Manet even kept the screen and drapery of Boucher's painting, but transposed them from right to left, as in a mirror image. |
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Manet was starkly linear, and sober in his coloration, whilst Renoir preferred loose curves and a roseate blur. |
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Always ready with a sharp retort, he savagely compared Manet to their slick, fashionable contemporary Carolus-Duran. |
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Indeed, the genre blurring of the title is intended, one gathers, to apply not only to Manet and Flaubert but also to Reed's own text. |
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The unregenerate Manet felt that the fame, or notoriety, of a Garibaldi was not enough. |
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Manet visualized brushwork and emphasized on the flat surface pattern, he guided the viewer to see the merely pigment on a piece of canvas. |
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But on the left the nattily dressed Manet, with hand on his chin and one leg folded under him, sprawls on a sofa. |
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Mr. Rivers then went to Europe, living for a few months in Paris, where he studied old masters, Courbet and Manet. |
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When Manet saw the finished work, he was furious, and swore that Degas had distorted the features of his dear wife. |
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By 1865, to paint the circle of Manet and Fantin was to invite more criticism for the group. |
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Both Manet and Ravi Varma introduce the European single point perspective of viewing the woman propped up high on cushions, looking down to confront the viewer. |
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With his good income as a stockbroker, Gauguin could afford to buy several paintings by Manet, Claude Monet, Auguste Renoir and other Impressionists. |
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French Impressionist paintings will be on display in the China National Art Gallery beginning October 10, featuring works of Monet, Manet, Renoir, and others. |
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Moffett, who took the winning bid, handled a sale of Cohen's Manet at Sotheby's two years ago. |
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Like Manet, Degas painted figures in the studio rather than outdoors. |
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Unlike the other Scottish Colourists, he was initially less influenced by Post-Impressionism and Fauvism than by the tradition of virtuoso brushwork stemming from Manet. |
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Typically, much is imported, but there is something of almost everything, from Gobelin tapestries through Goya, Monet and Manet to Klee and Kandinsky. |
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The show is called Manet Face to Face, which explains the exciting way in which these two pictures are hung, on opposite walls, with you caught in the crossfire. |
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Whilst Courbet was an open revolutionary, Manet did not deliberately produce provocative paintings, in his eyes he was emulating the early greats. |
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Manet shows Proust as a dandy, boulevardier and man of the world. |
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As a young man, Manet sailed to Brazil on a cargo ship and was asked by the ship's captain to paint the rinds of rotten cheese so it could be sold in the port. |
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While Manet and Monet were creating impressionism in France, across the channel, Millais was purveying kitsch, Victorian sentimentality. |
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Morisot drew Manet into the circle of painters who became known as the Impressionists. |
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Canvases such as The Bacchanalia on Andros are shown alongside works by Watteau, Manet and Picasso. |
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Visualizing the fight from a sailboat, Manet immortalised it in The Battle of the Kearsarge and the Alabama. |
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Correspondence between them shows warm affection, and Manet gave her an easel as a Christmas present. |
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Although Manet is regarded as the master and Morisot as the follower, there is evidence that their relationship was reciprocal. |
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It was Morisot who persuaded Manet to attempt plein air painting, which she had been practising since having been introduced to it by Corot. |
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The execution of Maximilian I on 19 June 1867, as painted by Edouard Manet. |
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While most were in standard styles, but by inferior artists, the work of Manet attracted tremendous attention, and opened commercial doors to the movement. |
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Dabbling in art had left me with some notions about Monet, Manet, Degas, Van Gogh, Toulouse-Lautrec, Picasso, Braque, and the Surrealists and Dadaists. |
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