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4.18: Olympia

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    Olympia

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    Artist: Édouard Manet
    Medium: oil on canvas
    Art Historical Time Period: Realism/early Modernism (1863)

    Manet’s Olympia shocked audiences when it was first exhibited in Paris in 1865. The French Salon was dominated by mythological nudes that hid sexuality under classical themes. Manet presented a modern woman, likely a courtesan, reclining on a bed and staring directly at the viewer. French culture was negotiating questions of morality, modernity, and women’s roles. Olympia reflected those debates by presenting sexuality in an honest, confrontational way, without the protective veil of myth.

    What was innovative about Manet’s painting was both its subject and its style. Unlike the soft transitions of traditional painting, Manet used sharp contrasts and visible brushstrokes. The model’s gaze is direct, asserting her agency rather than playing into male fantasy. At the same time, Manet included symbols (e.g. black cat, the maid) that hinted at sexuality and racial difference. This was a modern reinterpretation of earlier works like Titian’s Venus of Urbino but stripped of ideal beauty. The flatness of the painting and its break from tradition announced a new modernist approach to representation.

    The impact of Olympia was immense. It inspired later artists, including the Impressionists, to embrace modern subjects and new techniques. By portraying a real, contemporary woman rather than a classical goddess, Manet challenged conventions of both art and society. Today, the painting is seen as a turning point in the history of modern art, laying the groundwork for questions of gender, sexuality, and representation that remain central in contemporary culture.

    Vocabulary

    • agency the power to act and make choices
    • courtesan a woman who was a companion, often in exchange for payment

    • modernism an art movement focused on innovation and breaking tradition
    • Salon an exhibition of art sponsored by the Royal Academy of Art in Paris

    Student Authors

    • Jorge Barban ’27 and Elise Gonzalez ‘28

    References and Image Attribution

    • Folland, Thomas. “Édouard Manet, Olympia.” Smarthistory.
    • McCauley, Anne. “Beauty or Beast? Manet’s Olympia in the Age of Comparative Anatomy.” Art History, 2020.
    • T.J. Clark. The Painting of Modern Life: Paris in the Art of Manet and His Followers. Princeton University Press, 1985.
    • Image: “Edouard Manet Olympia” via Wikimedia Commons by Google Art Project, in the public domain. Modified from original.
       

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    4.18: Olympia is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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