I saw this at the Courtauld gallery yesterday and it's outstanding. I think the mirror reflects the girl's thoughts as she remembers a happier time (possibly with the viewer). It's worth noting that the reflected bottles are also set the wrong side of the counter.
@smaakjeks7 жыл бұрын
What a wonderful piece of art. Thanks for talking us through it :-)
@ocealucia7 жыл бұрын
I think it represents loneliness in a place full of people
@MoKXGu15 жыл бұрын
I have been telling people that for years .
@MoKXGu14 жыл бұрын
I have argued that for years .
@joshvalle55213 жыл бұрын
There's a club if you'd like to go. You could meet somebody who really loves you. So you go and you stand on your own, and you leave on your own, you go home, you cry and you want to die
@NylaVox3 жыл бұрын
I agree-her gaze feels distanced.
@NylaVox3 жыл бұрын
@@joshvalle5521 Morrissey....✨👌🥰✨
@scipioafricanus33243 жыл бұрын
The cut glass containing the oranges is the most impressive part of the painting to me.
@ajmittendorf3 жыл бұрын
I find a certain "ennui" (I hope that's the right word) in the girl's expression. She doesn't look directly at the viewer (assuming that we are the patron to the far right of the painting). Instead, she looks down a little and off to her right, and her eyes seem glazed, as though lost in thought while the patron gives his line or makes his move, or whatever. It's not fear, but fatigue I see. As though hundreds of men have approached her just that night. It's a sadness and loneliness, but one that recognizes that this suitor will not cure that loneliness. She is aware, so she's decidedly attentive to her physical setting. But there's also a distant longing, that sets her apart from her physical setting. This expression is more mysterious and masterful than that of da Vinci's Mona Lisa.
@combatantezoteric29655 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this video! Next week we will talk about this painting ( and the late realism - early impresionism ) in class. What I found now really fascinating about this painting is this new relationship between the personages and the spectator Manet tries to make. The bartenter may look and think in a certian way at/about the man approaching her, but not about us, the spectators ( we are like an objective narrator or a camera ).
@edo_moya7 жыл бұрын
She is clearly watching that lady in front of her at the distance, wishing she was her, with those pretty yellow gloves having fun, that is why the gloves lady is such a high contrast in the painting (but not the highest). She is even ignoring the man in front of her, she doesn’t care, she is daydreaming on the job.
@ovh9922 жыл бұрын
The focal point of this painting is actually the hair. Notice how much time Manet spent on painting her hair. You can almost see the individual strands. Also her hair can not be more plain Jane. She is in a room full of women and they are all wearing elaborate hats on top of elaborate coiffures. Yet her hair is brushed straight and put in a ponytail - with no hat. She is the epitome of a working class girl. She is a servant in a room full of the wealthy enjoying life. She epitomizes the eternal dilemma of the shop girl. She wistfully wishes she was in front of the counter instead of behind it.
@palladin3312 жыл бұрын
No, the focal point is the corsage. There are four lines of perspective focused on the corsage. The foreground triangle is formed by the two sets of bottles and the corsage. The background triangle is formed by the corsage and the two vectors in the two background scenes reaching to infinity through the streets of Paris. Put another way, the perspective lines create a large X from the left rear to the front right, and the right rear to the left front. This X is centered over the woman's heart which lies under the corsage. That is the focal point of this painting. Whatever programatic content one senses is up to the viewer and not specifically intended by the artist. If anything, Manet is thinking of her voluptuous body and her emotions.
@ovh9922 жыл бұрын
That is a bit weak of an argument. The focal point is her face and head. No one is looking at the corsage when her face is showing perplexed emotion. And as far as the perspective going into infinity into the streets of Paris.... Well considering the painting is set indoors, I really think you are grasping for validation there.
@palladin3312 жыл бұрын
@@ovh992 The focal point is her breasts, the corsage, her heart. The perspective lines are there for all to see. The background with its two views through the wall into the streets, put there intentionally by Manet, is even more dizzying than the misplacement of the bottles in their reflection and the off-center reflection of the woman showing an absent man, like a thought bubble. This is a distortion of time and space and reflects the woman's mental state. While the face is certainly of great interest, by focal point I am referring to lines of perspective which you seem not to understand.
@dkillion74853 жыл бұрын
She is tired from standing and working all day, leaning forward and resting her arms on the counter. The place is noisy, smoke filled, and full of intoxicated people. It is nearly time for her to finish, go home and get some rest. The man has only met her at work a few times but is aggressive in look and wants her to go out with him when she gets off. She is tired and just wants him to go away but is afraid he will make a scene and embarrass her. She is hoping that by maintaining her pose and her facial expression he will get the message. She doesn’t want to go out with him after work today or really anytime. It is not the first time she has been confronted by an aggressive and somewhat inebriated customer seeking something she does not want to do. She doesn’t want to lose her job. How can she negotiate through these situations now and in the future? She is looking at us. What would we tell her?
@franckr61593 жыл бұрын
This is a very credible description. Good art provides food for thought.
@KennedyYourEnemy10 ай бұрын
Viewing this piece as a woman helps you interpret it in a whole new way, truly!
@s.r.AlbertoАй бұрын
Ayer me topé con un libro recopilatorio de pinturas de Manet. Lo abrí en una página aleatoriamente y di con esta pintura que me hizo llorar inmediatamente: me recordó a una vieja amiga que quería y que se veía igualita a la camarera: tenía, o tiene, esos ojos de calma o de duda, pero de la atención que te ponía también, con esa mirada sincera, atenta, a la expectativa de cualquier cosa, incluso la menos divertida o más rara y extrovertida jaja, ella era algo tímida, aunque creo que más bien muy apaciguada y autosuficiente creía. Ver la pintura me hizo recordarla, les digo, y se sintió una maravilla: recordé que fue la primer amiga en verme, en platicarme de ella y de su vida, en permitirme hablarle de mí cuando nunca nadie lo había hecho antes: llegaba a sentir que era la primera persona que me veía desnudo pero no de mi cuerpo, sino de mi alma, y aun si eran cosas que ahora pienso que eran de menor relevancia que otras preocupaciones mías actuales, me eran muy importantes y ella sabía tratarlas con el mero hecho de escucharme. Durábamos horas platicando en llamada jaja, a veces teníamos que hacer un trabajo en equipo pero nos agarrábamos platique y platique, entonces nos propusimos comenzar las llamadas más temprano para hacer la tarea temprano y luego ya durar lo que quisiéramos hablando… ¡ni así trabajábamos! Jaja. Era muy padre. En fin y, pues escuchando este video la siento aun más cercana a mí a la camarera: ella era igual, algo distante pero no porque me quisiera hacer sufrir, aunque sufría cuando no nos hablábamos, sino porque se ocupaba o ella simplemente era como una hoja de un árbol que cae y se va volando pero disfrutándolo, sin darse cuenta que de repente está en otro parque o en otro árbol; yo en cambio era la raíz que se sabía fija y no podía separarme de este hastío. Ella era algo distante digo, y pensar que la camarera también pues me fascina por el hecho de que es una semejanza más en la pintura. Fue un muy agradable rato, la terminé comprando la pintura, me compré el libro, pienso pegarla por ahí para recordarla.
@Sasha0927 Жыл бұрын
It caught me by surprise to learn that she was standing in front of a mirror. Even after hearing that, I couldn't reconcile what I was seeing with that knowledge (e.g. her distorted pose and the missing man), so it was nice to hear that Manet was just jerking me around. Those eyes do look very sad. She is 103% over her shift - or perhaps the man standing before her.
@smarthistory-art-history Жыл бұрын
Exactly, it is a painting about the denial of the naturalistic illusion he scorned. He will not let you forget you are looking at paint.
@nancikuba422 жыл бұрын
Just noticed another inconsistency. If they're saying the bottom of the mirror is shown to be of a gold color. That would mean the bottom of the mirror would have went all the way accross & cutting off the bottom portion of the woman's body. That would make it more believable as it's a reflection off to the side. I feel it's another woman. The wall would have to be bent to capture her reflection in that angle. The other things I noticed are the bottles behind her are not the same as the ones in the foreground. All the bottles have gold tops, while the other in the BG has no gold top. Her posture & shoulders are different. Her hair is different.
@smarthistory-art-history2 жыл бұрын
And those inconsistencies are his very point, this is not a photograph, it is painting.
@nancikuba422 жыл бұрын
@@smarthistory-art-history Yes, I think it fascinating that he was fully aware of those things & distorts reality deliberately from the viewpoint of what can be another's. In a place where they can escape reality can distort it to their liking is not at all what really is the reality of this woman but theirs. Me personally I also had fun finding the inconsistencies like those games where you can find hidden figures in a picture along with the many interpretations of this painting.
@markusskand97732 жыл бұрын
terrific ! Thank you!
7 жыл бұрын
She represents, to me, an experience we've all known: dealing with difficult customers. This customer wants something, but what do they want? The bargirl appears bewildered. She's struggling to put it together, also struggling to keep her composure. Keeping up a pleasant front must be maintained at all costs. Your job depends on it. This struggle's all the more challenging when dealing with boorishness at the end of a long day. I imagine she's getting propositioned. It's dawning: "This is going to go on and on, isn't it."
@DavidPuckArtist7 жыл бұрын
I agree. Her expression to me reads as very weary, but attempting to conceal it. Towards the end of a long night working. Drunk customers. "This is going to go on and on, isn't it'", not just this one interaction, but having to play this role for the rest of her life.
@missbeans6 жыл бұрын
Right? People questioning what her expression means have clearly never worked in customer service 🤣
@ultraali4536 ай бұрын
Thank you for the commentary
@TheBunzy198027 күн бұрын
I grew up in cleveland ohio in the 80s 90s 00's and we had this painting on our wall.I remember playing with my moms encyclopedia collection and finding it in one.. It was given to a family friend. But it was this painting maybe a copy?
@smarthistory-art-history27 күн бұрын
The canvas was purchased by Samuel Courtauld in 1926. It has been in the Courtauld Gallery in London since the 1930s.
@AmanLiveTheMoment4 жыл бұрын
Thank You for the interesting interpretations
@Zenavesta7 жыл бұрын
Hi guys, great video! Could you guys do an analysis of a more modern piece of art; photography to be specific? It would be interesting to hear this type of thinking applied to a modern form of art technology
@smarthistory-art-history7 жыл бұрын
You can find a good deal of photography on our site. Here is an example from just before the Manet: smarthistory.org/julia-margaret-cameron-mrs-herbert-duckworth/ and here are more contemporary examples: smarthistory.org/tag/photography-video/
@Zenavesta7 жыл бұрын
+Smarthistory. art, history, conversation. Thank you for linking these
@ucheogo59772 жыл бұрын
I think the man represents us as the viewers
@bluesque96875 ай бұрын
I think the man she is interacting with is Manet himself. Manet is an expert at painting subtle facial expressions... And, you can see the gentle honest seeking love in her face... she is seeking love from Manet. This must have been a very "romantic" and private painting to Manet, while he was still painting it. He captures the expression just as beautifully as capturing a fleeting light in the evening sky.
@SKF3587 жыл бұрын
An insightful commentary on a remarkable work by Steven and Beth. Very educational. The top hat man in the mirror seems "off" spatially from the direct view of the bar maid. He would be in front of us blocking our view of her.
@morgandunn63843 жыл бұрын
This is one of my favorite paintings. I see the woman as being disinterested and maybe bored.
@Grendelmonster8u7 жыл бұрын
Great discussion. The counter doesn't look straight across to me, nor that strip behind her, and the reflection and angle with the man doesn't look right; her shoulders look even though. He looks as if he's close to her and he's much taller, but she can't be looking at him since she's looking downwards and thus he should look shorter and more distant. He may not even really exist. I see her expression as sad and detached-the kind of expression when you are thinking and not looking at anything specifically. Perhaps she wishes she weren't working and having fun like all the patrons, and that a gentleman would be interested in her. It's thought provoking. Manet makes dabs of paint effective.
@rebecca45705 ай бұрын
Thats the face i make at work when people flirt with me
@ikramdotani77032 жыл бұрын
I am so careful in subscription. It’s a new way of great explaination.
@nelliebly66162 жыл бұрын
I think that She is looking into a mirror, behind the bar.,. And We are looking out through Her eyes...as if we are Her...
@colinm55482 жыл бұрын
Thx
@barbarazielinska8968 Жыл бұрын
Choć liczni poprzednicy przygotowali Monetowi drogę,Impresja stanowi śmiały krok naprzód,wobec którego błędną osiągnięcia nawet Constanlea i Cirota.
@tommyzDad4 жыл бұрын
Guys, she's half-listening to the gentleman speak to her--probably smiling at some over-used pick-up line of the day. But she's wondering: _J'ai laissé le fer allumé?_