{"id":1766,"date":"2021-09-25T06:46:39","date_gmt":"2021-09-25T03:46:39","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/mymanet.net\/?p=1766"},"modified":"2023-05-28T00:07:14","modified_gmt":"2023-05-27T21:07:14","slug":"elementor-1766","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/mymanet.net\/home\/2021\/09\/25\/elementor-1766\/","title":{"rendered":"Manet&#8217;s Enigma &#8211; Breakfast in the Atelier   (P18)"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Most commentators agree, including the first reactions of critics in the Salon 1869: <em style=\"font-size: 18px; color: var(--e-global-color-accent); letter-spacing: 0;\">Breakfast in the Atelier<\/em> (1968) is perhaps his most enigmatic painting.<br \/>\nIt is puzzling to understand what is going on in the scene.<br \/>\nAlready the changing titles of the painting in different sources reflect that we cannot even be sure if this scene is before or after a breakfast or&nbsp; rather a luncheon than a breakfast, taking place in a studio or at Manet\u2019s home. We use the title above especially to distinguish it from the <i>Luncheon on the Grass<\/i>.<br \/>\nManet submitted it together with <em style=\"font-size: 18px; color: var(--e-global-color-accent); letter-spacing: 0;\">The Balcony <\/em>which left the visitors equally puzzled.<\/p>\n<p>Figure 1:&nbsp; <em>Breakfast in the Atelier<\/em> (1968)&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;and&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;<em>The Balcony<\/em> (1968)<\/p>\n<p><img fetchpriority=\"high\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignnone  wp-image-2734\" src=\"https:\/\/mymanet.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/09\/Breakfast-and-Balcony-300x145.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"614\" height=\"297\" srcset=\"https:\/\/mymanet.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/09\/Breakfast-and-Balcony-300x145.jpg 300w, https:\/\/mymanet.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/09\/Breakfast-and-Balcony-1024x494.jpg 1024w, https:\/\/mymanet.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/09\/Breakfast-and-Balcony-768x370.jpg 768w, https:\/\/mymanet.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/09\/Breakfast-and-Balcony-1536x740.jpg 1536w, https:\/\/mymanet.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/09\/Breakfast-and-Balcony-1200x578.jpg 1200w, https:\/\/mymanet.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/09\/Breakfast-and-Balcony-900x434.jpg 900w, https:\/\/mymanet.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/09\/Breakfast-and-Balcony-1280x617.jpg 1280w, https:\/\/mymanet.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/09\/Breakfast-and-Balcony.jpg 1693w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 614px) 100vw, 614px\" \/><\/p>\n<p>For the contemporary critic Castagnary, both paintings were arrangements \u201cwithout reason or meaning\u201d; for him, recording the appearances of modern life was not enough.<br \/>\nManet demonstrated too much \u201cfantasy\u201d and too little \u201csincerity\u201d and traditional finish (Hanson 1977, p. 30).<\/p>\n<p>Looking at the two paintings next to each other (Figure 1), I find it especially astonishing how <em style=\"font-size: 18px; color: var(--e-global-color-accent); letter-spacing: 0;\">different<\/em> the paintings are in their style and composition although Manet created them <em style=\"font-size: 18px; color: var(--e-global-color-accent); letter-spacing: 0;\">in the same year<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>Michael Fried (1998) pointed out that the two paintings show a return to the multi-figure paintings after a \u201cSpanish phase\u201d with single-figure paintings following Manet\u2019s travel to Spain.<br \/>\nHere he tried to recover from the harsh criticisms of <em>Luncheon<\/em> and <em>Olympia<\/em> by getting new inspirations from his admired Diego Velazquez.<\/p>\n<p>As the art historian James Rubin (2010) suggests, the two paintings document a <em>transition <\/em>in Manet:<br \/>\n&#8211; from Charles Baudelaire to Berthe Morisot;<br \/>\n&#8211; from the romantic and naturalistic novelist who died the year before in 1967 to the young impressionist painter whom Manet first met in the summer of 1968.<br \/>\nBoth were very close friends but had a very different influence on Manet.<br \/>\nWell, one was an old male friend deserving a memory in the most Baudelairian painting (Rubin), and the other a charming young lady who turned out to be one of the most important members of the impressionist movement.<br \/>\nQuite a transition of friendships!<\/p>\n<p>Since the two paintings were presented in the same Salon exhibition in 1869, they are often compared.<br \/>\nBut the first is somehow looking back to paintings in the Spanish and Dutch tradition, the second is moving forward integrating impressionist influences.<br \/>\nSo, it is not surprising that <em>The Balcony<\/em> is getting usually more attention and is seen easier to understand as testifying to Manet\u2019s modernity.<\/p>\n<p>In view of <em>MyManet<\/em>, this is not doing full justice to either painting, because there is a focus on the <em>differences<\/em> marked by the transition, while the <em>common<\/em> aspects are neglected.<br \/>\nBoth paintings \u2013 as the reactions confirm \u2013 are riddled:<br \/>\n&#8211; by the interpretation of the gazes and the (lack of) emotions shown by the figures, and<br \/>\n&#8211; by the logic of the composition.<br \/>\nIn fact, the divergent gazes seem to seriously disrupt or endanger the composition.<\/p>\n<p>In view of <em>MyManet<\/em>, let us consider both aspects.<br \/>\nIn this post, we take a closer look at<em>&nbsp;Breakfast<\/em>, in the next post at <em>The Balcony<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>Developing Manet\u2019s scheme in the previous posts, we have seen already how Manet varies the application of the scheme shifting the emphasis between the <em>roles<\/em> of the figures (<em>First, Second, Third, Other, Big Other<\/em>) and their <em>position<\/em> in the picture space (frontstage, middle ground, background, backstage).<br \/>\nIn some cases, he might substitute a position by another figure (e.g. the cat for the <i>Third<\/i> in <em>Olympia<\/em>).<br \/>\nIn some cases, he might omit a position, but implicate it by other means (e.g. omitting the \u201c<i>Other<\/i>\u201d by closing up the backstage in <em>Olympia<\/em>).<br \/>\nAdditionally, basic emotions are indicated by gestures and postures depending on their relations to each other, to \u201cunrepresented\u201d agents outside the painting, or to the viewer (e.g. the empowered and defiant gaze of <em>Olympia<\/em> toward the viewer).<\/p>\n<p><i><b>Breakfast in the Atelier <\/b>shows &#8211; in this perspective &#8211; another variation of Manet\u2019s scheme!<\/i><\/p>\n<p>To start, let us look at the dominating&nbsp; <i><b>figure of the boy<\/b><\/i> (or young man) standing right in front of us (the viewer).<br \/>\nThe undetermined age of the fellow gives rise to interpretations that we observe the <em>transitional state<\/em> of Leon (the model and Manet\u2019s son) between childhood and adulthood.<br \/>\nThe gaze of Leon is directed somewhat to the right of the viewer, not looking at the viewer or anything else specifically. He might be contemplating his future as an adult.<br \/>\nGisela Hopp (1968) suggests that the painting itself shows a kind of dream world, so the boy may be looking at this dream presented to the viewer in the atelier behind him.<\/p>\n<p>Hanson (1973) discusses the painting in her chapter on Manet\u2019s \u201cstill lives\u201d, since the boy seems to stand in an arrangement of \u201cstill lives\u201d: the weapons in the left forefront, the breakfast on the table (if, indeed, it is a breakfast), and the flower in the left background.<br \/>\nActually, the figures are also quite \u201cstill\u201d: the maid holding the coffee pot, the man peacefully smoking, and the boy holding on to the table without any signs of intention to go anywhere.<\/p>\n<p>The whole painting has a nostalgic or retrospective atmosphere, and as Hanson notes, it invites psychological interpretations: some reference to an underlying or hidden \u201cdrama\u201d which the unfocused gazes are \u201chiding\u201d and all those requisites are \u201cbetraying\u201d.<br \/>\nAnd as Richard Wollheim (1987) has pointed out, this \u201cdrama\u201d is <i>not<\/i> an effect of the portrayal of individual characters. The figures have presence and energy, but no clear personality or motivations to act, whether alone or together (see also Post 2 and his comparison with Edgar Degas).<br \/>\nStill, art historians like Wollheim (and Nancy Locke , among others) have tried to uncover a deeper psychological layer \u2013 a personal or family drama &#8211; by exploiting, for instance:<br \/>\n&#8211; the similarity of the Dutch looking maid with Manet\u2019s Dutch wife Suzanne,<br \/>\nwithdrawn in the background,<br \/>\n&#8211; the signature \u201cM\u201d on her coffee pot,<br \/>\n&#8211; the similarity of the man to the right with Manet himself,<br \/>\nnot paying attention to the other figures, and<br \/>\n&#8211; the fact that the boy is modelled by their son Leon,<br \/>\nlooking out of the painting into his own future.<\/p>\n<p>These interpretations provide interesting contexts, although they do \u2013 in my view \u2013 not reckon enough with Manet\u2019s inclination to stage an ironic and self-reflexive \u201ctheatre\u201d,<br \/>\nand with his sincerity as a painter in designing the scene.<br \/>\nSo, I like to pursue another suggestion about the meaning of the gazes in the painting offered by Charles Stuckley&nbsp; &nbsp; (cited in Fried 1998, p.592 in a footnote fn 205).<\/p>\n<p>Stuckley argues that what realist painters like Manet \u201ctruthfully reveal are the necessarily artificial underpinnings of the activity of painting per se.\u201d These underpinnings are the <i>reality of the model&#8217;s work in the setting of the atelier<\/i>. Stuckley suggests \u2013 in Fried\u2019s words &#8211; \u201cthat the strangeness of Manet\u2019s <i>Breakfast in the Atelier<\/i> was the work of Manet\u2019s models, not the painter himself\u201d. And citing Stuckley:<br \/>\n\u201cAs if irked by their model\u2019s roles, Manet\u2019s sitters seem to sabotage his efforts at Realism, for they refuse to remove their hats and they leave the table at which the artist had presumably instructed them to remain for as long as it took to complete the picture. Resigned to their lack of cooperation, Manet\u2019s only option was to record people unwilling to hide their genuine impatience with a slow painter.\u201d<br \/>\n(Fried wonders if Stuckley means this humorously, but I think he makes a serious point humorously.)<\/p>\n<p>This imagery of models &#8211; coming to the setting of the painting process like to the set of a theatre performance &#8211; is also vividly described by Carol Armstrong (1998). In her case the setting is the <em>Luncheon on the Grass<\/em>, and she also sees Manet purposefully keeping the artificial and theatrical appearance of the scene alive in the painting. The models in her imagery are very cooperative. Nevertheless, their actual behaviour in the setting is reflected in the painting to <i>enhance <\/i>its Realism &#8211; not to &#8220;sabotage&#8221; it (Stuckley).<\/p>\n<p>Models should \u2013 in Manet\u2019s view \u2013 act and pose as natural as possible, that is like in everyday life. This is also reported in an often-cited anecdote from Manet\u2019s time of studying in the studio of Thomas Couture. Here Manet is angry with a model striking a classical pose, and he ask him whether he would behave like that when buying his groceries down the street.<\/p>\n<p>I suggest combining this imagery of somewhat detached models with another imagery evoked by the description of performance training in a practical guide for teachers, dancers, and actors.<br \/>\nThe authors, Anne Bogart and Tina Landau, describe their method in \u201cThe Viewpoints Book\u201d (2005), a method developed in close interaction with postmodern painting and postdramatic theatre in the 1960ies.<\/p>\n<p>Like Manet\u2019s models, a group of dancers or actors enters the stage. Then they are asked to focus their awareness as much as possible on the immediate situation and their position in relation to the other persons on stage.<br \/>\nThey are asked <em>not to focus on the others<\/em>, but rather to keep them in \u201c<b><i>soft focus<\/i><\/b>\u201d, i.e. in their peripheral vision and in their perceptual and bodily awareness of each other including all the senses.<br \/>\nIn this state of \u201csoft focusing\u201d on the \u201cbetween\u201d of their relations in space and time and embedded in the architectural setting of the stage, they are then instructed to move in different patterns. They are asked to take their impulse to move or to shape their body <em>from the others<\/em> rather than from their own impulses.<br \/>\nObviously, it takes training to create in this way coordinated and harmonized group movements on stage.<br \/>\nIt is, actually, quite astounding that it works at all! (Visit the examples on Youtube!)<\/p>\n<p>Now imagine Manet\u2019s models taking their places under the guidance of the painter <em>in this spirit<\/em>.<br \/>\nThey got a general introduction into the theme (e.g. scene after a breakfast) but no great \u201cstory\u201d. They are assigned their position, but they have to find a posture, gaze, and gesture with which they are comfortable. They know that they have to keep the pose for a while to allow for the painting process.<br \/>\nBut <i>as long as their relations are harmonized by their mutual awareness of each other, Manet is not intervening<\/i>.<br \/>\nThis way the models have a certain freedom to \u201cinterpret\u201d their gaze, role, and position.<\/p>\n<p>As Struckley correctly observes, this exactly allows for the <i>realism <\/i>of the scene, and this is what Manet wants to paint!<br \/>\nIt is also clear that with a \u201csoft focus\u201d on their <em>relations<\/em> rather than on their individual mental states and emotions the models will not \u201cstrike a pose and keep it\u201d but adjust within a frame of relations with all others.<br \/>\nTheir pose will appear somehow \u201carrested\u201d \u2013 if you are looking for \u201cmeaningful\u201d activities \u2013 but not lifeless!<br \/>\nI think, Stuckley is wrong when seeing \u201cgenuine impatience\u201d in their faces and postures, there is something relaxed but intensive about them.<\/p>\n<p>The authors of &#8220;Viewpoints&#8221; use the metaphor of an act of shooting an arrow with a bow to a target.<br \/>\nThe most <em>intensity<\/em> rests in the moment when the arrow is pulled back, the bow is under pressure, the whole body of the shooter is lining up with the target, but the arrow is not yet released.<br \/>\nThe eventual <em>act<\/em> of releasing and shooting might carry most of the purposeful meaning, but this <i>moment <\/i>displays the potential energy.<\/p>\n<p>Now looking at<em>&nbsp;Breakfast<\/em> with this imagery in mind, the three figures show a presence and energy which flows from their awareness of the presence of the others, including the viewer\/painter, <em>without directly gazing at them<\/em>.<br \/>\nThis is the reality Manet tries to capture!<\/p>\n<p>To be able to achieve this, Manet is relying on models with whom he has personal and trusting relationships and who engage with his practice &#8211; family, friends, or models like Victorine Meurent.<br \/>\nThis may also be a reason why Manet preferred multi-figure compositions to portraits, because in this case he himself has to perform in the double role of the \u201cOther\u201d and the painter.<br \/>\nAnd, obviously, that becomes especially complicated when the person portrayed is an adorable woman like Berthe Morisot\u2026<\/p>\n<p>Certainly, the models cannot just do what they please.<br \/>\nManet is communicating with them to create the situation he wants \u2013 there is a <em>programmatic<\/em> dimension in the arrangement, and everybody has to take their position and role.<br \/>\nAnd in each modelling session his vision has to be communicated again, most likely with some changes.<br \/>\nAfter all, Manet is likely to have scraped off the sketch from the last session &#8211; as his models report &#8211; and for a reason!<br \/>\nIn view of <em>MyManet<\/em>, an important part of this programmatic dimension is Manet\u2019s scheme.<\/p>\n<p>In <em>Breakfast<\/em>, Leon has to take the position and role of the <em>Third<\/em> in the scheme, as I show below.<br \/>\nThis implies that his posture cannot be simply \u201cnatural\u201d.<br \/>\nIn Figure 2, we confront the painting with a sketch of the boy from the same year in preparation of the painting:<\/p>\n<p>Figure 2: <em>Breakfast in the Atelier&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;<\/em>and&nbsp; &nbsp; <em>Drawing of Leon&nbsp;<\/em>&nbsp; (both 1868)<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignnone  wp-image-2735\" src=\"https:\/\/mymanet.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/09\/Breakfast-and-Leon-300x147.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"588\" height=\"288\" srcset=\"https:\/\/mymanet.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/09\/Breakfast-and-Leon-300x147.jpg 300w, https:\/\/mymanet.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/09\/Breakfast-and-Leon-1024x502.jpg 1024w, https:\/\/mymanet.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/09\/Breakfast-and-Leon-768x376.jpg 768w, https:\/\/mymanet.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/09\/Breakfast-and-Leon-1536x753.jpg 1536w, https:\/\/mymanet.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/09\/Breakfast-and-Leon-1200x588.jpg 1200w, https:\/\/mymanet.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/09\/Breakfast-and-Leon-900x441.jpg 900w, https:\/\/mymanet.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/09\/Breakfast-and-Leon-1280x627.jpg 1280w, https:\/\/mymanet.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/09\/Breakfast-and-Leon.jpg 1730w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 588px) 100vw, 588px\" \/><\/p>\n<p>The sketch demonstrates that Manet is perfectly able to make a lively and \u201cnaturalistic\u201d drawing of his son.<br \/>\nBut in the painting, he is asked to take his hands out of the pockets and to look out of the painting. He also has to lean slightly back to rest on the table connecting with the man behind him resting his elbow on the same table, while the maid is arresting her approaching them.<\/p>\n<p>The energy of dancers with a \u201csoft focus\u201d on their spatial relations to the others permeates the atelier!<br \/>\nThis is less than the dynamics of a \u201cgood story\u201d or a \u201cfamily drama\u201d but capturing <i>the reality before Manet\u2019s eyes<\/i>.<\/p>\n<p>This brings us to the second riddle of<i>&nbsp;Breakfast<\/i>, the logic of its composition.<\/p>\n<p>Comments on the painting agree that the painting shows an arrangement of somewhat arbitrary figures and other elements in a rather strict composition. The elements seem all related to Manet\u2019s biography and previous paintings, but the logic of their composition appears non-transparent.<br \/>\nL\u00fcthy describes it as \u201csituative incoherence\u201d bound by a \u201cplanimetric order\u201d (2003, p.35).<br \/>\nIt is as if Manet is taming the diverging forces on the social <i><b>content level<\/b><\/i> &#8211; produced for the viewer by the uncoordinated gazes and the unrelated meanings of the requisites (still lives) &#8211; by a compositional order.<br \/>\nThis order creates a unity for the viewer on the <i><b>design level<\/b> <\/i>of shapes, colours, and spatial relations. L\u00fcthy sees the logic of the composition in these dynamics of incoherence and order between the elements of the picture and the relationship to the viewer.<br \/>\nIn view of <em>MyManet<\/em>, these dynamics capture an important aspect of the composition. However, there is more structure in the dynamics as the opposition of inner \u201cincoherence\u201d and stabilizing order for the viewer suggests.<\/p>\n<p>Above, I have already argued that the inner \u201cincoherence\u201d might better be understood as \u201cunfocused\u201d unity created by the figures being aware of each other. This compositional unity is supported by the hidden order of Manet\u2019s scheme: the figures have a position and are aware of their roles.<\/p>\n<p>This hidden order becomes apparent when we apply the scheme to the painting as in Figure 3:<\/p>\n<p>Figure 3:&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;Manet\u2019s scheme applied to The Breakfast in the Atelier (1968)<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-2388 aligncenter\" src=\"https:\/\/mymanet.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/03\/Breakfast-model-3-300x218.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"489\" height=\"355\" srcset=\"https:\/\/mymanet.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/03\/Breakfast-model-3-300x218.jpg 300w, https:\/\/mymanet.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/03\/Breakfast-model-3-768x559.jpg 768w, https:\/\/mymanet.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/03\/Breakfast-model-3.jpg 888w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 489px) 100vw, 489px\" \/><\/p>\n<p>The most striking variation in the scheme is clearly that Leon in the position of the <strong style=\"font-size: 18px; color: var(--e-global-color-accent); letter-spacing: 0;\"><em>Third<\/em><\/strong> is moved onto the <i>frontstage<\/i>.<br \/>\nThis creates a dominant position and role for him. We have indicated already that interpretations see the boy looking \u201cat his future\u201d, his future role in society. In view of the daring position he occupies almost encroaching onto the viewer and breaking the \u201cfourth wall\u201d separating the stage from the audience, we should interpret his role also as <em style=\"font-size: 18px; color: var(--e-global-color-accent); letter-spacing: 0;\">challenging painterly traditions<\/em> of composition.<\/p>\n<p>Comparing the position of the boy as the <em>Third<\/em> with the positioning of Christ as the <em>Third<\/em> in <em>Christ Mocked by Soldiers<\/em>, we see how dramatically the <em>Third<\/em> is moved against all rules to the front (see Post 14).<br \/>\nThus, the boy&#8217;s gaze is directed at the <strong><em>Big Other<\/em><\/strong> in Manet\u2019s scheme.<\/p>\n<p>The maid is taking the position of <strong><em>First<\/em><\/strong> engaging the viewer.<br \/>\nHowever, she is doing that from a position in the <i>background<\/i>. Nancy Locke (2001, p.130) rightly observes that the triangle of the Luncheon \u2013 with the nude (<em>First<\/em>) in front and the man (<em>Third<\/em>) behind her &#8211; is here reversed.<br \/>\nThis position provides some depth to the triad, although the effect is more to push the <em>Third<\/em> even more to the front, since behind her is only the wall (or painted coulisse) sealing off the back. (In an earlier draft, there was a larger window behind the triad which Manet has painted over hanging a small painting on the dark wall.)<\/p>\n<p>The <strong><em>Second<\/em><\/strong>, the man to the right, also shows a striking variation of the scheme.<br \/>\nHe is moved far to the right, even cut off by the frame. From this position, he is looking not at the others but straight across the picture space to the left. He is focusing on nothing in particular, may be even lost in his own thoughts.<br \/>\nBut he is establishing the <i>middle ground<\/i> of the painting &#8211; occupied by him and the table &#8211; as an own layer between the boy in the foreground and the maid in the background.<\/p>\n<p><em>This distinct distribution of the three figures over three different layers of the painting must have been an essential element in Manet\u2019s experiment with the scheme!<\/em><\/p>\n<p>The dominant role of the figure frontstage must have been a compositional challenge which Manet balanced with a prominent <strong><em>still life<\/em><\/strong> in the front:<br \/>\nthe theatrical arrangement of weapons and, again, the black cat, his signature animal from the <em>Olympia<\/em> (orange circle). Additionally, he lets the bright yellow lemon almost drop from the table to the right (orange circle).<br \/>\nSo, this scene of the \u201cpuppet theatre\u201d is clearly talking to the audience <i>from the frontstage<\/i>.<\/p>\n<p>Finally, the white flowerpot to the left plays an interesting role in the composition.<br \/>\nOn the one hand, it is placed somewhat behind the figure of the maid; on the other hand, it is painted surprisingly bright and colourful, even with Japanese motifs. It is pushing forward from the back \u2013 and in this feature &#8211; the pot is reminding of the second woman in <em>Luncheon on the Grass<\/em> looking from the back! The pot is also somehow \u201ctoo large\u201d, not a face but clearly \u201cfacing\u201d the scene and the viewer.<br \/>\nIndirectly, it is accentuating the <i>void space<\/i> between the pot and the weapons supporting the independence of the middle ground across the composition.<br \/>\nThus, we may see the position and role of the <strong><em>\u201cOther\u201d<\/em><\/strong> taken by a flowerpot!<\/p>\n<p>We see an inversion of the scheme from Luncheon on the Grass and, as I would like to show in the next post, the painting <i>The Balcony<\/i> is displaying yet another variation of the scheme!<\/p>\n<p><strong><em>See you in two weeks again!<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Interpretation of &#8220;Breakfast in the Atelier&#8221; as a variation of Manet&#8217;s scheme<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":199326225,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"nf_dc_page":"","_crdt_document":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[156853,225364],"tags":[748385132,3990,156853,748385127,1930],"class_list":["post-1766","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-diagram","category-manet","tag-breakfast-in-the-atelier","tag-dance","tag-diagram","tag-manets-scheme","tag-performance"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.4 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Manet&#039;s Enigma - Breakfast in the Atelier  (P18) - My Manet \u2013 Your Manet<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/mymanet.net\/home\/2021\/09\/25\/elementor-1766\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Manet&#039;s Enigma - Breakfast in the Atelier  (P18) - My Manet \u2013 Your Manet\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Interpretation of &quot;Breakfast in the Atelier&quot; 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