Édouard Manet
(1832 - 1883)
The Spanish Singer is an 1860 oil painting composed in Manet's studio, it employed a model and props which were later used for at least one other painting. This work, both realistic and exotic in its depiction of its subject, exhibits the influence of Spanish art, especially that of Diego Velázquez, on Manet's style. Manet, due to this painting, was accepted for the first time at the Salon of Paris in 1861, where he also exhibited a portrait of his parents.
The Spanish Singer received positive criticism at the time and won a decent mention. It was appreciated by French writer Charles Baudelaire, and by French journalist and literary critic Theophile Gautier, who praised the painting for its "very true color" and "vigorous brush". Manet consequently became the leader of the avant-garde movement and inspired a group of young artists, including Henri Fantin-Latour and Carolus-Duran, who decided to visit Manet's studio.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Spanish_Singer
The Spanish Singer
1860 (28 years old)
Oil on canvas
147.35 × 114.3 cm
The MET, N.Y.
https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/436944
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