The Hallucination of Modernity
Paul Cezanne painted A Modern Olympia to pick a fight, not play nice with the critics. In 1874, the first Impressionist exhibition was a declaration of war against the polished, dead art of the Salon. Paris was still bleeding from the 1871 Commune's bloody political experiment gone horribly awry. The city was a ghost of its former self, held together by coal smoke and the desperate energy of the avant-garde. While photography began to make traditional painters look like taxidermists, Cezanne decided to look inward.
This painting is a fever dream. It is a direct, hallucinatory response to Manet’s scandalous 1863 Olympia. But where Manet was cool and detached, Cezanne is franticly chaotic. He puts himself in the frame as a dark, brooding voyeur. He is watching the scene as a servant unveils a nude woman who looks less like a goddess and more like a specter of death. The paint is applied with a thick, aggressive impasto. It is raw and messy. It feels like the first unrefined whispers of the subconscious hitting the canvas.
One critic at the show claimed Cezanne had delirium tremens. They couldn't handle the lack of finish or the raw sexual energy. They saw a nightmare where they wanted a postcard. Everything in this rendered world was shifting from the external landscape to the internal struggle beneath appearance. Cezanne wasn't just painting a nude, he was painting the collapse of the old world and the birth of a psychic reality that would eventually become Expressionism.
References
Gowing, Lawrence. Cezanne. Thames & Hudson, 1988.
Rewald, John. The History of Impressionism. Museum of Modern Art, 1973.
Cachin, Françoise. Cézanne. Philadelphia Museum of Art, 1996.