


Fishing
Edouard Manet
$47.00
Select sizeSize guide
- 380g/m² cotton canvas — certified museum quality
- Solid wood stretcher bar with 0.75” gallery wrap
- HD Giclée print — colour-true to the original
- Ready to hang — hanging hardware included
Fishing, painted by Édouard Manet around 1862–63, is a remarkable early work that reveals the artist's deep engagement with the Old Masters before he fully embraced the modern sensibility that would define Impressionism. Composed with a lush, verdant landscape framing two figures at the water's edge, the painting pays direct homage to Flemish and Dutch landscape traditions, most notably the work of Rubens, whose influence is evident in the richly layered atmosphere and warm tonal palette. The riverside setting, believed to depict the outskirts of Paris near Saint-Ouen, also carries a quietly personal dimension: the figures in the foreground are thought to represent Manet himself and his future wife, Suzanne Leenhoff, lending the scene an intimate, almost autobiographical quality.
Manet's brushwork balances careful observation with expressive freedom, rendering the reflective water, dense foliage, and softly lit sky with confident, assured strokes. The work stands at a pivotal threshold in his career — rooted in tradition yet charged with the restless originality that would soon transform Western art. This museum-quality stretched canvas reproduction faithfully captures every nuance of Manet's composition, presented on a 0.75" gallery wrap with a matte fine art canvas surface, ready to display in any interior as a timeless statement of artistic heritage.
| Artist | Edouard Manet |
| Year | ca. 1862–63 |
| Medium | Oil on canvas |
| Dimensions | 30 1/4 x 48 1/2 in. (76.8 x 123.2 cm) |
| Collection | The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York |
| Movement | Impressionism |
| Available sizes | |
| Small | 25 × 20 cm (10″ × 8″) |
| Medium | 76 × 51 cm (30″ × 20″) |
| Large | 152 × 102 cm (60″ × 40″) |
| All sizes include a 0.75" gallery wrap. Ready to hang — no framing required. | |



