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Édouard Manet — Line in Front of the Butcher Shop
Édouard Manet

Line in Front of the Butcher Shop

1870

As a member of the National Guard during the Prussian siege of 1870, Edouard Manet witnessed the misery of wartime Paris. He wrote, "[The] butcher shops open only three times a week, and there are queues in front of their doors from four in the morning, and the last in line get nothing." The abstract patterns of arrayed umbrellas in this print recall the work of the Japanese printmaker Utagawa Hiroshige. The bayonet rising above the umbrellas, however, reveals the military presence required to control the hungry crowd.

Medium
Etching in warm black on ivory laid paper
Dimensions

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About this work

Édouard Manet, Line in Front of the Butcher Shop, 1870

As a member of the National Guard during the Prussian siege of 1870, Edouard Manet witnessed the misery of wartime Paris. He wrote, "[The] butcher shops open only three times a week, and there are queues in front of their doors from four in the morning, and the last in line get nothing." The abstract patterns of arrayed umbrellas in this print recall the work of the Japanese printmaker Utagawa Hiroshige. The bayonet rising above the umbrellas, however, reveals the military presence required to control the hungry crowd.

Medium
Etching in warm black on ivory laid paper
Dimensions
16.9 x 15 cm
Year
1870
Seen at
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL

Related themes

Nineteenth Century, Monochrome, Street Life, French, Etching, Social Commentary, Butcher Shop, Realism, Black and White, Urban Scene

More works by Édouard Manet

Collected by

Art Institute of Chicago, Cleveland Museum of Art