Olympia

Paris in the Age of Monet

Nonfiction, History, Modern, 19th Century, France
Cover of the book Olympia by Otto Friedrich, Author & Company
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Author: Otto Friedrich ISBN: 9781620710005
Publisher: Author & Company Publication: September 11, 2014
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Otto Friedrich
ISBN: 9781620710005
Publisher: Author & Company
Publication: September 11, 2014
Imprint:
Language: English

“Using Manet's controversial masterpiece as his starting point,” Janet Maslin wrote in the New York Times about Olympia, one of her all-time favorite books, “Friedrich examined every imaginable aspect of the city's history and culture in a book that bristles with incisive analysis and amazing data.”  “He brings,” Kirkus Reviews said, “his rare historical imagination and narrative gifts to the art and politics, frivolity, eccentricity, and scandal of the Second Empire (1865-85) in Paris during the reign of Napoleon III.”
 
Otto Friedrich’s account of Paris (“the capital of the 19th century”) during the Second Empire brilliantly evokes an era and vividly depicts its people and events.  The central character is Manet with an awe-inspiring supporting cast of Napoleon III, Empress Eugénie, Wagner, Flaubert, Bismarck, Offenbach, Proust, Degas, Haussmann, Zola, Monet, and Victor Hugo.  Though Manet never paints Empress Eugénie, the most powerful woman in France, he does paint the execution of Maximilian in Mexico (which is only one of the ill-fated schemes urged on Napoleon III by the Empress) and he does paint Berthe Morisot—eleven times, in fact, with whom he is clearly in love—but she marries his brother.
 
Baron Haussmann tears up and rebuilds most of central Paris. Manet paints a portrait of Nana as a mindless showgirl. Zola, at almost the same time, writes Nana as a portrait of a woman as a devourer.  Bismarck provokes and Empress Eugénie prods Napoleon into war.  Napoleon loses his entire army and surrenders at Sedan. The Third Republic is proclaimed in Paris. Manet and Degas serve in the defending army. Victor Hugo publishes a cookbook on how to cook rats. Under siege, Paris surrenders. The French government attacks and massacres the Communards.  The Impressionists paint and quarrel among themselves.
 
“Rich, vivid, imaginatively organized,” continued Kirkus, “a 19th-century Bonfire of the Vanities, a true one, ready for the big screen… Memorable vignettes include the exiled Wagner producing Tannhäuser for the frivolous Parisians; the massacre of citizens in Napoleon's coup and again after his defeat; the Exposition of 1867, with its 52,000 exhibits; and a history of syphilis, the disease that probably took Manet's life.” “Friedrich’s technique,’ wrote Malcolm L. Johnson in the Hartford Courant, “born of Time compression, is to read everything available and then distill it into readable, anecdotal, humorous history.”

This eBook edition includes interactive links between the text and the artwork about which Friedrich is writing.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

“Using Manet's controversial masterpiece as his starting point,” Janet Maslin wrote in the New York Times about Olympia, one of her all-time favorite books, “Friedrich examined every imaginable aspect of the city's history and culture in a book that bristles with incisive analysis and amazing data.”  “He brings,” Kirkus Reviews said, “his rare historical imagination and narrative gifts to the art and politics, frivolity, eccentricity, and scandal of the Second Empire (1865-85) in Paris during the reign of Napoleon III.”
 
Otto Friedrich’s account of Paris (“the capital of the 19th century”) during the Second Empire brilliantly evokes an era and vividly depicts its people and events.  The central character is Manet with an awe-inspiring supporting cast of Napoleon III, Empress Eugénie, Wagner, Flaubert, Bismarck, Offenbach, Proust, Degas, Haussmann, Zola, Monet, and Victor Hugo.  Though Manet never paints Empress Eugénie, the most powerful woman in France, he does paint the execution of Maximilian in Mexico (which is only one of the ill-fated schemes urged on Napoleon III by the Empress) and he does paint Berthe Morisot—eleven times, in fact, with whom he is clearly in love—but she marries his brother.
 
Baron Haussmann tears up and rebuilds most of central Paris. Manet paints a portrait of Nana as a mindless showgirl. Zola, at almost the same time, writes Nana as a portrait of a woman as a devourer.  Bismarck provokes and Empress Eugénie prods Napoleon into war.  Napoleon loses his entire army and surrenders at Sedan. The Third Republic is proclaimed in Paris. Manet and Degas serve in the defending army. Victor Hugo publishes a cookbook on how to cook rats. Under siege, Paris surrenders. The French government attacks and massacres the Communards.  The Impressionists paint and quarrel among themselves.
 
“Rich, vivid, imaginatively organized,” continued Kirkus, “a 19th-century Bonfire of the Vanities, a true one, ready for the big screen… Memorable vignettes include the exiled Wagner producing Tannhäuser for the frivolous Parisians; the massacre of citizens in Napoleon's coup and again after his defeat; the Exposition of 1867, with its 52,000 exhibits; and a history of syphilis, the disease that probably took Manet's life.” “Friedrich’s technique,’ wrote Malcolm L. Johnson in the Hartford Courant, “born of Time compression, is to read everything available and then distill it into readable, anecdotal, humorous history.”

This eBook edition includes interactive links between the text and the artwork about which Friedrich is writing.

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