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Artist

  • ? manet 2

Copyright

  • ? metropolitan museum of art 138

General

  • ? 1800s 46
  • ? 1860s 9
  • ? 1866 1
  • ? 1girl 58
  • ? bird 19
  • ? commentary 17
  • ? dress 56
  • ? facing forward 5
  • ? flower 2
  • ? fruit 2
  • ? jewelry 23
  • ? monocle 1
  • ? necklace 10
  • ? nosegay 1
  • ? orange 6
  • ? orange (fruit) 1
  • ? parrot 1
  • ? pink 2
  • ? plain 2
  • ? red hair 1
  • ? silk 3

Meta

  • ? incredibly absurdres 190
  • ? oil painting (medium) 68
  • ? painting (medium) 69

Information

  • ID: 381
  • Uploader: groszo »
  • Date: 12 days ago
  • Approver: DEERFRIEND »
  • Size: 1.91 MB .jpg (2607x3795) »
  • Source: metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/436964 »
  • Rating: General
  • Views: 39
  • Score: 1
  • Favorites: 0
  • Status: Active

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  • Commentary
Resized to 32% of original (view original)
metropolitan museum of art by manet
Original Commentary Translated Commentary

Une jeune dame en 1866

Description from the Met Museum:
Manet’s model, Victorine Meurent, had recently posed as the brazen nudes in Olympia and Luncheon on the Grass (both Musée d’Orsay, Paris). Here, appearing relatively demure, she flaunts an intimate silk dressing gown. Critics eyed the painting as a rejoinder to Courbet’s Woman with a Parrot (29.100.57) and as indicative of Manet’s "current vice" of failing to "value a head more than a slipper." Recent scholars have interpreted it as an allegory of the five senses: the nosegay (smell), the orange (taste), the parrot-confidant (hearing), and the man’s monocle she fingers (sight and touch).

Open Access
As part of the Met's Open Access policy, you can freely copy, modify and distribute this image, even for commercial purposes.

Young Lady in 1866

Description from the Met Museum:
Manet’s model, Victorine Meurent, had recently posed as the brazen nudes in Olympia and Luncheon on the Grass (both Musée d’Orsay, Paris). Here, appearing relatively demure, she flaunts an intimate silk dressing gown. Critics eyed the painting as a rejoinder to Courbet’s Woman with a Parrot (29.100.57) and as indicative of Manet’s "current vice" of failing to "value a head more than a slipper." Recent scholars have interpreted it as an allegory of the five senses: the nosegay (smell), the orange (taste), the parrot-confidant (hearing), and the man’s monocle she fingers (sight and touch).

Open Access
As part of the Met's Open Access policy, you can freely copy, modify and distribute this image, even for commercial purposes.

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