Jesus Mocked by the Soldiers

Description

Throughout his career Édouard Manet managed to shock and confound the public with his bold technique and unorthodox approach to subject matter. The most startling feature of this painting is that he painted it at all. Following the advent of the Realist movement, which grounded art in the here and now, avant-garde artists in France did not pursue religious themes. While Manet was primarily a painter of secular subjects, he was also interested in art history, which led him on at least two occasions to depict the biblical narratives that had compelled artists for many centuries. This work might also have been inspired by the popular 1863 biography Vie de Jésus (Life of Jesus) by the French philosopher and historian Joseph-Ernest Renan, a controversial work that emphasized Christ’s humanity.

Here, Manet depicted Jesus at the end of his life, beaten and awaiting crucifixion. The Roman soldiers force him to don a crown of thorns and proffer a reed “scepter” and purple cloak, all intended to ridicule him as “King of the Jews,” a title bestowed ironically by his tormenters. Manet transformed this sacred narrative into a gritty drama that marries realism with theatricality. He presented Jesus frontally, emphasizing his vulnerability and human physicality. Jesus seems exhausted and limp. The canvas’s visible brushstrokes and color palette create a sense of materiality that further evokes a palpable, unidealized Christ, who notably lacks a halo. Is he a holy being emanating divine light or a real man posing under a studio spotlight? The painting caused a scandal in its own time for precisely this ambiguity.

Provenance

Estate of the artist, Paris, 1883 [the inventory lists the painting as no. 17 as Le Christ insulté par les soldats]; by descent to Léon Leenhoff, Paris, 1883; sold to Boussod et Valadon, Paris, May 31, 1893, for 3,500 francs [this and the following per dealer’s stock book 13, no. 23074, as Les Christ insulté par les Soldats, published online at http://www.getty.edu/research/tools/digital_collections/goupil_cie/books.html]; sold to Jean-Baptiste Faure (d. 1914), Paris, April 14, 1894, for 8,000 francs; partially sold to Durand-Ruel, Paris, April 17, 1894 [per Durand-Ruel, Paris, stock book (no. 3006); copy of archival reference in curatorial object file]; partially transferred from Durand-Ruel, Paris, to Durand-Ruel, New York, October 23, 1911 [this and the following per Durand-Ruel, New York, stock books (no. 3461, as Ecce homo, le Christ insulté par les soldats, 1865); copy of archival reference in curatorial object file]; sold to James Deering (d. 1925), Chicago, October 23, 1911, for $44,000; bequeathed to the Art Institute of Chicago, 1925.

Jesus Mocked by the Soldiers

Édouard Manet

1865

Accession Number

16499

Medium

Oil on canvas

Dimensions

190.8 × 148.3 cm (74 7/8 × 58 3/8 in.); Framed: 240.1 × 196.9 cm (94 1/2 × 77 1/2 in.)

Classification

Painting

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Gift of James Deering

Tags

Painting Impressionist & Modern (1851–1900) Oil Painting Canvas

Background & Context

Background Story

Édouard Manet (1832-1883) painted Jesus Mocked by the Soldiers in 1865, depicting the New Testament episode in which Roman soldiers mock Christ before the Crucifixion by crowning him with thorns and dressing him in a purple robe. Manet's treatment strips the subject of the devotional sentiment that traditional religious painting would have given it, rendering Christ and the soldiers with the same dispassionate realism he brought to scenes of contemporary Parisian life. The soldiers are not allegorical figures but real men in Roman costume, and Christ's suffering is presented with a matter-of-factness that shocked contemporary viewers accustomed to more reverent treatments of sacred subjects.

Cultural Impact

Jesus Mocked by the Soldiers is one of the most controversial religious paintings of the 19th century because Manet applied the same realist technique to a sacred subject that he applied to scenes of modern life. The painting's matter-of-fact treatment of Christ's suffering—no devotional sentiment, no idealization, just a man being tormented by other men—was a radical departure from the reverent tradition of religious painting and demonstrated that Manet's realism was not limited to secular subjects.

Why It Matters

Jesus Mocked by the Soldiers is Manet's realism applied to sacred subject: Christ and the soldiers rendered with the same dispassionate observation that Manet brought to scenes of modern Parisian life. The 1865 painting strips the biblical subject of traditional devotional sentiment, presenting Christ's suffering with a matter-of-factness that shocked viewers accustomed to more reverent treatments.