Édouard Manet - Jesus mocked by the Soldiers 1865

The head of Christ 1864 Vase of Peonies on a Small Pedestal 1864 Angelina 1865 Jesus mocked by the Soldiers 1865 Madame Auguste Manet 1865 Beach at Boulogne 1869 The dead toreador 1865
Jesus mocked by the Soldiers 1865

Jesus mocked by the Soldiers 1865
191x147cm oil/canvas
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA

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From Art Institute of Chicago:
Although the art of Eduoard Manet was often rooted in references to the history of art, his subjects—parks, cafés, racetracks—were usually quite modern. Jesus Mocked by the Soldiers represents a foray into religious imagery that was rare for Manet (and for his peers in the French avant-garde). Its theme, heroic scale, and dark colors related it to Old Master paintings. Its treatment, however, reflects Manet's usual daring, his flouting of convention. Here, the viewer is confronted with a very human, vulnerable Jesus whose fate is no longer his to determine. Manet depicted the moment when Jesus' captors have mocked the "king of the Jews" by crowning him with thorns and covering him with a purple robe. Although this taunting is followed by beatings, according to Gospel narrative, Manet's three earthy and contemporary-looking soldiers appear ambivalent as they surround the pale, stark figure of Jesus. One gazes at him, one kneels in apparent homage, and one holds the purple cloak in such a way as to suggest that he wishes to cover Christ's nakedness, rather than strip him. Manet's use of stark contrasts, flat forms, and a dark palette of thickly applied pigment enhances this raw and powerful impression.
— Permanent collection label