|
This association of Le Bon Bock
with democratic ideals inspired Emile Bellot, a printmaker and the model for Manet's corpulent beer drinker, to organize the Bon Bock Society in 1875. For almost fifty years this group hosted monthly dinners in and around Montmartre for its membership, which consisted mostly of artists, writers, and performers. The Bon Bockers rummaged through French cultural history for new ways to define the national spirit, settling on the gutsy humor of François Rabelais, the sixteenth-century satirist. The Bon Bock Society promoted a concept of French national identity, combining a commitment to liberal republicanism with boisterous Rabelaisian laughter. This indivisibility of liberty and humor supported a climate of artistic experimentation and engendered tongue-in-cheek, anti-academic, and anti-institutional satire.
While Bon Bock dinners served for more than forty years as constant reminders of France's forfeiture of its eastern citizens to the Germans, they also
kept this Rabelaisian model of parody and raucous humor alive in the minds of two generations of artists and intellectuals. Beginning in the last quarter of the nineteenth century, political thought and aesthetic innovation
were unified in the minds of many writers and artists in Paris, and most of those who frequented Montmartre attended the Bon Bock dinners. First inspired by Manet's painting, the Bon Bockers and their freewheeling attitude paved
the way for generations of Montmartre denizens to follow. |