Repose (painting) explained

Repose
Artist:Édouard Manet
Type:Oil paint on canvas
Dimensions:150.2cmx114cmcm (59.1inchesx45inchescm)
City:Providence, Rhode Island
Museum:Rhode Island School of Design Museum

Repose (French: Le Repos, 'Rest') is an oil on canvas painting by French painter Édouard Manet, from . It is held in the Rhode Island School of Design Museum, in Providence.[1]

The painting is a portrait of the artist Berthe Morisot, a regular model, who was married to Manet's brother, Eugène. She is wearing a white dress as she sits with a fan in her right hand on a red sofa, beneath a then-fashionable Japanese print (in this case The Dragon King Pursuing the Ama with the Sacred Jewel by Utagawa Kuniyoshi).[2] Her gaze seems meditative and absent. There is a striking contrast between the light tone of her dress and the dark tones of the furniture and the serenity of the subject with the violent activity on the print that is exhibited above her head.[3]

Manet himself described the work as a study in physical and psychological repose — “not at all in the character of a portrait.”

See also

References

  1. Web site: Repose (Le Repos) | RISD Museum. risdmuseum.org.
  2. Book: Ives . Colta Feller . The Great Wave: The Influence Of Japanese Woodcuts On French Prints . 1979 . The Metropolitan Museum of Art . New York . 0-87099-098-5 . 25 . Fourth printing . 1 June 2024 . https://archive.org/details/the-great-wave.-the-influence-of-japanese-woodcuts-on-french-prints.-met./ . 4 March 2023 . live . en.
  3. Web site: The Repose by Manet. World History Encyclopedia.