Edouard Manet's Olympia will go on display with a kindred painting next month in Venice, in the work's much anticipated first trip out of Paris since 1890, France's Musee d'Orsay said Wednesday.
"Exceptionally, and for the first time, I asked the President of the Republic to lend out the Olympia, which belongs to France's heritage," museum president Guy Cogeval told AFP.
The French painter's depiction of a reclining woman will be featured for the first time alongside Titian's nude Venus of Urbino, from which Manet drew inspiration, and will be lent to Venice by a Florence museum.
"It's every art historian's obsession to bring together these two great works of art, of which one served as a model for the other," Cogeval said.
While Titian painted the highly paid courtesan Angela del Moro in the image of a goddess, Manet depicted Venus as a cold and dominating woman, according to James H. Rubin, art history professor at Stony Brook University in New York. Manet's inclusion of a black cat on te bed and other symbols of prostitution were scandalous at the time.
The Doge's Palace gallery will feature the paintings in its Manet: Return to Venice exhibition from April 24 to August 11.