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dc.contributor.authorKnowles, Marika Takanishi
dc.date.accessioned2019-12-19T00:36:21Z
dc.date.available2019-12-19T00:36:21Z
dc.date.issued2018
dc.identifier255867135
dc.identifier598e14d2-3047-4ab4-9999-9ba4ad87ce5c
dc.identifier85048956714
dc.identifier.citationKnowles , M T 2018 , ' Affect, citation, and rapt looking in Manet’s The Old Musician ' , Word & Image , vol. 34 , no. 2 , pp. 111-125 . https://doi.org/10.1080/02666286.2017.1370948en
dc.identifier.issn0266-6286
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10023/19165
dc.description.abstractA bit to the left of center in Édouard Manet’s painting The Old Musician (1862) stands a young boy, clothed in white and tan, a floppy straw hat haloing his round face. Previous commentators have explained this boy’s significance through the way his figure cites the œuvres of the brothers Le Nain and Antoine Watteau. This article investigates these citations for what they suggest about the boy’s affect: the emotional stance with which his figure approaches and regards the world. Period discussions of the affect of the figures of the brothers Le Nain and Watteau suggest a range of affective possibilities for the figure, from the somnolent passivity of the rural peasant to the irony of an eighteenth-century comic type, Pierrot. Yet Manet’s little boy evinces an affect considerably more knowing, as he takes up the practice that Charles Baudelaire attributed to young children, of looking seriously and imaginatively at the colorful and bizarre visual surface of modernity. This child’s rapt looking at the fleeting and flickering visual aspects of the urban environment leads his figure towards existential ambivalence, as Manet paints the figure using an “approximative,” spectacular technique, in which the referents of painted surfaces constantly shift and dissolve.
dc.format.extent372542
dc.language.isoeng
dc.relation.ispartofWord & Imageen
dc.subjectÉdouard Maneten
dc.subjectCharles Baudelaireen
dc.subjectNaivetéen
dc.subjectLe Nainen
dc.subjectWatteauen
dc.subjectChampfleuryen
dc.subjectRealismen
dc.subjectAffecten
dc.subjectND Paintingen
dc.subjectT-NDASen
dc.subjectBDCen
dc.subjectR2Cen
dc.subject.lccNDen
dc.titleAffect, citation, and rapt looking in Manet’s The Old Musicianen
dc.typeJournal articleen
dc.contributor.institutionUniversity of St Andrews. School of Art Historyen
dc.identifier.doi10.1080/02666286.2017.1370948
dc.description.statusPeer revieweden
dc.date.embargoedUntil2019-12-19


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