Artist Biography: Edward Manet

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Manet was born in Paris on January 23, 1832, the eldest son of a high official in the
French Ministry. In 1848 he failed the entrance exam to naval college. He subsequently
went to sea with the merchant marine to avoid studying law, as his father wished. He
became a painter against his father's advice, joining the studio of the respected
academic painter Thomas Couture in 1850. Though he remained with Couture for six years,
Manet gained his real knowledge of art during visits to Italy in 1853 and 1857, and to
Germany and Holland in 1856. Those trips exposed Manet to the same masters who had so
profoundly interpreted realism in the past: Hals, Vel�zquez and Goya.

In 1863 Manet participated in the famous Salon des Refuses, an exhibition consisting
of works rejected by the official Salon, and he came to be viewed as the hero of the
nonconformists. Though Manet regarded himself as working in the tradition of the great
masters, his approach was to rethink established themes in modern terms.

His early notoriety was based on the subject matter of paintings such as Dejeuner sur
l'herb, and Olympia rather than their style. Highly independent, and extraordinarily
original in both his unconventional portrayals of modern life and his spontaneous
brushwork, he struggled for academic acceptance throughout his life. Although Manet
was rebellious in his subject matter, he craved official recognition, and this may be
why he never 'compromised' himself by exhibiting at any of the Impressionist exhibitions.
He claimed that he had 'no intention of overthrowing old methods of painting, or creating
new ones'. Although he never regarded himself as an Impressionist and never exhibited
with them, Manet strongly supported their choice of subject matter. Manet's refreshingly
direct look at life and his spontaneous yet monumental translation of what he saw into
paint earned him the position as their unofficial leader.
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