Le Suicidé

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Le Suicidé
Artist Édouard Manet
Year 1877 (1877)–1881 (1881)
Type Oil on canvas
Dimensions 38 cm × 46 cm (15 in × 18 in)
Location Foundation E.G. Bührle, Zurich, Switzerland

Le Suicidé is a small oil painting by Édouard Manet, completed between 1877 and 1881.[1] The painting has been little studied within Manet's oeuvre, as if art historians have had difficulty finding a place for the work within the development of Manet's art.[1]

The pictorial content of the painting is limited to a man who appears to have just shot himself—still holding a gun while slouched on a bed—and a few pieces of furniture. Manet has removed the trappings of earlier depictions of suicide, and provided next to no narrative content or "moralizing tendency".[2] Ilg (2002) associates the painting with the realism of Gustave Courbet, and notes that Courbet also used a depiction of death in his Burial at Ornans (1849–50), a work that Courbet later indicated marked the beginning of his new artistic approach.

The realism of Le Suicidé has fueled speculation that it depicts an actual suicide, but the subject, if any, is not known.[3] Speculation has concerned an assistant of Manet who committed suicide in Manet's studio more than a decade earlier. Another suicide proposed to be connected with the painting was that of an artist whom Émile Zola had written about in 1866.[1] Recent critics have downplayed these associations.

Manet's approach to this depiction may represent his continuing desire to break from academic tradition, in which a depiction of suicide could only fit within the genre of history painting—where death and suicide would be placed within a narrative associated with sacrifice, idealism, or heroism. Examples in the French idiom include The Death of Socrates (1787) by Jacques-Louis David, which depicts Socrates' choice to kill himself by hemlock rather than go into exile. There is no such grand statement underlying Manet's painting. The artist has not given us a time, a place, or a protagonist. The painting is plainly constructed rather than carefully styled. This departure from tradition would have been controversial with contemporary viewers.[4]

See also

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Ilg, 179
  2. Ilg, 179–180
  3. Paradis
  4. Ilg, 182

Sources

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.