Student Scholar Symposium Abstracts and Posters

Document Type

Poster

Publication Date

Spring 5-6-2026

Faculty Advisor(s)

Justin Walsh

Abstract

The question is whether Édouard Manet was shaped by his era or doing the shaping, and Olympia answers it. It was not an accident but a methodical dismantling of a centuries-old tradition, and by refusing to look away from modern life he forced everyone else to reckon with it too. The reclining nude has never recovered. For centuries, artists from Titian to Ingres constructed a genre around idealized bodies, mythological distance, and an uncontested male gaze that rendered real women into timeless passive objects. Manet inherited that tradition and refused to perpetuate it. Through the theoretical frameworks of Berger and Mulvey on the male gaze, Clark and Nead on idealized form, and Nochlin on Realism, this thesis conducts a close formal analysis of every deliberate choice Manet made in Olympia, the confrontational gaze, the foreshortened hand, the Black maid, the black cat, the iconographies, demonstrating how each decision systematically dismantled the conventions that preceded it. That analysis is anchored in the social and political volatility of Second Empire Paris: the revolutions of 1848, Haussmann's gutting of the city, the sharpening visibility of class and the sex trade. All of it made Olympia possible, but Manet is the one who actually painted her. The reception history stretches from the explosive 1865 Salon response through Cezanne, Duchamp, and modern ad campaigns, tracing how Manet fundamentally destabilized what the reclining nude could represent. Nobody could put it back.

Comments

Presented at the Spring 2026 Student Scholar Symposium at Chapman University.

This poster presents a formal analysis of Édouard Manet's Olympia (1863), examining how each compositional choice including the confrontational gaze, the foreshortened hand, the Black maid, and the black cat systematically dismantled the conventions of the Western reclining nude tradition. Tracing the genre from Titian to contemporary advertising, this thesis argues that Manet was both shaped by and actively shaping the cultural moment of Second Empire Paris.

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