The Fifer

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The Fifer
Manet, Edouard - Young Flautist, or The Fifer, 1866 (2).jpg
Artist Édouard Manet
Year 1866
Type oil painting
Dimensions 160 cm × 97 cm (63 in × 38 in)
Location Musée d'Orsay, Paris

The Fifer or Young Flautist is a painting by French painter Édouard Manet, made in 1866. It is usually kept in the Musée d'Orsay, Paris.

History

On a trip to Spain in 1865, Édouard Manet visited the Prado, where the art of Diego Velázquez was a revelation. Upon his return to Paris in 1866, he began work on a new painting, depicting an anonymous regimental fifer of the Spanish army. In this picture, Manet presents the uniformed boy, in a manner that imitates and inverts the formula of Vélazquez's court portraits, against a barely inflected, flattened background of neutral tone, thus frustrating attempts to assess the figure's true size and, by extension, importance.

The painting, entitled Le fifre, was rejected by the jury of the Salon of 1866. Outraged by the jury's decision, Émile Zola, an early champion of Manet's art, published a series of articles in the newspaper L'Évenement, that praised Manet's realist style and modern content. Following the example of Gustave Courbet, in May 1867, Manet personally funded and mounted an exhibition of his own work in a pavilion at the edge of the Éxposition universelle. The exhibition included Le fifre, which was ridiculed in the popular press for its unusual brushwork and inscrutable spatial setting.

The painting was acquired by Durand-Ruell in 1872 and again in 1893. Between 1873 and 1893, the painting was owned by Manet's friend, composer and baritone Jean-Baptiste Faure. It was included in a large exhibition of Manet's work in 1884, a year after his premature death.

Le fifre was accepted by the French government in lieu of taxes on the estate of its last private owner, the Count Isaac de Camondo, and entered the national collections in 1911. It was displayed at the Louvre from 1914 until 1947, when it was relocated to the Musée du Jeu de Paume. It was included in the sweeping Manet retrospective held at the Grand Palais in 1983, the 100th anniversary of the artist's death.

In 1986, it was moved to its current home in the Musée d'Orsay, the national museum of 19th-century art. It has since traveled in exposition; for example, in 2017 and 2018 it was on loan to the Louvre Abu Dhabi museum in Abu Dhabi, UAE.[1]

Analysis

As with a painting by Velázquez, Manet conceived a shallow depth, where vertical and horizontal planes are barely distinguishable.[2] According to Peter H. Feist, in The Player fife, Manet showed the appeal of "the decorative effect of a large single figure, with emphatic contours and placed before a background surface."[3] Against a monochrome background, the figure is boldly highlighted with a reduced palette of colors mostly laid on in a thick impasto which brings forth the very sharp black of the jacket and shoes, along with the red pants, white strap, spats and so on. Thus, the figure stands "firm, smooth and alive."[4][2]

Moreover, as in Velázquez's work, Manet also portrayed an anonymous character, a teenage musician of the band of the Imperial Guard of Napoleon III, who was sent to Manet by commander Lejosne,[5] "treated like a grandee of Spain."[2] Additional models may have also posed for the figure: the likenesses of both Léon Leenhoff and Victorine Meurent have been seen in the boy's face and figure.[6]

In popular culture

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. A fictional tale concerning the painting forms the subject of an episode ("Art for Hogan's Sake") of the American television series Hogan's Heroes, in which the work is stolen from the Louvre by a Nazi general and returned by the Allied POW's working with the French underground.[citation needed][7]

See also

References

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  6. Armstrong, Carol. Manet's Le Déjeuner sur l'hérbe. Cambridge University press, 1998, pp. 98-100. ISBN 0-521-47466-3
  7. An assertive Gen. Burkhalter "requisitions" the famous Édouard Manet painting, "The Fife Player," from the Louvre museum in Paris to give to Hermann Goering as a birthday present. Undaunted by seemingly impossible logistics, Hogan and LeBeau decide to steal it back.

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