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Self-Portrait with Palette (Manet)

Self-Portrait with Palette (French: Autoportrait à la palette) is an 1878–79 oil-on-canvas painting by the French artist Édouard Manet. This late impressionistic work is one of his two self-portraits. Velasquez's self-portrait in Las Meninas was a particular inspiration for Manet's painting which despite its allusion to the previous artist's work is very modern in its focus upon the personality of the artist and loose paint handling.

Self-Portrait with Palette
French: Autoportrait à la palette
ArtistÉdouard Manet
Year1878/1879 (1878/1879)
MediumOil on canvas
Dimensions83 cm × 67 cm (33 in × 26 in)
OwnerFranck Giraud

A long series of prominent collectors have owned this painting. Most recently, it sold for $29.48 million at Sotheby's on 22 June 2010.

Description edit

The 83 × 67 cm (33 × 26 in) painting shows a half-length portrait of the painter Édouard Manet. In this self-portrait as painter he depicted himself as a stylish Boulevardier in front of a dark background. The depicted wears a black top hat and a brown jacket, under which is a white shirt, of which only the collar can be seen. The neckline of the suit jacket covers a black silk tie which is affixed by a tie pin.[1] In the right, only vaguely depicted hand he holds a long wooden brush with red paint on the tip; the left hand holds a painting palette with about three more brushes. No further accessories are shown. The figure is lit from the left by which the shadows beneath the left arm and the right half of the face are created. His pose is slightly turned to the right, so that the right half of the body is darker than the forward, left half. The painter's gaze is directed forwards at the viewer.

Origin and meaning edit

 
Self-portrait by Diego Velázquez – detail of Las Meninas, 1656
 
Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Portrait of Claude Monet, 1875

As has been established by X-ray analysis, Manet painted his Self-Portrait with Palette over a portrait in profile of his wife Suzanne Manet. In this picture she was depicted in a pose similar to that in the painting Madame Manet at the Piano (1868, Musée d'Orsay).

The dating of the painting goes back to Manet's friend Théodore Duret, who asked Léon Leenhof, the son of Manet's wife, about it after the painter's death.[2] Moreover, Manet had used the same suit jacket that he wore in Self-Portrait with Palette in the painting At "Père Lathuille" (also from 1879), for the depiction of the son of the restaurant's owner.

Las Meninas, in which Diego Velázquez depicted himself in a similar pose with brush and palette, is considered an important precedent for the Self-Portrait with Palette. There the painter stands almost in the background of his studio, while his models, the five-year-old Margarita Teresa of Spain and her servants, occupy the foreground. From here Manet appropriated the pose of the painter and his equipment, but as opposed to Velázquez, he makes himself the thematic center of the image. At the same time, however, he is working on a painting, but leaves its subject matter, as well as his surroundings, to the imagination of the viewer. Manet himself between 1865 and 1870 portrayed Velázquez in a studio scene in which the Spanish painter is posed similarly to his self-portrait.

As a practical matter painters did not and do not wear formal dress while working, as it could far too easily be ruined by oil paint. Manet's depiction of himself as a painter in stylish city-going clothes has various precedents. Already Velázquez had shown himself in costly garb that would be appropriate for a courtier. In 1870 Manet had sat for the painter Henri Fantin-Latour in the painting Un atelier aux Batignolles while similarly well-dressed. His wearing of a hat indoors also has a direct precedent. Renoir had depicted Monet in 1875, with suit, hat and all. Just as Velázquez had used his clothes to underscore his proximity to the Spanish court, Manet's clothing shows his role as a stylish and successful Parisian artist,[1] "who not only in his artistic posture, but also in his appearance is quintessentially the painter of modern life, of Baudelaire's description."[3]

The unfinished right hand with the paintbrush is conspicuous in the painting. Victor Stoichiţă perceives this as Manet's intention and interprets it thusly: "because it is an act of painting that is depicted here, it turns painting around itself like a whirlwind"[4] Françoise Cachin explains it as a way of concentrating the light and the attention of the viewer upon the more important aspects of the painting.[5] Manet's wife Suzanne, however, described this painting and the Self-Portrait with Cap (1878–79) as sketches.[6]

Position in the Oeuvre edit

 
Self- Portrait with Cap (1878/79), Bridgestone Museum of Art, Tokyo

The Self-Portrait with Palette is the only self-portrait by Manet in which he depicted himself as an artist. He depicted himself in several other paintings, but almost always as one of many figures in a large composition. These works include Fishing (1860/61), Music in the Tuileries (1862), and The Ball of the Opera (1873).

The full-length Self-Portrait with Cap (1878–79) is the only other pure self-portrait by Manet. The chronological proximity of the two paintings implies a direct connection between them; accordingly, they have been considered as two stages of a work in progress. In the first painting, Self-Portrait with Palette, the act of painting itself is depicted by the blurred gestures of the painter. In the latter work, the painter is shown with the clear detachment of a viewer, rather than a creator. To Éric Darragon it appears that the painter has "stepped back, to evaluate his painting."[7]

After Manet's death the two pictures hung on either side of the 1877 painting Jean-Baptiste Faure in the Role of Hamlet. From this arrangement Stoichiţă concludes that the choice of this Spanish influenced painting was meant to evoke a renewed parallel to Velázquez. Another message derived from the juxtaposition is that the self-portraits could almost be read as Manet in the Role of Manet.[4] Juliet Wilson-Bareau, however, points out that Manet probably did not intend the pictures to be so displayed, as it was Léon Leenhoff who had the pictures framed and hung them on either side of the Faure portrait.[2]

Reception edit

The painting was often considered to be of lesser artistic value than Manet's other works. In 1926 the critic Étienne Moreau-Nélaton wrote: "This work, like the other efforts of the artist, are spoiled by a certain coldness. The artist's hand moves with too much fire, painting so freely here, that it is impossible for the painter to seriously focus upon himself as an object."[8] On the other hand, Theodore Reff in 1982 emphasized the meaning of Manet's decision to approach self-portraiture, which he had never before attempted, at the high point of his career.[6] The chosen clothes, in both case stylish suits, give the impression that Manet considered himself not only a successful artist but a successful figure in society: the paintings are a record of this success.

Wilson-Bareau proposes an alternate explanation for the origin of the self-portraits. When the art historian and Manet biographer Adolphe Tabarant asked Manet's stepson Léon Leenhoff about the point in time at which Manet had been stricken with Syphilis, Leenhoff gave 1879 as an answer, which would explain why Manet, who had never before in his life painted a self-portrait, had painted two within that year. It would seem that with the reality of death right before his eyes, he felt a need to come to terms with himself.[2]

The nephew of the artist, Edouard Vibert (1867–1899) finished shortly before his death a series of copies of various Manet paintings for Madame Manet as mementos of the paintings that had had to be sold after the death of the artist. Around the turn of the 20th century a copy of the Self-Portrait with Palette was attested that was ascribed to Vibert.[6]

Provenance edit

 
Edvard Munch (1909), Professor Daniel Jacobson, oil on canvas. 204 × 111.5 cm. Munch Museum, Oslo, Norway

The Self-Portrait with Palette was not sold during Manet's lifetime and after his death was held by his widow. Nor were either of the self-portraits sold in the 1884 estate sale. Manet's widow does not appear to have wanted to sell them until 1897, as Antonin Proust in a letter from May 10 of that year stated that neither Jean-Baptiste Faure nor Auguste Pellerin were interested in the paintings.

On 2 February 1899, Suzanne Manet bequeathed the pictures to her sister Martina Leenhoff, probably with the intention of aiding her during financial difficulties. That year, Madame Manet and Proust renewed their efforts to sell the paintings. This time the art dealers Hermann Paechter and Ambroise Vollard expressed interest. Later that year Paechter obtained the paintings at the price of 6,000 Francs for the Self-Portrait with Cap and only 1,000 for Self-Portrait with Palette. In Théodore Duret's 1902 exhibit catalog the picture is listed as the property of Pellerin.

Shortly after, the Self-Portrait with Cap went to the collection of Max Linde in Lübeck. In addition to being an art collector Linde was also an ophthalmologist, with Edvard Munch among his patients. Eventually the Norwegian artist was inspired by the Manet to paint various other full length portraits, including a 1909 portrait of his psychiatrist Daniel Jacobson, which came close to the Manet in style and feeling.[9]

In May 1910, the Self-Portrait with Palette appeared in an exhibit at the gallery of Georges Petit in Paris, where it was labeled as on loan from the widow of the Marquis Etienne de Ganay. Just a month later it was shown in an exhibit by the gallery owners Paul Durand-Ruel, Bernheim-Jeune and Paul Cassirer together with all other Manet paintings that had previously been owned by Pellerin. Pellerin had sold his collection to the dealers, with the exception of the Self-Portrait with Palette, which he had sold to Madame de Ganay immediately beforehand. Ganay owned the painting through the 1920s; by 1931 it was in the collection of the Berlin bank president Jakob Goldschmidt. Goldschmidt immigrated to New York City in 1936, taking his collection with him, and died there in 1955. In 1958 the painting was bought by J. Summers for 65,000.[10]

Later the collector couple John and Frances L. Loeb from New York acquired the painting for $176,800.[11] At the auction of the Loeb collection on 12 May 1997 the painting was sold for $18.7 million to an anonymous bidder.[12] At that time it was the second highest price ever paid for a work by Manet. Shortly thereafter the new owner was revealed to be the Casino developer Steve Wynn, as he displayed the picture in his hotel in the Hotel Bellagio and Wynn Las Vegas.[2] In March 2005, it was privately sold to Steven A. Cohen.[13] The price is estimated to have been between $35 million to $40 million.[14]

On 7 May 2010, it was announced that Cohen had decided to auction the painting at Sotheby's on 22 June 2010. The price was expected to be between $30.1 and $45.2 million.[14] These expectations were not met, however, and the painting sold for £22,441,250[15] ($29.48 million)[16] to the New York collector Franck Giraud.[17] The price was nevertheless a record for a Manet painting.[17]

Gallery edit

See also edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b Theodor Reff: Manet and modern Paris, p. 30.
  2. ^ a b c d Juliet Wilson-Bareau in Gary Tinterow, Geneviève Lacambre: Manet/Velázquez, p. 502.
  3. ^ quoted in Hajo Düchting: Manet Pariser Leben München, New York 1985; ISBN 3-7913-1445-9 zu Selbstporträt mit Palette, p. 93.
  4. ^ a b Stoichiţă 2005.
  5. ^ Cachin, Françoise (1995). Manet: The Influence of the Modern. "Abrams Discoveries" series. New York: Harry N. Abrams. p. 109. ISBN 0-8109-2892-2.
  6. ^ a b c After Moffet 1984.
  7. ^ Darragon: Manet, Paris 1989. Quoted in Stoichiţă 2005.
  8. ^ Étienne Moreau-Nélaton: Manet raconté par lui-même. Vol. II, Paris 1926, pp. 50–51. Translated in Moffet 1984.
  9. ^ Mikael Wivel: Ausstellungskatalog Kopenhagen 1989: Manet. Charlottenlund 1989; ISBN 87-88692-04-3
  10. ^ Provenance in this section after Moffet 1984.
  11. ^ New York Times, July 5, 1998
  12. ^ David Ebony in Art in America, July 1997.
  13. ^ New York Times, March 3, 2005.
  14. ^ a b Vogel, Carol. "Manet Self-Portrait: New Star on the Block". New York Times, 7 March 2010
  15. ^ Manet self portrait fetches record £22m at London sale. BBC News, 23 June 2010.
  16. ^ Vogel, Carol. A Lackluster Art Auction in London. New York Times. 22 June 2010.
  17. ^ a b Hough, Andrew. Rare Edouard Manet self portrait sold for record £22million at Sothebys auction. The Telegraph. 22 June 2010

References edit

  • Charles S. Moffet: Selbstporträt mit Palette. In: Manet 1832–1883. Réunion des Musées Nationaux, Paris, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Frölich & Kaufmann, Berlin 1984, ISBN 3-88725-092-3.
  • Theodor Reff: Manet and modern Paris. National Gallery of Art, Washington und University of Chicago Press, Chicago und London 1982, ISBN 0-226-70720-2.
  • Victor Ieronim Stoichiţă: Eduard Manet: Selbstporträt, 1879. In: Ulrich Pfisterer, Valeska von Rosen: Der Künstler als Kunstwerk. Selbstporträts vom Mittelalter bis zur Gegenwart. Philipp Reclam jun., Stuttgart 2005, ISBN 3-15-010571-4.
  • Gary Tinterow, Geneviève Lacambre: Manet/Velázquez: The French Taste for Spanish Painting. Réunion des Musées Nationaux, Paris, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Yale University Press, New Haven und London 2003, ISBN 1-58839-038-1.

self, portrait, with, palette, manet, self, portrait, with, palette, french, autoportrait, palette, 1878, canvas, painting, french, artist, Édouard, manet, this, late, impressionistic, work, self, portraits, velasquez, self, portrait, meninas, particular, insp. Self Portrait with Palette French Autoportrait a la palette is an 1878 79 oil on canvas painting by the French artist Edouard Manet This late impressionistic work is one of his two self portraits Velasquez s self portrait in Las Meninas was a particular inspiration for Manet s painting which despite its allusion to the previous artist s work is very modern in its focus upon the personality of the artist and loose paint handling Self Portrait with PaletteFrench Autoportrait a la paletteArtistEdouard ManetYear1878 1879 1878 1879 MediumOil on canvasDimensions83 cm 67 cm 33 in 26 in OwnerFranck Giraud A long series of prominent collectors have owned this painting Most recently it sold for 29 48 million at Sotheby s on 22 June 2010 Contents 1 Description 2 Origin and meaning 3 Position in the Oeuvre 4 Reception 5 Provenance 6 Gallery 7 See also 8 Citations 9 ReferencesDescription editThe 83 67 cm 33 26 in painting shows a half length portrait of the painter Edouard Manet In this self portrait as painter he depicted himself as a stylish Boulevardier in front of a dark background The depicted wears a black top hat and a brown jacket under which is a white shirt of which only the collar can be seen The neckline of the suit jacket covers a black silk tie which is affixed by a tie pin 1 In the right only vaguely depicted hand he holds a long wooden brush with red paint on the tip the left hand holds a painting palette with about three more brushes No further accessories are shown The figure is lit from the left by which the shadows beneath the left arm and the right half of the face are created His pose is slightly turned to the right so that the right half of the body is darker than the forward left half The painter s gaze is directed forwards at the viewer Origin and meaning edit nbsp Self portrait by Diego Velazquez detail of Las Meninas 1656 nbsp Pierre Auguste Renoir Portrait of Claude Monet 1875 As has been established by X ray analysis Manet painted his Self Portrait with Palette over a portrait in profile of his wife Suzanne Manet In this picture she was depicted in a pose similar to that in the painting Madame Manet at the Piano 1868 Musee d Orsay The dating of the painting goes back to Manet s friend Theodore Duret who asked Leon Leenhof the son of Manet s wife about it after the painter s death 2 Moreover Manet had used the same suit jacket that he wore in Self Portrait with Palette in the painting At Pere Lathuille also from 1879 for the depiction of the son of the restaurant s owner Las Meninas in which Diego Velazquez depicted himself in a similar pose with brush and palette is considered an important precedent for the Self Portrait with Palette There the painter stands almost in the background of his studio while his models the five year old Margarita Teresa of Spain and her servants occupy the foreground From here Manet appropriated the pose of the painter and his equipment but as opposed to Velazquez he makes himself the thematic center of the image At the same time however he is working on a painting but leaves its subject matter as well as his surroundings to the imagination of the viewer Manet himself between 1865 and 1870 portrayed Velazquez in a studio scene in which the Spanish painter is posed similarly to his self portrait As a practical matter painters did not and do not wear formal dress while working as it could far too easily be ruined by oil paint Manet s depiction of himself as a painter in stylish city going clothes has various precedents Already Velazquez had shown himself in costly garb that would be appropriate for a courtier In 1870 Manet had sat for the painter Henri Fantin Latour in the painting Un atelier aux Batignolles while similarly well dressed His wearing of a hat indoors also has a direct precedent Renoir had depicted Monet in 1875 with suit hat and all Just as Velazquez had used his clothes to underscore his proximity to the Spanish court Manet s clothing shows his role as a stylish and successful Parisian artist 1 who not only in his artistic posture but also in his appearance is quintessentially the painter of modern life of Baudelaire s description 3 The unfinished right hand with the paintbrush is conspicuous in the painting Victor Stoichiţă perceives this as Manet s intention and interprets it thusly because it is an act of painting that is depicted here it turns painting around itself like a whirlwind 4 Francoise Cachin explains it as a way of concentrating the light and the attention of the viewer upon the more important aspects of the painting 5 Manet s wife Suzanne however described this painting and the Self Portrait with Cap 1878 79 as sketches 6 Position in the Oeuvre edit nbsp Self Portrait with Cap 1878 79 Bridgestone Museum of Art Tokyo The Self Portrait with Palette is the only self portrait by Manet in which he depicted himself as an artist He depicted himself in several other paintings but almost always as one of many figures in a large composition These works include Fishing 1860 61 Music in the Tuileries 1862 and The Ball of the Opera 1873 The full length Self Portrait with Cap 1878 79 is the only other pure self portrait by Manet The chronological proximity of the two paintings implies a direct connection between them accordingly they have been considered as two stages of a work in progress In the first painting Self Portrait with Palette the act of painting itself is depicted by the blurred gestures of the painter In the latter work the painter is shown with the clear detachment of a viewer rather than a creator To Eric Darragon it appears that the painter has stepped back to evaluate his painting 7 After Manet s death the two pictures hung on either side of the 1877 painting Jean Baptiste Faure in the Role of Hamlet From this arrangement Stoichiţă concludes that the choice of this Spanish influenced painting was meant to evoke a renewed parallel to Velazquez Another message derived from the juxtaposition is that the self portraits could almost be read as Manet in the Role of Manet 4 Juliet Wilson Bareau however points out that Manet probably did not intend the pictures to be so displayed as it was Leon Leenhoff who had the pictures framed and hung them on either side of the Faure portrait 2 Reception editThe painting was often considered to be of lesser artistic value than Manet s other works In 1926 the critic Etienne Moreau Nelaton wrote This work like the other efforts of the artist are spoiled by a certain coldness The artist s hand moves with too much fire painting so freely here that it is impossible for the painter to seriously focus upon himself as an object 8 On the other hand Theodore Reff in 1982 emphasized the meaning of Manet s decision to approach self portraiture which he had never before attempted at the high point of his career 6 The chosen clothes in both case stylish suits give the impression that Manet considered himself not only a successful artist but a successful figure in society the paintings are a record of this success Wilson Bareau proposes an alternate explanation for the origin of the self portraits When the art historian and Manet biographer Adolphe Tabarant asked Manet s stepson Leon Leenhoff about the point in time at which Manet had been stricken with Syphilis Leenhoff gave 1879 as an answer which would explain why Manet who had never before in his life painted a self portrait had painted two within that year It would seem that with the reality of death right before his eyes he felt a need to come to terms with himself 2 The nephew of the artist Edouard Vibert 1867 1899 finished shortly before his death a series of copies of various Manet paintings for Madame Manet as mementos of the paintings that had had to be sold after the death of the artist Around the turn of the 20th century a copy of the Self Portrait with Palette was attested that was ascribed to Vibert 6 Provenance edit nbsp Edvard Munch 1909 Professor Daniel Jacobson oil on canvas 204 111 5 cm Munch Museum Oslo Norway The Self Portrait with Palette was not sold during Manet s lifetime and after his death was held by his widow Nor were either of the self portraits sold in the 1884 estate sale Manet s widow does not appear to have wanted to sell them until 1897 as Antonin Proust in a letter from May 10 of that year stated that neither Jean Baptiste Faure nor Auguste Pellerin were interested in the paintings On 2 February 1899 Suzanne Manet bequeathed the pictures to her sister Martina Leenhoff probably with the intention of aiding her during financial difficulties That year Madame Manet and Proust renewed their efforts to sell the paintings This time the art dealers Hermann Paechter and Ambroise Vollard expressed interest Later that year Paechter obtained the paintings at the price of 6 000 Francs for the Self Portrait with Cap and only 1 000 for Self Portrait with Palette In Theodore Duret s 1902 exhibit catalog the picture is listed as the property of Pellerin Shortly after the Self Portrait with Cap went to the collection of Max Linde in Lubeck In addition to being an art collector Linde was also an ophthalmologist with Edvard Munch among his patients Eventually the Norwegian artist was inspired by the Manet to paint various other full length portraits including a 1909 portrait of his psychiatrist Daniel Jacobson which came close to the Manet in style and feeling 9 In May 1910 the Self Portrait with Palette appeared in an exhibit at the gallery of Georges Petit in Paris where it was labeled as on loan from the widow of the Marquis Etienne de Ganay Just a month later it was shown in an exhibit by the gallery owners Paul Durand Ruel Bernheim Jeune and Paul Cassirer together with all other Manet paintings that had previously been owned by Pellerin Pellerin had sold his collection to the dealers with the exception of the Self Portrait with Palette which he had sold to Madame de Ganay immediately beforehand Ganay owned the painting through the 1920s by 1931 it was in the collection of the Berlin bank president Jakob Goldschmidt Goldschmidt immigrated to New York City in 1936 taking his collection with him and died there in 1955 In 1958 the painting was bought by J Summers for 65 000 10 Later the collector couple John and Frances L Loeb from New York acquired the painting for 176 800 11 At the auction of the Loeb collection on 12 May 1997 the painting was sold for 18 7 million to an anonymous bidder 12 At that time it was the second highest price ever paid for a work by Manet Shortly thereafter the new owner was revealed to be the Casino developer Steve Wynn as he displayed the picture in his hotel in the Hotel Bellagio and Wynn Las Vegas 2 In March 2005 it was privately sold to Steven A Cohen 13 The price is estimated to have been between 35 million to 40 million 14 On 7 May 2010 it was announced that Cohen had decided to auction the painting at Sotheby s on 22 June 2010 The price was expected to be between 30 1 and 45 2 million 14 These expectations were not met however and the painting sold for 22 441 250 15 29 48 million 16 to the New York collector Franck Giraud 17 The price was nevertheless a record for a Manet painting 17 Gallery edit nbsp Fishing 1860 61 nbsp Music in the Tuileries 1862 nbsp The Ball of the Opera 1873 nbsp Jean Baptiste Faure in the Role of Hamlet 1877 nbsp Fishing Detail Manet together with later wife Suzanne nbsp Music in the Tuileries Detail nbsp The Ball of the Opera Detail Manet is the man with the blond beard nbsp At Pere Lathuille 1879 uses the same suit jacket nbsp Edouard Manet Velasquez in his Studio 1865 1870 nbsp Henri Fantin Latour Hommage a Delacroix 1864 nbsp Henri Fantin Latour Portrait d Edouard Manet 1867 nbsp Henri Fantin Latour Un atelier aux Batignolles 1870See also editList of paintings by Edouard ManetCitations edit a b Theodor Reff Manet and modern Paris p 30 a b c d Juliet Wilson Bareau in Gary Tinterow Genevieve Lacambre Manet Velazquez p 502 quoted in Hajo Duchting Manet Pariser Leben Munchen New York 1985 ISBN 3 7913 1445 9 zu Selbstportrat mit Palette p 93 a b Stoichiţă 2005 Cachin Francoise 1995 Manet The Influence of the Modern Abrams Discoveries series New York Harry N Abrams p 109 ISBN 0 8109 2892 2 a b c After Moffet 1984 Darragon Manet Paris 1989 Quoted in Stoichiţă 2005 Etienne Moreau Nelaton Manet raconte par lui meme Vol II Paris 1926 pp 50 51 Translated in Moffet 1984 Mikael Wivel Ausstellungskatalog Kopenhagen 1989 Manet Charlottenlund 1989 ISBN 87 88692 04 3 Provenance in this section after Moffet 1984 New York Times July 5 1998 David Ebony in Art in America July 1997 New York Times March 3 2005 a b Vogel Carol Manet Self Portrait New Star on the Block New York Times 7 March 2010 Manet self portrait fetches record 22m at London sale BBC News 23 June 2010 Vogel Carol A Lackluster Art Auction in London New York Times 22 June 2010 a b Hough Andrew Rare Edouard Manet self portrait sold for record 22million at Sothebys auction The Telegraph 22 June 2010References editCharles S Moffet Selbstportrat mit Palette In Manet 1832 1883 Reunion des Musees Nationaux Paris The Metropolitan Museum of Art New York Frolich amp Kaufmann Berlin 1984 ISBN 3 88725 092 3 Theodor Reff Manet and modern Paris National Gallery of Art Washington und University of Chicago Press Chicago und London 1982 ISBN 0 226 70720 2 Victor Ieronim Stoichiţă Eduard Manet Selbstportrat 1879 In Ulrich Pfisterer Valeska von Rosen Der Kunstler als Kunstwerk Selbstportrats vom Mittelalter bis zur Gegenwart Philipp Reclam jun Stuttgart 2005 ISBN 3 15 010571 4 Gary Tinterow Genevieve Lacambre Manet Velazquez The French Taste for Spanish Painting Reunion des Musees Nationaux Paris The Metropolitan Museum of Art New York Yale University Press New Haven und London 2003 ISBN 1 58839 038 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Self Portrait with Palette Manet amp oldid 1185300507, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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