenmaier, Honoré Daumier, Horst Kerstan, Hubert Griemert, Hugo von Habermann, I. L. Deliguon, I. Stella, Ian Tyson, Ilona Singer, Inga Dorner, Ingeborg Asshoff, Isa Genzken, Israhel van Meckenem, Iwan Babij, Jacob Isaackszoon van Ruisdael, Jacob Sarazin, Jacoba van Heemskerck, Jacopo de Barbari, Jacques Callot, Jacques Claude Danzel, Jacques Dassonville, Jacques Lipchitz, Jacques Mahé de La Villeglé, Jakob Philipp Hackert, James Ensor, James Lloyd, James Turrell, Jan Bontjes van Beek, Jan Brueghel d. J., Jan Harmensz. Muller, Jan J. Schoonhoven, Jan Tschichold, Jannis Kounellis, Jean - Baptiste Oudry, Jean Baron, Jean Daullé, Jean Fautrier, Jean Tinguely, Jean-Baptiste Greuze (zugeschrieben), Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot, Jean-Francoise de Troy, Jean-Michel Moreau le jeune, Jesse Darling, Jesús Rafael Soto, Joachim Bandau, Joachim Kuhlmann, Joachim Lutz, Joachim Schmettau, Joan Miró, Johan Christian Clausen Dahl, Johan Grimonprez, Johann Christian Reinhart, Johann Elias Haid, Johann Georg Dillis, Johann Wilhelm Schirmer, Johanna Jacoba (Johnny) Rolf, Johannes Gebhardt, John Bock, Jon Kessler, Joseph Anton Nikolaus Settegast, Joseph Beuys, Joseph Kosuth, Joseph Parrocel, Joseph von Führich, Josh Kline, Joshua Reynolds, Juan Gris, Julio González, Julius Bissier, Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld, Jürgen Brodwolf, Jürgen Goertz, Jürgen Riecke, Juscha Schneider-Döring, Kaari Upson, Karl Adlmannseder, Karl Albiker, Karl Bertsch, Karl Bobek, Karl Dillinger, Karl Fred Dahmen, Karl Friedrich Korden, Karl H. Hödicke, Karl Hartung, Karl Heinz Wulf, Karl Hentschel, Karl Hofer, Karl Hubbuch, Karl Ostertag, Karl Otto Götz, Karl Roux, Karl Scheid, Karl Schmidt-Rottluff, Karl Schmoll von Eisenwerth, Karl Stohner, Karl Theodor Boehme, Kate Diehn-Bitt, Käte Hoch, Katharina Hinsberg, Käthe Kollwitz, Kay Heinrich Nebel, Kenneth Armitage, Kiki Smith, Klaus Rinke, Koch Pyke, Krištof Kintera, Kuno Gonschior, Kurt Lehmann, László Moholy-Nagy, Leo Erb, Leo Kahn, Leonore Maria Stenbock-Fermor, Lodovico Ottavio Burnacini, Lore-Lina Schmidt-Roßnagel, Lothar Fischer, Lotte B. Prechner, Lotte Reimers, Louis de Boullogne, Louis de Silvestre, Louis Desplaces, Louis Le Nain, Louise Nevelson, Lourdes Castro, Lovis Corinth, Lucas Cranach d.Ä., Lucas Cranach d.J., Lucas Hugensz van Leyden, Lucio Fontana, Ludwig Deurer, Ludwig Friedrich, Ludwig Kasper, Ludwig Kuntz, Ludwig Meidner, Ludwig Schmid-Reutte, Lynette Yiadom-Boakye, Lynn Chadwick, Lyonel Feininger, Maarten van Heemskerck, Man Ray, Marc Chagall, Marc Sterling, Marcantonio Bellavia, Marcel Wyss, Marcus Behmer, Marcus Sadeler, Margarete Schott, Margret Eicher, Marianna Simnett, Mariano Bovi, Marie-Hélène Vieira da Silva, Marino Marini, Mario Ceroli, Mario Merz, Mario Tozzi, Mario von Bucovich, Markus Walleitner, Marten Jacobs van Hemskerck, Martin Honert, Martin Lauterburg, Martine Andernach, Mary White, Matthäus Merian, der Ältere, Matthias Gerung, Maurice de Vlaminck, Maurice Denis, Max Beckmann, Max Bill, Max Ernst, Max Joseph Wagenbauer, Max Laeuger, Max Liebermann, Max Pechstein, Max Slevogt, Medardo Rosso, Meredith Frampton, Michael Cleff, Michael Croissant, Michael Schoenholtz, Michael Wohlgemut, Michel Majerus, Michel Pastore, Milly Steger, Mimmo Rotella, Mo Jupp, Monika Grzymala, Moritz von Schwind, Mykola Hlushchenko, Nairy Baghramian, Nam June Paik, Naum Gabo, Nicolas Fouché, Nicolas Mathieu Eekman, Nicolas Vanni, Nicolas-Dauphin de Beauvais, Nigel Hall, Niki de Saint Phalle, Niklaus Stoecklin, Niklaus Stoecklin, Norbert Kricke, Odilon Redon, Olaf Gulbransson, Olaf Nicolai, Olafur Eliasson, Orazio Bertelli, Orazio Borgianni, Oskar Just, Oskar Kokoschka, Oskar Schlemmer, Ossip Zadkine, Oswald Achenbach, Oswald Herzog, Otobong Nkanga, Ottilie Roederstein, Ottmar Hörl, Otto Coester, Otto Dill, Otto Dix, Otto Douglas-Hill, Otto Dressler, Otto Freundlich, Otto Gleichmann, Otto Greis, Otto Herbert Hajek, Otto Lange, Otto Lindig, Otto Mindhoff, Rudolf Belling, Rudolf Bergander, Rudolf Großmann, Rudolf Hellwag, Rudolf Lunghard, Rudolf Maeglin, Rudolf Schlichter, Rudolf Wacker, Rudolph Carl von Ripper, Rudolph Kuntz, Rupprecht Geiger, Ruth Duckworth, Ruth Francken, Ruth Koppenhöfer, Rutilio di Lorenzo Manetti, S. Desmaretz, S. Drury, Sabine Rosenbach, Sally Falk, Sergius Pauser, Silvia Ullmann, Silvio Siermann, Simona Andrioletti, Simone Cantarini, Toni Stadler, Trude Petri, Trude Stolp-Seitz, Ubaldo Oppi, Umberto Boccioni, Ursula Scheid, Valentin Ruths, Vera Isler-Leiner, Vera Vehring, Victor Bonato, Vincent van Gogh, Volker Ellwanger, Agnelli, Albreliaca, Arman, Calabrois, César, Dado, Delanau, Delonguelle, Denys, Derinet, Desmoulins, Dodo, Fossier, Manolo, Waldemar Grzimek, Walter Schulz-Matan, Walter Stallwitz, Walter Waentig, Wassily Kandinsky, Wendelin Stahl, Werner Hofmann, Wieland Förster, Wilfried Otto, Wilhelm Gerstel, Wilhelm Gimmi, Wilhelm Heise, Wilhelm Laage, Wilhelm Lehmbruck, Wilhelm Leibl, Wilhelm Loth, Wilhelm Schnarrenberger, Wilhelm Süs, Wilhelm Trübner, Wilhelm von Kobell, Willi Baumeister, Willi Roerts, William Kentridge, William Mehornay, William Turnbull, William Wauer, William Woollett, Willy Jaeckel, Wim Mühlendyck, Winfred Gaul, Wladimir von Zabotin, Wolf Spitzer, Wolf Vostell, Wolfgang Kessler, Xaver Fuhr, Ximena Ferrer Pizarro, Young-Jae Lee, Yves Klein, Zanele Muholi
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La joven retratada es Suzanne Manet, pianista de origen holandés con quien se casó Édouard Manet.
Fue adquirida por el estado argentino a la Galería Witcomb de Buenos Aires en 1914.
El trabajo iba a formar parte de una composición más ambiciosa, abandonada en última instancia, y cuyo propósito era representar a Moisés salvado de las aguas.
ALL PHOTOS WERE TAKEN BY ME/TODAS AS FOTOGRAFIAS FORAM TIRADAS POR MIM
9 – PORTRAITS OF THE AGE OF INNOCENCE ON MY DATABASE/RETRATOS DA IDADE DA INOCÊNCIA NA MINHA BASE DE DADOS : Nº 19/50
AUTHOR/AUTOR:
MANET, EDOUARD (1832-1883)
NAME OF WORK/NOME DO TRABALHO:
AS BOLAS DE SABÃO, LÉON KOELLA-LEENHOFF
TECNIQUES/TÉCNICAS:
OIL ON CANVAS/ÓLEO SOBRE TELA
YEAR/ANO:
1867
DIMENSIONS/DIMENSÕES:
100,5X81,4CM
COUNTRY/PAÍS:
PORTUGAL
CITY/CIDADE:
LISBOA
WHERE I TOOK THE PHOTO/ONDE TIREI A FOTO:
CALOUSTE GULBENKIAN FOUNDATION/FUNDAÇÃO CALOUSTE GULBENKIAN
THE YEAR WHEN I TOOK THE PHOTO/ANO QUE TIREI A FOTO:
2022
LINK INFO OF THE AUTHOR/LIGAÇÃO PARA O AUTOR:
pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89douard_Manet
LINK THE WORK/LIGAÇÃO PARA O TRABALHO:
artsandculture.google.com/asset/as-bolas-de-sab%C3%A3o/gA...
LINK TO THE MUSEUM OR OTHER PLACE/LIGAÇÃO PARA O MUSEU OU OUTRO LUGAR:
LINK INFO ABOUT THE PHOTOGRAPHED/INFORMAÇÃO SOBRE O FOTOGRAFADO:
SEM DADOS
ALREADY WORKED IN / JÁ TRABALHEI EM:
1 – PHOTOS OF RELIGIOUS ART OR MOTIFS/FOTOS DE ARTE OU MOTIVOS RELIGIOSOS: 1132 WORKS/TRABALHOS.
2 – SELF-PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHS OF PAINTERS/FOTOS DE AUTORRETRATOS DE PINTORES: 38 WORKS/TRABALHOS.
3 – PAINTERS AND PATRONS OF THE ARTS PHOTOGRAPHS/FOTOS DE PINTORES E PATRONOS DE ARTE: 36 WORKS/TRABALHOS.
4 – PORTRAITS OF THE EUROPEAN ARISTOCRACY. NOBILITY AND ROYALTY/FOTOS DA ARISTOCRACIA, NOBREZA E REALEZA EUROPEIA: 173 WORKS/TRABALHOS.
5 – PORTRAITS OF IDENTIFIED PEOPLE/RETRATOS DE PESSOAS IDENTIFICADAS: 73 WORKS/TRABALHOS
6 – PEOPLE AND THEIR PROFESSIONS/PESSOAS E AS SUAS PROFISSÕES: 58 WORKS/TRABALHOS
7 – PORTRAITS OF ANONYMOUS OF SOCIETY/RETRATOS DE ANÓNIMOS DA SOCIEDADE: 97 WORKS/TRABALHOS
8 – FAMILIY PORTRAITS/RETRATOS DE FAMILIA: 16 WORKS/TRABALHOS.
From the museum label: To the countryside! In 1873, the Frenchman Edouard Manet painted en plein air with its natural light for the first time: four people playing croquet together, a popular as well as casual leisure activity. In the foreground sits fellow artist Alfred Stevens and in the background Paul Roudier, one of Manet's friends. In between are two ladies, modeling. Manet rarely came as close to the Impressionists as he does here.
Link to other Manet paintings
ANKARA
15.02.2012
15ème Festival International de Jazz d'Ankara
15. Uluslararası Ankara Caz Festivali
Célebre pintor francés, uno de los iniciadores del impresionismo, por completo indiferente ante los objetos que pintaba, salvo como excusas neutras para situar un contraste de líneas y sombras.
Paris: Day 3: Musée d'Orsay
Émile François Zola (2 April 1840 – 29 September 1902) was a French writer, the most important exemplar of the literary school of naturalism and an important contributor to the development of theatrical naturalism. He was a major figure in the political liberalization of France and in the exoneration of the falsely accused and convicted army officer Alfred Dreyfus, which is encapsulated in the renowned newspaper headline J'Accuse.
[From the Wiki entry: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89mile_Zola ]
ANKARA
15.02.2012
15ème Festival International de Jazz d'Ankara
15. Uluslararası Ankara Caz Festivali
According to the French poet Henri Proust, Manet was inspired to paint modern street life by Frans Hals's paintings: 'Frans Hals's audacity also made a deep impression. So when Manet returned to Paris (after his trip to the Netherlands in 1872), he devoted himself unflinchingly to the study of the various aspects of big city life.'
In this painting, it almost seems that you can hear the sounds of the French boulevard. It was painted with short, lively brushstrokes. The woman puts a glass of beer on the table with a practised movement, and looks at her next customer. The painting seems full of movement.
Media: Collage. Price: $ 800.00. Show: Turn On Your Masters. Dates: April 5-28, 2013. Curators: Drew Cariaso and Zade Ramsey. Location: Del Ray Artisans gallery at the Nicholas A. Colasanto Center, 2704 Mount Vernon Avenue, Alexandria, Virginia 22301.
The National Museum of Wales in Cardiff has a very fine art collection.
Unusually depicted hanging outside, Manet's rabbit is not a glorified trophy of the hunt but almost merges with its surroundings. It was completed in the final years of his life.
From the museum label: This work is a version of Manet's Déjeuner sur l'herbe, the startling depiction of a picnic scene with two nearly naked women in the company of fully clothed men that became the artist's first succès de scandale in 1863. The painting draws on his study of famed Italian Renaissance artworks, yet reframes those references into an entirely new style and context. Rejected by the official French Salon in 1863, it was hung instead at the Salon des Refusés, where it won him immediate notoriety. The broad strokes and seemingly quick application of paint in the version he exhibited belie the fact that the artist worked on the composition for a good year before showing it. This work may have been part of that preparatory process.
Link to other Manet paintings