A Bar at the Folies-Bergère, oil painting created in 1882 by groundbreaking French artist Édouard Manet. The complex, disorienting composition is an iconic image of modern life.
Manet painted this, his last great masterpiece, when he was terminally ill. In it, he returned to his favourite subject matter, the celebration of Parisian life. The Impressionists often showed people enjoying themselves, and many of their most familiar scenes were set in bars, cafés, and dance halls. The Folies-Bergère was the most famous of the café–concert halls, which provided entertainment as well as refreshment. A sample of this entertainment can be seen in the upper left-hand corner of the picture, where the legs of a trapeze artist are visible. Manet also gives some prominence to the electric lighting in the Folies-Bergère, which was still a novelty at this time. The girl was a barmaid, rather than a professional model.
At first glance, the structure of the composition is confusing, as most of the picture is a reflection in a large mirror behind the barmaid. Manet employed artistic license here, shifting the girl’s reflection to the right and tilting it slightly, to make the image more attractive. The man in the top hat shares the same viewpoint as the spectator.
Manet was too ill to paint this picture in the Folies-Bergère itself. Instead, most of it was completed in the studio, where he had an imitation bar installed. As a result, the details in the foreground were painted with careful precision. Manet even added his signature to the wine bottle on the left. The background, by contrast, was less distinct. The artist had to work from memory, producing a shimmering, hazy reflection of the glamorous world that he was leaving behind.