Paris - França
Museu de Belas Artes de Bordeaux França
OST - 175x220 - 1878
The history of
Rolla was captured in a poem by Musset in 1833. Rolla was the man who had paid
for Marion as a courtesan whom he couldn't really afford.
" . .
.Marion was expensive. To pay for one night he had spent everything . . ..
Rolla peered with a melancholy eye over the rooftops, he saw the sun
coming up. He moved to the edge of the window. Rolla glanced back to Marie, she
was tired and had fallen asleep again ..."
Gervex had
painted the poem. But just like Manet's Olympia this was way too direct, and
forced Parisian society to face the realities of prostitution which was
widespread in Paris, along with the issues of female sexuality. The ruffled
sheets, the quickly discarded corset and man's top hat, left little doubt the
passion that this painting depicted.
Some
courtesans became quite wealthy, even celebrities in Paris as prostitution was
common at all levels. Everyone knew it, but no one of society would dare
discuss it. Clearly, Gervex is romanticizing the poem here. But there was
another side to this story. Most woman of prostitution did not reach
courtesan status. Even those that did had to navigate the troubled straits of a
society in deep denial. In her book "Edouard Manet: rebel in a frock coat,"
Beth Archer Brombert documents pretty well the appalling conditions that most
working class women had to live under. A widowed mother, or an unwed woman, if
not under the care of a man of means, was left with no economic opportunities.
Paris was bursting from population growth and venereal disease was epidemic,
and of course with no real cure yet. Edouard Manet, as did his father before
him, would eventually die of complications to syphilis in 1883 -- five years
after Gervex's painting -- one year prior to Sargent's "Madame X"
Ultimately it would be the artists that would force the public to face the hypocrisy. For most Parisians, Gervex's Rolla could just of easily been a visual depiction of one of the most popular plays of the time called "Lady of the Camellias" wherein Marguerite Gautier, the beautiful courtesan, and the Armand Duval, the young middle class civil servant (whom couldn't afford her either) are left utterly destroyed.
Ultimately it would be the artists that would force the public to face the hypocrisy. For most Parisians, Gervex's Rolla could just of easily been a visual depiction of one of the most popular plays of the time called "Lady of the Camellias" wherein Marguerite Gautier, the beautiful courtesan, and the Armand Duval, the young middle class civil servant (whom couldn't afford her either) are left utterly destroyed.
In 1878,
Gervex submitted three paintings to the Salon: Portrait d'E. Paz, Portrait
of Madame G. (Madame Gervex mère), and this painting of Rolla. The
last was refused because it was deemed indecent. The artist turned around
and showed the painting in the window of a furniture store at 41 rue de la
Chaussée d'Antin for three months (April 20th thru July 20th). It
attracted crowds of Parisians and was so scandalous that it would make Gervex
famous.

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