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paper (fiber product)50 × 39 Cm
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About the artwork
Artist supplied description.
Édouard Manet drew on his painting The Dead Toreador (1864; National Gallery of Art) for this print, transforming its context from a morbid twist on a festive Spanish tauromaquia to the crisis in France’s short-lived Second Empire (1852–70). The tumultuous years 1870–71 marked the humiliating defeat of France in the Franco-Prussian war, the rise and suppression of the revolutionary Paris Commune, and the dawn of the Third Republic. In this print, an unidentified soldier lies behind a Parisian street barricade. A glimpse of a pin-striped civilian pant leg at the lower right hints at the encroachment of violence on everyday life.
Artwork metadata
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| Medium | paper (fiber product) |
| Dimensions | 50 × 39 Cm |
| Tags | war |
| Certificate | Certificate not provided |
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